Monday 2 May 2016

What Items Are Made From Brass?


 

If you found yourself scratching your head trying to think of what common items are made from brass, you are not alone. Things made of brass are more common than you would think, and here are a few you may have forgotten about.

Brass In and Around the Home

  • In many hanging light fixtures, especially older chandeliers, you will find they are made from brass.
  • The highly forgotten bed frame is also commonly made from brass. Although it hides under your bed, it is made from a metal alloy that can be recycled if you decide you no longer need that frame.
  • Knock, knock. Who’s there? It’s your doorknobs, hinges and door locks that might be made from brass.
  • In your bathrooms you might find brass right under your nose. Faucets are frequently made from brass alloy as well.
  • Underneath those faucets made from brass are also pipe valves and pipe fittings that may be made from brass alloy.

Recreational Places You Might Find Brass

  • Perhaps one of the easiest ways to collect brass for recycling is to go to a shooting range and politely ask if you can collect the shells from shot off rounds.

For more information, visit this website to learn more about brass recycling in Milpitas.

Earth Matters


 

Plastic water bottles add convenience because they can easily be disposed of while carrying water on the go. But it is the consumer’s responsibility to make sure they are properly disposed of. No one should have to capture bottles in a fishing net.

Recycling Reigns Supreme - Always Think Twice Before Throwing It Into The Trash


 

If you’re like the rest of the world, you’ve collected a lot of things over the years. When you’re ready to part with your unwanted belongings, always try and recycle things before resorting to throwing them in the trash. If something has the opportunity to be reused instead of condemned to sitting in a landfill for the rest of time, always choose that option. Here are a few tips to help you when recycling your unwanted items.

  • Always think to see if an item can be repurposed before resolving to get rid of it. Sometimes jars, bottles and cans make the best planters and decorative pieces.
  • Before throwing unwanted clothing in the trash, find locations that collect unwanted clothes to donate to those less fortunate. You’ll clear out closet space for newer items while providing clothes to someone who may need them.
  • If you have unwanted furniture that you think belongs in the garbage, try putting it out at the curb or listing it on local websites as a free item asking the recipient to move it themselves. Many people are more than willing to take lightly used items off of your hands for free.

For more tips on recycling, visit the website of a recycling company in Campbell.

Recycle Your Plastic – The World Needs You To


 

You’ve been told over and over again how necessary it is to recycle. The environment and future generations depend on your responsible recycling in the present so that they might have the same comfortable lifestyle that you enjoy today. Recycling your plastic is simple, and here are a few reasons how you can help incorporate it into your everyday life.

Don’t Make Recycling a Chore

  • Make recycling a priority. Remind yourself that every plastic item you throw into the trash instead of recycling will add to the growing problem of needing more space for landfills.
  • Remember how simple it is to recycle your plastic. By simply keeping a separate bin for recyclable items right next to the trash can, you eliminate the desire to simply throw away plastic.

Make Recycling Fun

  • If your state allows it, collect plastic bottles that will pay a small amount for every item recycled. Recycling may seem more appealing when there is a monetary reward attached to it.
  • Celebrate knowing your recycled plastic will be revived as a new product down the line. When plastic is not recycled, it sits in landfills or floats in the oceans and may never break down over time.

For more information, visit this website on plastic recycling in Milpitas.

Daly Plastics selects Bollegraaf Recycling Solutions

The Appingedam, Netherlands-based company Bollegraaf Recycling Solutions has completed installation of a plastics sorting system at Daly.....read more

Before You Throw Away Those Batteries, Think Of What Harm They’ll Do


 

When a battery in your television remote stops working, what would you usually do? If your answer was to throw it away in the trash, you should consider finding alternative disposal methods for your dead batteries.

Batteries in Landfills Contaminate Soil

  • If you have ever seen a battery corroded into one of your electronic devices, you know how harmful batteries can be when they are not being used correctly. When this toxic material escapes from the battery, it can seep into the soil and contaminate the land. Sometimes this soil comes in contact with groundwater, which can also be poisoned from the battery’s toxic chemicals.

Batteries Are Not Biodegradable

  • Although there are recycling programs available for different battery types, many still find their way into landfills every year. Aside from the toxic chemicals that leak from dead batteries into the earth, batteries add to the overall mess that enters a landfill and may never leave.

What You Can Do to Help the Environment

  • Make an effort to recycle the different types of batteries you may have that no longer work. Electronic batteries can be recycled with top electronic retailers and many automotive shops must recycle your unwanted car batteries.

For more information, visit this website to learn about battery recycling in Cupertino.

The Benefits of Teaching Children How to Recycle


 

A great analogy between kids and adults is that children’s minds are like the beginning phase of making a gelatin dessert when it’s just been mixed with powder and water. It’s flexible at that point. You can drop anything into it, and it will stay.

The end phase of this same dessert when it has set is like an adult’s mind. It’s firm and nonmalleable. You drop something in, it will just bounce off.

Because their minds are more open, the biggest advantage of showing kids how to recycle is they will be:
  • More likely to do it
  • More consistent at it

Helps the Economy

As many people know, recycling plays a huge role in the economy in terms of energy costs and jobs. Lately, too, as oil prices have hit astronomical prices, people are becoming more conscious of the advantages of recycling, particularly in lowering the amount of plastic waste from the beverage and bottled water industry.

Protects Resources

Throwing out one aluminum can versus recycling it is akin to pouring out five ounces of gasoline. Also, a study conducted several years ago showed that recycling aluminum cans in just one year conserved the energy costs of more than 14 million barrels of oil.

Kids learning how to recycle now are just gearing up for the massive amounts of recycling they are, most likely, going to do when they grow up. Visit this website to find a recycling company in Campbell.