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-   -   WHY do people do this?? (http://www.videokarma.org/showthread.php?t=261438)

YamahaFreak 04-27-2014 11:25 PM

WHY do people do this??
 
Maybe there's a legitimate reason for it that eludes me, but...

I can't remember the last time I pulled something off the curb with a fully intact AC power cord. They are always cut off, or at least have the plugs lopped off the end (easier to fix). Maybe it's to prevent kids from getting entangled or strangled, or to stop people messing with potentially dangerous failed equipment...but I lean more towards selfish and stingy people trying to prevent others from getting use out of their castaways! What do you think? A 27-inch Philips Magnavox S-Video equipped stereo CRT TV set I rescued last night needed absolutely nothing except a cord. :headscrat

CoogarXR 04-28-2014 07:21 AM

The main reason? Copper scrap. The owner probably didn't do it. Some scrapper driving by probably snagged the cord.

snelson903 04-28-2014 08:35 AM

its scrappers

CoogarXR 04-28-2014 09:02 AM

Another reason that might account for a small percentage- recalls. I had a crock pot that was recalled. They sent a new unit, but they included a prepaid envelope and asked that I mail them the plug off the old one to prove it had been disabled.

user181 04-28-2014 09:08 AM

It's amazing how some people scrounge up the tiniest bits of copper, thinking they're going to get any significant amount of money.

While in college, I worked as a telecom installer, and one time when we were pulling a lot of network cable (4-pair CAT6) in a large building, one of the janitors kept gathering up our cable scraps, which were only a couple feet long or so. He thought he was going to get big money for it.

DavGoodlin 04-28-2014 09:19 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by user181 (Post 3102437)
It's amazing how some people scrounge up the tiniest bits of copper, thinking they're going to get any significant amount of money.

While in college, I worked as a telecom installer, and one time when we were pulling a lot of network cable (4-pair CAT6) in a large building, one of the janitors kept gathering up our cable scraps, which were only a couple feet long or so. He thought he was going to get big money for it.

There is a place nearby with a sign asking for ANY copper wire.
You see a guy sitting inside a box truck stripping insulation off it.
Wonder how that pays off.:scratch2: At least theyre not burning it off.

user181 04-28-2014 10:05 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CoogarXR (Post 3102436)
Another reason that might account for a small percentage- recalls. I had a crock pot that was recalled. They sent a new unit, but they included a prepaid envelope and asked that I mail them the plug off the old one to prove it had been disabled.

Yes, that's a good point. I had a surge protector outlet strip by APC which was recently recalled, and while they didn't require me to send in anything as proof (other than a digital photo of the serial tag), they instructed to destroy it by cutting off the cord.

dieseljeep 04-28-2014 10:13 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by user181 (Post 3102437)
It's amazing how some people scrounge up the tiniest bits of copper, thinking they're going to get any significant amount of money.

While in college, I worked as a telecom installer, and one time when we were pulling a lot of network cable (4-pair CAT6) in a large building, one of the janitors kept gathering up our cable scraps, which were only a couple feet long or so. He thought he was going to get big money for it.

Isn't that the type of cable where the conductors are copper clad steel?
If you take a magnet to the wire, it's attracted to it. :scratch2:

user181 04-28-2014 10:30 AM

No, it's solid copper. This is what is used for Ethernet jacks (often called "RJ45" jacks).

YamahaFreak 04-28-2014 04:33 PM

I'd imagine the copper in a four-foot-long stranded power cable is worth such a trivial amount of money (as is the yoke!) that people wouldn't bother...this whole scrapping thing really has gotten way out of hand IMO. I can remember five years ago it didn't exist at all. Now we have trucks and vans driving down our street at all hours of Monday and Thursday nights. I'm very lucky if I get to save anything now. FWIW I'd rather these things fixed up and sold or given to people that can use them, instead of being completely destroyed for at most a couple dollars. >_<

CoogarXR 04-28-2014 07:41 PM

I don't get it either. You would think driving around a full-size chevy truck or a big ford van getting 8mpg clipping random power cords would not be profitable.

YamahaFreak 04-28-2014 08:57 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CoogarXR (Post 3102510)
I don't get it either. You would think driving around a full-size chevy truck or a big ford van getting 8mpg clipping random power cords would not be profitable.

That is a VERY good point!! :headscrat

Jon A. 04-28-2014 09:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by YamahaFreak (Post 3102484)
I'd imagine the copper in a four-foot-long stranded power cable is worth such a trivial amount of money (as is the yoke!) that people wouldn't bother...this whole scrapping thing really has gotten way out of hand IMO. I can remember five years ago it didn't exist at all. Now we have trucks and vans driving down our street at all hours of Monday and Thursday nights. I'm very lucky if I get to save anything now. FWIW I'd rather these things fixed up and sold or given to people that can use them, instead of being completely destroyed for at most a couple dollars. >_<

Yup, as soon as I saw an older clothes dryer that I thought to be worth saving, I started dragging it. I wouldn't leave it long enough to go home for my dolly, which was fairly nearby. I knew from experience that a scrapper would have it before I got back. I was going to hide it and then get my dolly, but then I was offered help. The rear feet were destroyed from grinding on the concrete, but they're just specialized bolts, gone now.

Hey, it was free.

YamahaFreak 04-28-2014 09:36 PM

You should have seen me last week, toting an RCA D52W19 rear-projection HDTV over a mile from the thrift store dumpster to my house...on a modified wagon. :P

Jon A. 04-28-2014 10:23 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by YamahaFreak (Post 3102538)
You should have seen me last week, toting an RCA D52W19 rear-projection HDTV over a mile from the thrift store dumpster to my house...on a modified wagon. :P

The said dolly also brought home a junker Hitachi console TV over 4 1/2 miles. Good for parts at least I figured, mainly the delta-gun CRT. I did part it out once I discovered that someone had severed and spliced the HV 2nd anode wire. Two days ago the stored 25VCXP22 was hit from the back by a falling small plant pot; lucky for me it was the pot that broke, I was standing directly over the thing. No more careless storage of small, hard items.


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