Scrapping a Vacuum Cleaner for Copper and Pouring an Ingot! How Much?
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Lol, I've scrapped a ton of these and in the motor teardown I wanted to reach a hand through the screen to your shoulder and say on almost all of them the nut is reverse threaded. Also inside the plastic cord spool, there's a pair of nice, circular brass contacts 🥰 thought opening their housing is always a pain lol
As a teacher with access to the dump metal bin in my rural town, I plan to scrap copper this summer with my son. Thanks for the videos! Great to see a lot of what I will be expecting this summer.
Something to know about that nut in the motor . . . usually they are reverse thread. You were probably tightening it, not loosening it.
You had a cool piece of copper art there, for a minute. 😂
@richavic4520
Жыл бұрын
Lobster
Your pouring skills are improving, keep it up👍♻️✌
Love the scrapping out vids. Been watching your channel for a while now and have also though about getting into the smelting aspect. Keep kick ass man, these vids are awesome to watch and entertaing as heck!
@thubprint
Жыл бұрын
Thanks so much! They don’t seem to be as popular so I think I’d better dial them back a bit, but I still think it’s a valuable series and I’m really enjoying making them 👍
@joeluk123
Жыл бұрын
@@thubprint They are valuable. It's nice to know what you can aquire from these objects that are valuable. Maybe not one or two but after 50 you got a box of decent stuff!
I save the motors and stuff for a rainy day. I did buy the stripmeister after I seen your review video. That thing is awesome!
@thatcanada
Жыл бұрын
Made in Canada quality!
That's so beautiful. What a great success. Your videos are seriously the most calming thing I watch, lol. I enjoy the simple can runs to estate sales. ❤
Along with others, I thought the accidental spill may become an abstract art piece! Perhaps when you have finished making bars, you can come up with a coin mold and start pouring & stamping your own Thub currency!
@zerocool7772
Жыл бұрын
I love your channel, mate. I've learnt alot from watching your videos. 🍻👍🇦🇺
@theaussienurseflipper.8113
Жыл бұрын
Lol Chris.
Also love these videos because I side scrap. I don't do it for now. I've got the room so I've been saving whatever I come across for a day when metal prices go crazy. I do come across tons of computer parts and hard drives. So much to learn on that stuff. That's my goal this winter. Figure out all the goodies in a computer so I can make room for more. One of my jobs is for a computer place and they let me take from the recycling bin every week. There is so many hard drives and stuff I just grab 4 to 5 a week and throw them in the pile till I figure it out what's good to keep.
really appreciate you making these videos, really a big help and enjoyable to watch.
interesting process, thank you for sharing
Oh, man! I'm glad you were safe from that splash. I would have framed that long splash piece.
I do enjoy this series of videos, always interesting. 👍
@thubprint
Жыл бұрын
Thank you! I’m having fun making them!
I love/hate vacuums. Finding the screws is always hilarious. Inside the "cord wind-up thingy" there are some small brass or sometimes copper pieces hidden. Just for the microscrappers out here - but if you bust it open at all, why not go the extra inch? (Oh, beware of the spring!) Nice video. Thx
Coolest video I’ve watched in a long time!
@thubprint
Күн бұрын
Thanks so much!
Love the take apart plus melt vids
I learned that the hard way too with my stripmeister. Probably about a year ago I got like 50lb of this super thin wire they use in elevators. I stripped it all not checking and it was all spiky dust. I ended up putting gloves on and just sweeping it off the floor lmao
The Nut on the vacuum motor is REVERSE Thread! They always are! I've found the best way to get the copper off the rotor is just to put the thing in a fire for about 10 minutes and burn off all the glues and insulation. , The wire will just fall right off then.
The really small wire will loose some during the melting process. It burns up. I used Bare Brite wire that I stripped out of Romex or #1 wire and didn’t loose anything. Measured out 6.5 lbs and after brushing the ingots it still measured the same. Just FYI.
Copper ingots are selling for about 4x scrap price per pound. Is it worth it 🤷♂️ depends if you like melting copper and dealing with eBay fees and shipping.
Right after you stripped the fist wire there was a Stripmiester ad👍 i like these breakdown videos. Have a rad weekend broseph.
When you spilled your pour and pried it off the brick I thought that it looks like art when it's brushed up. I could see something like that in a poured epoxy table top or something similar. I would definately try it if I still had my shop. Love the content, slowly working my way through.
There is so much I love about this video! Starting with "WHAM WHAM - Found it." I think the hammer tickles me so much because my dad always called these "carpenters' adjustments." It's rather bracing to see how much is completely unusable in these sorts of appliances. Did we say the same thing when it tipped? Thank goodness for voice over, eh? Thanks, Thub.
@pianochannel100
2 ай бұрын
Thumb detectors :)
I love your videos. I promise your just a bit ahead of your time. I'm a silver stacker as well. The last half of this decade will be the decade of metals and people a few years from now will be flooding to your videos to figure out how to do this stuff.
@2ndPortal
Жыл бұрын
Why do you think there will be no more copper left?
11:45 I’ve lost to these so manny times I don’t even bother anymore
@thubprint
Жыл бұрын
Yup. Even if I could get it cleaned with a torch or something, the value isn’t there
I find just taking off the cord and separating the cloth rope and the wires really the only thing worth it. It's what my random wire ham radio HF antenna is made of. It's not the best, but it works. The cloth rope thing I've done a lot of weaving with and made some cool things like water bottle holders and slings.
Cool video, I never saw that steipping machine before. Used to sit and use manpower to remove copper when i was a kid. Im sure the recycling guy will appreciate it in ingot form!!.
that copper spill was pretty cool looking
Good advert for safety gear there 😳 cheers Thub
That look like fun, I'm taking my shampooer apart to fix it, I got it apart going to work on motor tomorrow
@thubprint
Жыл бұрын
Hopefully you can get it figured! The scrap and melt is fun but obvs kind of a waste compared to fixing something
Cool. Here in Atlantic Canada I get shred price for all my plastic. Thanks for sharing
Can't beat the good ole 4.5" electric cut-off electric grinder!!!😊
Great job my friend have a great day 👍
The nut on the vacuum fan is usually reverse threaded.
Great job.....live and learn....🇺🇲👍
Great video
Good job!!
@thubprint
Жыл бұрын
Ty!
Interesting as usual with your vids. Like you, I will scrap anything. Left hand threads(lefty tighty, righty loosy)
Love your destruction videos. That little spill was super cool. Happy little accidents. I would have left it as art. Love your melt down videos.
The name for the abstract art piece from the spill can be "The Scrapped Copper Spill". Well, on a serious note, thanks a lot for the demonstration. Vacuum cleaners may have too much plastic to tear apart, but for a fun time, the amount of copper, steel and aluminum is worth doing it.
These kind of videos are fun
@thubprint
Жыл бұрын
Thank you! I have a lot of fun doing them!
i did wear a respirator and latex gloves when i removed the stuff from the bag.
Good video
Cool vid thub! I never picked up a vacuum to scrap out. Nice to see someone else do it. How long did it take to melt the copper? Tc
The nut on the motor is reverse thread.
@andrewcannon587
Жыл бұрын
lol, poor thub
Magnificent.
I collect vacuums, nice to see the plastic Walmart shit taken care of properly. Although for the older ones I'd check to see if they're worth anything. My favorite method of getting into these cheap junk ones is just cut all the extra crap off with a sawzall and rip the motor out with giant channellocks. I was waiting for the cord rewind to explode lol.
@andrewcannon587
Жыл бұрын
how would old vacuums worth anything other than basic metals?
@bread-gz3rl
Жыл бұрын
@@andrewcannon587 collectors, like me, I've seen 80s hoovers go for like 250$
@andrewcannon587
Жыл бұрын
@@bread-gz3rl dust included? :D :D I see your point. The current made in china craps are really short life disposable products, bad for the environment because they filling up the landfill.
Thought there would be much more hammer action to remove those screws. Watch for the motor brushes as they are often made of brass
Also, thank you for reminding me why I just toss vacuums in the shred pile. I get $1.50-$2 each that way and it takes no extra time. I know, and I know, and I know, but I’d rather spend that time looking for more scrap!
@thubprint
Жыл бұрын
Oh I wouldn’t give you a hard time for that! Taking them apart for that little motor is very much not worth it
Video #3 asking for @Devil Forge to get this man a proper furnace for melting metal! He doesn’t even need the big 10k model, just a small one would fit his needs.
@vincedibona4687
Жыл бұрын
@9:32 - approved
@thubprint
Жыл бұрын
I emailed them, no reply lol. I don’t think they see any value in the numbers my vids get
@vincedibona4687
Жыл бұрын
@@thubprint Dangit! Well, maybe we Thubprints can help. Email it is!
I like how U had the right socket ready. Have U ever heard of left-handed threads. Where you undo it by turning clockwise..
I'm in Dublin Ireland I've been watching your videos a b long time now I've learned a lot from you but you no them small things in the motor it has copper in it its very hard to get out you said there the last one you did was easier to get the copper out maybe you could send me video of how the easiest way to get the copper out of them I find it very hard thank you keep up the good work 👍👍👍
The last dozen of so vacuum cleaners I found had aluminum windings so I don't bother stripping them down and just throw them in the small motors pile.
Nice vid thub. I have given up vacuums as I seem to have more cost in plastic waste disposal than in actual recovery. The spill was unfortunate... no harm no foul but a good live training event. Have you tried to move any poured ingots? I was curious as to your experience and reception with the yard. Thanks man! Looking forward to the next installment.
@jonglewongle3438
Жыл бұрын
Nearly all scrappers won't have a bar of vacuum cleaners, but they will lap up the juicy cords.
Just discovered your channel and love the videos. Is that an oxyacetylene torch you use to melt the metal?
Thub Thumbs up 👍 👌 👏
Wondering where you obtained the stuff to melt and form the ingot? I have a torch. I'd like to try your method. Thanks
i think the nut you were trying to remove was probably reverse threaded , so righty loosey, lefty tighty, i do auto body and we get stuff pre-fuckified, and sometimes tightening a nut or bolt first will help to crack it loose, and that's how i first learned of " the reverse thread" ,scrappy day
i have panned the dust from my old vacuum cleaners and found flour gold and one nice picker. where the gold came from beside my work boots i dont know
Hey are you from Halifax? That maxwells plum plate you were using to weigh in on was from a bar in Halifax
Cool
How much acetylene, gas used ...and time was it worth it?
Can you recycle the plastic from the vacuum or is it destined for the landfill ?
Doing all that is going to be for fun or hobby... Not a money maker :-) But interesting to know how much value is actually in stuff!
Damn a make shift chilm that's pretty cool tbh
What are you melting it in?
That's nice and healthy breathing in the fumes from heating up and melting the copper. Uwe not good!!!
How Much Time Do You Put Into Doing This ?
What happend with it, was it just old?
Hey you can throw that plastic steel vacuum line into your shred! They accept it. It has enough metal
I know it's probably frowned upon but I have burnt alot of copper wire to clean it of its insulation
I don't recycle. I do however dumpster dive ar apartments I live at and trash pick at people curbs down the road. I get vacuums, steam cleaners, electronics, and small appliances and take it apart and sell it online. Like sites like ebay and poshmark. I sold vacuum canister yesterday for 25.00 on Poshmark! 😍 I even find other stuff I sell. I found vintage baby doll. Sold it 35.00 on Facebook marketplace.
That impeller nut was lefthand thread.
nice breakdown of start to finish, and weights, now if you could melt that plastic down back to fuel, you will have cracked it
I would like to know the name of the tool used to strip the wires and where I can get one, please 😁
@thubprint
4 ай бұрын
The Stripmeister? It’s in the video description 👍
Now since the copper that came out of the power cord was stranded yet shiny is that if not bare bright considered #1 copper? I'm trying to separate my copper. I stripped apart a submpum cord yesterday and it had copper wire that thin inside it as well.
@thubprint
Жыл бұрын
I had thought the same for years but it’s not about the shininess as much as the recovery percentage. Having contaminants lowers the recovery percentage but really fine strands of copper will also have lower recovery because a larger amount will be burned away and lost when refined. So unfortunately because the strands were super fine rather than solid core it will still be considered #2
@JOEY22445
Жыл бұрын
Thank you for the information :)
5.06 a lb for copper today. Ontario Canada. About 3.00 for brass. Get done! Is there copper in a carpet Bissell cleaner, anyone know. The motor? Thx😊
At 4:46 - what is that " drill driven wire stripper" act ual name and is it on Amazon??
@thubprint
9 ай бұрын
It’s a “stripmeister”, and there’s a link to it on Amazon in the description 👍
Work on my shampooer and it is dead. Motors fried. I tried to fix no way.
You could have used the torch to burn off the varnish on the armature and freed the copper easily .try it you may like it . You could have also melted it out in to your crusabull.
@thubprint
Жыл бұрын
I thought about that, and for the sake of the video I probably should’ve. Now that I’ve got a cracked and dirty crucible I can go ahead and try it on the next one!
Would it be easier to take apart with a 5 pound hammer perhaps. Why waste time on delicate screws and 30 minutes goes by and its not done yet. 2 big hits with the big hammer and its apart, I'm thinking
Hey Thub…. How do you like the gloves you’re wearing? I had to search & pause the video to see what brand & style they were but seemed to fit & wear pretty good. Also could you please hit the pound/ounce tab on the scale? Lot’s of USA viewers here! Keep up the great work! Glad to see you make it a family affair & teaching a way to make $$ & knowledge.
@thubprint
Жыл бұрын
I can try fit in the lbs/oz button but it’s a bit of a silly system and it forces a lot of extra math 😅 I know my yards buy in pounds but I find grams to pounds much easier than oz to pounds.. as for the gloves, the white “roper” ones are okay but they’re really sweaty and porous so I don’t really like them. The leather welding ones and my polishing ones are great though!
Maybe the thread on the shaft for the fan was left hand......
Personally I’m not a big fan of this new quite dark format you’ve been doing but I’m a big fan keep it up
i stripped an upright shark hoover today, apart from the power cord. pure pain in the rear. never again
oh yeah, in the States we call those Canadian threads (lefty)😀
You were very subdued today🧐
@thubprint
Жыл бұрын
It was late and I’ve been emo hah
Notice- gentlemen removing aluminum plate- Threads are Left threaded! No idea why that is....I would have taken apart the ARMATURE from the Electric Motor . Ive been saving them for a rainy day
What do you do with the copper after you melt it? I know you carve in it, but are you planning on selling it to the scrap yard after you get so much or what? I've wondered what your wife thinks about all the stuff you bring home? Thanks for the video!! Loved it
@thubprint
Жыл бұрын
I have no plans on selling it as scrap, I’m really just aiming to build a collection of bars to show how much is available in each appliance. I live in my own space though so I don’t get any feedback on my pile of “treasures” haha
@tinathompson2877
Жыл бұрын
That's cool. I wasn't sure what you was going to do with the bars once you have a lot gathered up. Thanks for replying
Cheapo Harbor Freight Vise??
@thubprint NEW SUBCRIBER here. I got a easy way for you to finish off those induction motor spools.. The outside fins are shaped like a T use grinder dont cut off grind down the top of T to make it just columns then just pull out copper. Easy pezy
@thubprint
Жыл бұрын
That’s a *great* tip, thank you!
Nooo my vacuum! 😱
@thubprint
Жыл бұрын
We can find you another one 😆
Your wife know you’re doing that?😂
That nut is reverse thread. Righty loosen lefty tighten
Other than the accident, The cost of using oxygen and accetiline, cost maore than the copper,
Some seemed to have been lost in the spill.
Very informative video but I wonder why the “security screws” what are they hiding! 🤣 One concern, the melting process all though exciting is a bit dangerous, perhaps investing in safer and more efficient equipment might be a prudent choice? 🤔 Keep doing the thing! 👍 God bless 🙏🏼🇺🇸🇨🇦
@NeverEvil1
Жыл бұрын
You don’t need safety!!!
Vacuum companies must have lots of stock in screw companies.
@benjaminarmstrong7047
Жыл бұрын
Righty loosie?
@thubprint
Жыл бұрын
😆
Sometimes the windings on the Electric Motor are Copper coated aluminum- useless! There is a little wire and alot of plastic. Rarely Very Rarely I find a ' 60s old school cast aluminum vacuum cleaner.