Hi Tony
I recently had my nephew over for work experirnce. Not a lot of work on so we started pulling apart about ten years work of accumulated hard disks. There were about two hundred and it took quite a bit of time. At the end we ended up with loads of chassis, some stainless and the platters.
I took them all off the a scrap yard to see what I could get for them and it turned out that we averaged $0.50/hr. A complete waste of time.
The platters are cut from very high purity aluminium, wash ground, sputtered with a cobalt based alloy and then burnished, spanked soundly and sent to bed without supper.
They are a problem like just about anything to do with dead electronic componentry.
Really they are several problems. Firstly they contain loats of useful very high purity minerals.
Secondly, they contain them is such small quantities that they it is not ecconomically feasible to reclaim those minerals.
Thirdly many of the minerals are toxic albeit in the single computer there is little chance of anyone getting sick.
In the 1850's here in Victoria we had a mamoth gold rush and many people from around the world decided to have a go. Included in those people wre many Chinese. The Chinese copped it a bit from the round eyes for all sorts of reasons, not least of which that they were Chinese.
We had riots, something Anglo Saxons are quite good at.
At the heart of the riots which killed many Chinese was the fact that the Chinese were prepared to work harder for smaller reward than the mostly British expats. The Chinese would go through the tailings and mullock heaps after the whitey's had finished with them and pick out the flecks that no-one else could be bothered with. The made some money and got killed.
The three most noticable minerals in a computer are steel, aluminium and gold.
I don't know of any metal recyclers who will take steel and pay you for it in quantities of less than 500kg. Aluminium is broken into several classes according the the amount of other crap there is adhering to it or incorporated within it. Thus you will not be able to convince your local metalo that the aluminium platters from hard drives are really high class items. You will get a reduced price for them. You wont get a decent price for the chassis because of the paint on them.
The stainless steel that makes up the lids has bits of adhesive which will recude their value.
The gold in computers is typically laid on in thicknesses of between 25 and 50 microns. There really sin't much of it and unlike twenty five years ago when it was thicker, it is now not really ecconomically recoverable, even with a gold price of over $1,500.00/oz
So, what do you do with them and all of the rest of the junk in a computer or television?
Currently a very large proportion of it gets kibbled and stuck into land fill. Personally I think that this is wrong. Economics is a very variable thing. Certainly we have not gone back to the days of rag picking or pure collecting but I can see a day not too far off when it will be ecconomically viable to start processing large quantities of kibble for the constituent minerals IF the kibble is readilly accessible. If it is scattered all over land fill, it will not be viable.
Therefore I reckon that it should be stored separately. Still in land fill if that is all we have (not suggesting that it is) but in one easily excavatable hole.
What can we do? I think we should continue to pull things apart prividing doing so means that the components can be stored more easily that way. A printer is mostly space as is a computer but uit turns out that the most space efficient was to store the components, unless you have a kibbler, is to just leave them assembled.
And then just leave then in the Dust Collection Corner until you have sufficient to do something about.
I appologise if this doesn't quite make sense, I am still working it out.