I literally didn't know that it was Earth Day until the metal
recycler guy thrust a bright green T-shirt in my hands. I had just
sold them $77 worth of metal, and on Earth Day they were giving
away T-shirts. He invited us to stay for their free Earth Day
barbecue, but I had to decline: I was still shoveling.
I missed Earth Day mostly because I was shoveling. That morning
I had shoveled close to 300 pounds of metal into the back of the
Durango. About 30 pounds of that was bronze and copper, and another
100 or so was aluminum. The rest was iron and steel.
My scrap metal collection is legendary; why did I let so much of
it get away? Easy: I dumped the stuff that wasn't likely to be
useful. Chunks of pure copper don't machine well. Brass is
way better--I wasn't giving away any brass. The bronze was
a sort of special case. Carol's dad had given me several husky
bronze Acme-threaded bearing brackets that once gripped a lead
screw from some very large but long-dead surface grinder. Each one
was bigger than my fist. I'd been staring at them (and carting them
from state to state) since the early 1980s, and never came up with
a use for them. In the cause of
The
Duntemann Ensmallening, I decided to trade them in for
something much more useful: cash.
Ditto the aluminum, most of which consisted of aluminum grinding
wheels from very large but (probably) long-dead surface grinders.
The largest were 24" in diameter and 5/8" thick. All had once had a
coating of fine diamond abrasive on their edges, suitable for the
grinding of carbide dies, which was what Carol's dad did for a
living. When the diamond coating got thin at any spot along the
edge, the wheel was swapped out for a new one and scrapped.
He gave me a lot of them.
I did keep a few, and I have used a couple in the last 35 years,
especially the smaller, 8" diameter ones. The rest of the aluminum
pile was odd stuff I'd picked up cheap at hamfests in the 42 years
I've been going to hamfests. As for the steel, well, it consisted
of odd and generally rusty chunks that used to be frames for
chairs, lamp base weights, a beat-to-hell surface plate, and
several 3' lengths of badly galvanized (and now corroding) 1"
threaded rod that I no longer remember obtaining at all. 1"
threaded rod is stock at Artie's Ace Hardware in Phoenix, and I
don't have to scrub the rust off of theirs. Out it went.
I'm probably due for another Advil. There's a hard deadline for
emptying the garage utterly: On May 4 the jackhammers will show up
to take out our crumbling garage slab. Much of what I will be doing
between now and then will be shoveling. Tomorrow I'll shovel a load
of ancient computers, computer accessories, dead cordless phones,
ratty computer speakers, and cables (RCA / VGA / parallel etc) into
the car to take up to Best Buy for recycling. I still have to
Craigslist my small workbench and figure out how to con somebody
into taking a middling list of dead or limping radio gear,
including my Kenwood TS-520S (blew out its balanced modulator)
a WWII Navy MAB receiver, condition unknown,
and a Heathkit HW-22A that's immaculate but may or may not work. (I
bought it cheap at an estate sale, sans cables.) Most regretted may
be my Hammarlund HQ-145X general-coverage receiver, which was my
SWL radio in college and later my Novice receiver. It always had a
few quirks, and probably has a couple of bad tubes, as it doesn't
bring much in anymore. (I haven't had it opened up in 30 years or
so.) Alas, the Hammarlund is enormous, and does nothing that my
IC-736 doesn't already do, in a third the space. I'll miss it, I
guess. But that's what an Ensmallening is all about.
I'm going to ask $75 for the whole pile and see what happens. I
could probably have gotten more for them by selling each item
individually, but it would be a bad use of my time, considering all
the shoveling that still has to be done.
I may try to foist a few things off on my hapless partygoers at
our nerd party next Saturday. We still have a Midcentury Modern
steel stepstool, decorated with drips of every color known to
Sherwin Williams, and a "flying saucer" charcoal grill from the
'50s. Beyond that, what's left is lumber scraps and useless crap
that's going out on the curb this Wednesday, if I can force myself
to keep shoveling.
No ifs. Shovel I must, and shovel I will, until the Ensmallening
is done.