South Carolina pound ended in 1793.
depends on the grade and type of scrap copper. for example do you have insulated cable, stripped copper wire, buss bar, etc. No. 1 heavy scrap copper is around $3.00 per pound (lb)
The price of copper scrap varies daily and also depends on the grade (No. 1, No 2. , bare brite wire, etc.) . No .1 copper scrap is currently around $2.23 per pound
As of June 30,2012 prices range from $2.25 -$2.50;depending on the grade.
North Carolina pound ended in 1793.
This depends on the grade and type of scrap metal you have (i.e. is it wire, cable, buss bar, bare brite, etc.). No 1 heavy scrap copper is around $2.65 per pound (lbs) , No 1 bare brite copper wire is arpund $2.70 per pound (lb). Prices fluctuate daily
$ 4.34 per pound of copper. according to the world copper price market.
depending on the grade of copper scrap you have (wire, stripped cable, buss bar, motors, bare brite, etc.) you can see a range of pricing between 30 cents and $3.00 per pound (lbs)
240 copper pennies equal a pound.
price varies each day. there are websites to keep current on these changing prices. Update Oct 2011 - Scrap copper has come down from historic high's of over $4.25 per pound to now as low as $3 to $3.50 a pound depending on the grade of scrap (i.e. stripped copper cable "bare brite" is more then small insulated copper wire
· Good question this is what the current copper scrap dealers need. Thanks for this question.Here I will posted the approximate price for copper scrap# 2 Copper Wire 2.740.02$US / Lb1 Month OldThis is right? Or wrong? Aluminium scrap
This is highly variable, and depends upon the richness of the ore. For example, the mines of Michigan's Keweenaw Peninsula mined primarily native copper, occasionally found in immense, multi-ton masses, which were actually quite a nuisance as explosives had no effect upon them and they had to be chiselled into managable sizes using hand tools. So in that case, to get a pound of copper, you'd smelt about a pound of ore. In mines with low grade ore, eg. Arizona, it will take a lot of rock to produce a pound of copper... but every mine is different.