See these passing thru town here as we have a smelter just out of town (Kurri Kurri NSW)
Trucked to Newcastle docks for shipment.
Our lead smelter at Cockle Creek was shutdown years ago.
See these passing thru town here as we have a smelter just out of town (Kurri Kurri NSW)
Trucked to Newcastle docks for shipment.
Our lead smelter at Cockle Creek was shutdown years ago.
We had a flatbed TT wreck on the interstate near us and it was hauling steel coils. Chains broke and two of the coils rolled out into a ploughed field about 200 feet or so and then promptly sank. Was too far away & too soft ground to do any sort of rigging with equipment so the transport company paid a crew of guys to take thermal lances and peel it like an onion into rolloff bins. Took a while to do, too.
Due to market fluctuations I am no longer buying range scrap jackets.
Sic gorgiamus allos subjectatos nunc
I worked in a nickle smelter in Oregon for a short time. When I was there, a furnace burned a hole in it and spilled molten ore everywhere. The nickle left in the furnace was about three feet thick and 25 feet across. They brought in a crew to cut it up with oxygen fed lances, which was nothing more than a hose and a length of 1/4" black pipe.
It took weeks to cut it into manageable chunks.
BTW
I know this is the wrong forum but here goes anyway.
That place was where I saw the "Tinsel Fairy" for the first time.
We were adding a slag (flux) to the refining furnace and accidentally tossed in a tiny bit of mud. It lifted a three ton lid up off of the furnace and set it off to the side, and spewed part of the meltl out of the door which painted a wall about 30 feet away with a 1/2" sheet of nickle.
THAT would not be the Tinsel Fairy, but her MUCH meaner grandfather the Nickle Genie!
If you think a visit from the Tinsel Fairy is bad, you don't ever want to conjure up
the Nickle Genie!
Bill
If it was easy, anybody could do it.
Here's a pallet of lead from a local company that galvanizes. 1 "pig" wieghs 250 lbs from what the guy says. That pallet weighs alot!
Last edited by Lead guy; 06-13-2011 at 10:01 PM. Reason: picture didnt work first try
I saw a truck go through town here with a couple solid bars of TI. 36" round by 15' long give or take. I wonder what that would be worth?
I hauled about 40,000 lb of lead to the battery plant at Holland Ohio once. It was a two rows of ingots down the center of the 53' trailer about a foot high held in place with 2X4's nailed to the floor. There was very little of the trailer space taken up by the lead but it was about all that could be hauled legally.
I was installing some robots at a plant that cast intake manifolds and engine brackets for several well-known automakers. They had shaker conveyors under the floor that transport the cut-off sprue and trimmings & such back to the furnace for remelt. The shakers were two layers, the top was floored in grating so the sand would sift out and that got dumped in a dumpster behind the furnace. The shakers dumped into an auto-hopper that would be periodically charged with more AL ingots and then dumped in the furnace.
Due to the hot and dirty plant environment they allowed the workers to have drinks at their stations. One specific worker was in the habit of carrying a can of soft drink to her station. After the incident, it turned out that she was an environmentalist who would place her empty soft drink cans into the aluminum shaker conveyor to be recycled. Who knows how many times she did this, but one day she had half finished her soda and put the can in the shaker. Maybe she did this a lot and the can normally by the action of the shaker wound up empty. This one day the part-full can of soda wound up getting charged to the smelting furnace. The explosion blew most of the roof and rear of the plant apart and destroyed the smelting furnace. The holding furnace was also damaged and had to have all the refractory lining replaced. Luckily nobody was killed and injuries were not as bad as they could be due to automation and safety practices. There were cars in the parking lot that got a nice aluminum skin. The plant was shut down for a period of time for repairs. After that drinks were only allowed to be brought in to the plant in plastic containers such as bike bottles and it was forbidden to add anything to the scrap line.
Due to market fluctuations I am no longer buying range scrap jackets.
Sic gorgiamus allos subjectatos nunc
it is zink from jmz there in clarksville tenn
AL not PB.
That many PB ingots would have overloaded the truck, I imagine.
I've hauled copper like the pic's above and some Aluminum too. but the pure brass I loaded in down town LA was one of the worst. they made me tarp the scrap stuff to keep theft down. weighed my load in and out of the plant. I also work for a place and we took ovens to Alcoa to pre heat the scrap to remove any moisture because of the soda can from the post above..
I picked up a 10,000# load of silver from ASARCO years ago three pallets in the nose of a Pup trailer, then we built a wall and filled the rest of the trailer with Levies. Wonder what a load of 10,000# of silver and 10,000# levies are worth?
Frank G.
If that load is 120 in Ohio our state weighman would be in heaven. I've been pulled over twice in two weeks thinking I was overweight. Funny thing is, most of the quarrys in our area only let you leave the yard if your legal. These weighmen are like the lonley Maytag repairmen. Cool pic though. Been working on the Ohio Turnpike 80/90 and been seeing alot of those loads.
Tom
BP | Bronze Point | IMR | Improved Military Rifle | PTD | Pointed |
BR | Bench Rest | M | Magnum | RN | Round Nose |
BT | Boat Tail | PL | Power-Lokt | SP | Soft Point |
C | Compressed Charge | PR | Primer | SPCL | Soft Point "Core-Lokt" |
HP | Hollow Point | PSPCL | Pointed Soft Point "Core Lokt" | C.O.L. | Cartridge Overall Length |
PSP | Pointed Soft Point | Spz | Spitzer Point | SBT | Spitzer Boat Tail |
LRN | Lead Round Nose | LWC | Lead Wad Cutter | LSWC | Lead Semi Wad Cutter |
GC | Gas Check |