
E-Scrap Recycling
WE PAY FOR THESE ITEMS!!!
Call For Todays Pricing
We accept computers and consumer electronics.
Non-ferrous metals such as copper, aluminium, lead and tin are contained within electronics and can be saflt recovered by us. Hazardous materials are also contained within electronics and we will properly dismantel, seperate and safly dispose of the hazardous waste. A certificate of destruction is available upon request.
*** SAFTEY ALERT ***
Hazardous materials contained in electronics and appliances including oil, lead, mercury, cadmium,PCB's, CFS's, HCFC's and HFC's,
.
These and other materials can have a substantail negative impact on the enviroment and dissasembler if not disposed of properly.
We accept:
Laptops Ipods Mother Boards Hard Drives Mother Boards Phones Printers Radios VCR's Scanner Networks Mainframes Copiers Monitors Radios VCRs DVD Players Video Cameras Televisions Battery Back ups Surge Protectors Video game consoles Cable & Speakers Most Other Electronics. |
The Steel Recycling Institute saves the equivalent of 18 million households worth of electric energy every year by recycling steel |
|
By weight, most appliances are 75 percent steel. |
|
Plastic, steel, glass, refrigerant, oil, and blowing agent found in old appliances can be salvaged and recycled for use in new products. |
|
Refrigerators, air conditioners, and freezers made before 1995 contain chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) and most air conditioners produced after 1995 contain hydrochlorofluorocarbons (HCFCs). Both CFCs and HCFCs harm Earth’s ozone layer. Refrigerators, freezers, and some air conditioners manufactured since 1995 contain hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs), which are not ozone-depleters, but which still require careful disposal. |
|
Most household appliances—nearly 84 percent in the US, in fact—are now recycled since state and municipal disposal bans have become effective. |
|
Almost 40% of the world's requirements of copper are met by recycling - a clear example of the importance of the secondary metals industry in conserving resources and in reducing our dependence on finite reserves of metals in the Earth's crust. |
The average cathode ray tube inside a PC monitor contains about five
pounds of lead oxide powder embedded in the glass. |
|
Computers have several elements – lead, mercury, cadmium – that
are regulated as hazardous wastes by U.S. EPA and all states.
Electronics can be an environmental hazard if they are disposed by
landfilling or incinerating. |
|
Plastic, steel, glass, refrigerant, oil, and blowing agent found in old appliances can be salvaged and recycled for use in new products. |
|
| In 2007, we generated 3.01 million tons of e‐waste in the US. Of this amount, only 410,000 tons or 13.6% was recycled. The rest was trashed – in landfills or incinerators. | |
Most household appliances—nearly 84 percent in the US, in fact—are now recycled since state and municipal disposal bans have become effective. |
|
68 percent of consumers stockpile used or unwanted computer
equipment in their homesfor a total of 234.6 million electronic units in storage not including cell phones |



