Al isn't exactly a rare mineral ... and refining it only takes huge amounts of electricity. I don't expect demand to significantly outpace supply.
at one time aluminum was more expensive than gold!!!
never again hah.
take a tip from the youtube crazies (like the link), melt all your aluminum down into large blocks, maybe you can one day make money off aluminum.. as for me, when i scrapped stuff, i hated aluminum... weigh next to nothing, priced at around 2 bucks a pound, but takes up a bunch of space... id rather scrap stainless than aluminum.
also, i never got the concept, i saw people bring in truck beds full of uncrushed pop cans (can't crush here due to people filling with sand and crushing), they would get maybe 10 bucks or something.. how does that even cover gas? i would unload one little tote full of copper and brass, and get 3-400. definitely worth the trip at that point. but why bother with cans at all?
For money making purposes, I save all aluminum across the board and any plastic bottles and such that I can recycle (aluminum was only $1.59/lb. a few months back while plastic was $1.10/lb....to put things in perspective).
For purposes of melting and such, I think the copper pennies are where it's going to be more promising. Especially if the Government stops recognizing the penny (and producing it....which they've talked about doing many times before).
I've been saving them (mid 1982 and down) for the past 4 years, but I don't have all that much saved up yet. My Dad told me he has 16 or 18 Costco Mayo jars full of copper pennies since I tipped him off a couple years back. To be fair, he get $5-10 bucks every week from the bank and goes through them roll by roll.
It would be sweet to be able to melt that stuff down for casting projects at home!
Andy
Next to nothing here, 40 cents/lb on a good day for cans, 16 cents for cast alum. A truckload might get you a couple bucks.here, a truckload of cans would get you a few hundred bucks. i think the idea of melting them is kinda neat as you can make more useless stuff lol
at one time aluminum was more expensive than gold!!!
Could you do this with any aluminum? I have several old screen door frames and some aluminum screen window frames that I could melt if it would work.
Aluminum is the most abundant metal in the Earth's crust.
What alloy is used for soda cans?
Round here our cans are worth 10 cents a pop for deposit. Almost never see them at the scrapyard.
I've heard the same thing. Cast old cast parts. The only casting I have done was a beer stein for an advanced metallurgy class I took in college. It was cool making the cope and drag and the cores and pouring it yourself.Great tutorial on aluminum casting in, I think, about 50, 10-20 minute segments can be found at MYFORDBOY on youtube. He's done a lot of casting and strongly recommends that the best results are achieved using things that were originally cast as feed stock. The alloys that extrusions and beer cans are made from are not ideal for casting. That's not to say they won't work, just that the stuff made to be cast casts better and if you're going to the trouble you might as well stack the deck in your favor. One aluminum cylinder head or alloy wheel will give you a lot to work with.
If you want to do metal casting, using aluminum cans for stock is probably the least cost effective source, right next to screen or aluminum foil. By the time you skim the dross off, there isn't much quality aluminum left. It takes ALOT of cans to make a few pound ingot. The fuel and time is not worth it.