You can sell your aluminum cans at the Ak-sar-ben Scrap Iron & Metal Company located at 1001 N 12th St Omaha, NE 68102.
About one day, with good weather. :)
A good midpoint of Dundee is 40th Street & California Street (just north of Dodge).
In Omaha, Nebraska one can purchase all kinds of stationary supplies from The Bookworm. Staples also sell a good range of stationary and one could always purchase online from Amazon.
for bread: Great Harvest (near 50th and Underwood) for pasteries: Sweet Magnolia's (near 40th and Cumming)
Aluminium is used in the airframe of the space shuttle due to its light weight and high strenght. The problems with aluminum is that it is susceptible to fatigue and it requires shielding from heat for high temp applications
Aluminum is good for cans. Steel is still used in cans for vegetables, meats etc., because an aluminum can thick enough to survive pressure cooking is more expensive than a steel can.
hi aluminum is very good for cans ect. blah blah blah lalalalala thanks for the question
Aluminum is a good metal for drinking cans because it is light, easily obtained, non-toxic and it can be handled roughly.
the pricees for scrap are relatively the same every where sogo on apmex or kitco .com and they shouuld give you a good idea of what the cost is currenttly going at
The batteries contain toxic chemical that can eventually leech out into the soil. Aluminum cans will be Chemically stable in a Landfill. Also Aluminum can be recycled into new products fairly easily and cheaper than making new Aluminum from Bauxite (Aluminum Ore). So recycling both is a good idea!
For plastic I got $0.92 per lb Glass $0.11 per lb Cans $1.57 per lb There are about 33 cans per pound (12 fl oz size) is manufactured from Aluminum and weighs roughly 15 grams or 0.5 ounces. It always good to recycle if you need a little money this is the way to go.
My understanding is that ALUMINUM cans are melted down (and purified) and then (probably by adding to new aluminum ore) smelted into 'fresh' aluminum, that can be used for ANY process or manufacturing that uses aluminum...even potentially into brand new aluminum cans (or aluminum foil, etc.) Processing of Aluminum Ore (?bauxite?) uses HUGE amounts of electricity. I have seen aluminum referred to as "solid electricity" the process requires so much of it. At one point Aluminum was the most expensive metal in the world, even more than gold. That's one reason why the top of the Washington Monument in Washington DC is a block of solid aluminum...as it was so valuable. Remelting and recycling used aluminum is much more energy efficient than the processing of bauxite ore to obtain aluminum. Recycling not only keeps more materials out of landfills, it saves energy at the same tme! Steel cans (are there any steel cans any more?) would similarly be recycled by being added along with other steel scrap to blast furnaces smelting iron and steel. As with aluminum, it helps create 'new' steel for all sorts of manufacturing. The car you drive today may have been part of a WWI or WWII battleship, or maybe your dad's or grand-dad's old 57 Chevy. (Although, in the case of the 57 Chevy, it may have been worth more in that configuration than its worth after recycling!)
In this economy, aluminum brings in good money.
Depends on the quallity level of the bike. Generally most parts are, and the frames on medium to good bikes are. They use aluminum alloys. Very good bikes use carbon fibre frames. Also the SI name is aluminum.
Because aluminum contains a great deal of calcium in it, which makes your bones stronger and brittle. You must eat the can too.
- Aluminium has good strength to weight ratio so can's can be made thinner (saving money as less material is used) yet still have the required strength. - Aluminium has a very low density, it is a light metal. - Aluminium is sufficiently resistant to corrosion. - Aluminium is cheaper. - Aluminium is 100 % recyclable.
Aluminium, iron (steel), zinc. Early tin cans were soldered closed - so that includes lead as an answer. this is not a good answer