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Archives for the Category: Scrap Yard News

Self-Service Salvage Yards Growing

Posted by admin on September 4th, 2012 in Category Auto Industry, Scrap Cars in the USA, Scrap Yard News (no responses)

Many DYI’ers want the option of pulling their own parts from auto salvage yards for even more savings!!

It takes a lot for an industry with more than 8,000 businesses and $22 billion in annual sales to change direction. That’s what’s happening now in automotive recycling, where self-serve salvage yards that permit customers to remove their own parts from scrapped vehicles are beginning to supplant traditional full-service operations.

Thus far, there are only about 200 pure self-service yards, estimated Dimitri Gerontis, principal at S3 Software Solutions, a Salt Lake City provider of software for self-service auto salvage operators. “But there are probably upwards of 400 to 500 of what would be considered a hybrid yard, bordering between self-service and full-service,” Gerontis said. “And everyone’s looking in that direction.”

Read the full article here.

Students are Planting at Former Auto Salvage Yard

Posted by admin on May 1st, 2012 in Category Auto Industry, Fun and Humor, Going Green, Scrap Yard News (no responses)

Great little story out of Muncie on bringing fruitful land back from a former salvage yard!

Work has begun on a plan to re-vegetate Car Doctors, a former auto salvage yard on Burlington Drive adjacent to the Cardinal Greenway.

Revegatation is important in preventing erosion by water and wind and runoff of metal contaminants, and to alleviate unsightly conditions, says John Pichtel, a professor of natural resources and environmental management at Ball State University.

The project also will research the possibility of plants vacuuming up contaminants in the soil.

Mayor Dennis Tyler was on hand last week to thank Pichtel and his students for doing the project, which the city is helping to fund with $1,450.

The students are trying to “recolonize” the site by planting test plots of clover, rye grass, bluegrass and other plants, to determine which will grow best in the compacted, gavelly, infertile soil.

The project also will compare the ability of each type of plant to remove or stabilize soil contaminants.

The contaminants of concern include lead, arsenic, hydrocarbons and benzene. The site borders the White River as well as Cardinal Greenway. It also is the former site of bulk oil plants.

The students are using compost provided by Ball State in some test plots but not in others to determine if hauling in compost is worth the effort, Pichtel said. They also are studying the effects of amending the soil with mycorrhizal fungi, to see if it is better than compost in recolonizing the property.

Other vegetation to be planted at the site for testing includes, corn, wheat, soybeans and oats.

Eventually, Pichtel would like to recolonize the site with tallgrass prairie and a woodlot of oak, beech, birch and maple trees so it could become a recreational area with walking trails.

Read the full article here.

Your Car Could be Ready for the Junkyard When…

Posted by admin on April 1st, 2012 in Category Fun and Humor, Scrap Yard News (no responses)

it looks like this!!

Man Collects Junk to Pay the Bills

Posted by admin on February 1st, 2012 in Category Scrap Yard News (no responses)

When people drive by John Ramsay’s home in Clover they may see a pile of junk in his side yard and Ramsey would agree with you.

“It’s junk, just junk,” said Ramsay.

But he also sees much more.

“I can get maybe $40 to $45 for this transmission and I have two of them,” said Ramsey. “This pile of aluminum and old pots I can get $30 to $40 for a big pile.”

He says can get $40 for 100 pounds of aluminum cans he collects too.

“If I see one under the red light up there I’ll stop and get it ‘cause I know that’s a penny,” said Ramsey.

Collecting the things that others don’t want all to help the 78 year old Korean War Veteran, pay the bills.

“What I make I spend it the same week,” said Ramsey. “A lot of weeks I don’t sell anything.”

Read more here.