Thank you very much for the detailed information about these TVs. I used to think I had more valuable materials, know I know what to do with mine. Thank you again
@Bradjgonnuscio8 жыл бұрын
Thank you for the video....
@rodneysrepurposingrecyclin38218 жыл бұрын
I stack my LCD screens up. once a year I ship them to a company that recycles them. I make no money at all on them.
@borispetrov65758 жыл бұрын
+Rodman Lyons You can easily recover aluminum, it's really easy. Also if you want you can cut "acrylic type of glass" into proper shape and sell it also. Not too much but still better than nothing. Also I forgot to mention in this video about plastic recycling - it could be fairly easily distilled into diesel fuel. Unfortunately it makes sense only with larger quantities. When it comes to indium I'm not sure if it makes sense even on industrial scale
@rodneysrepurposingrecyclin38218 жыл бұрын
+Властелин колец I recycle everything but the screens. I agree with you. indium is not worth my time. the plastic I put in the city recycling bin. everything else I recycle. and all my vehicles are gas lol.
@borispetrov65758 жыл бұрын
+Rodman Lyons Actually..... just now I came up with idea about recovering indium in economical way I will try and have a look if it works :)
@rodneysrepurposingrecyclin38218 жыл бұрын
+Властелин колец I would be interested in the results. I am all for recovery/reuse of all matterials.
@borispetrov65758 жыл бұрын
+Rodman Lyons hi! Ok I tried many different things and the only thing could be done (money-wise making sense) is getting kind of crude Indium with about 50% impurities. Any further refining involves way too poisonous chemicals. Also it must be done in multiple stages, with every stage loosing some amount of indium. Sorry to disappoint, but seriously there is no economical way of recovering Indium from LCD. At least not for small scale refiner