Guide

Copper & Wire: Grades, Prices, and What Yards Want

Bare bright vs. #1 vs. #2 copper, insulated wire grades, and how stripping affects payout per pound.

Copper and wire: where the per-pound spread comes from

A pound of bare bright copper can pay three to five times what a pound of low-grade insulated wire pays. The reason is straightforward: yards are ultimately reselling the copper inside the wire, and the more insulation, jacketing, and contamination they have to strip out, the less of the original weight is actually copper.

Wire grades you'll encounter

GradeDescriptionTypical copper content
Bare brightClean, uncoated, 16ga+100%
#1 insulated (heavy)Thick romex, single jacket65–80%
#2 insulatedLighter gauge, single jacket50–65%
Christmas-tree / extensionThin, fine strand30–45%
Communication / dataSmall gauge, complex jacket15–35%

These ranges are typical — your yard's posted grades and percentages will vary.

When to strip vs. sell as-is

The decision depends on:

  • Per-pound spread between bare-bright and your insulated grade
  • Time required to strip — often several hours per 100 lb of insulated wire
  • Tooling — a wire-stripping machine pays for itself for serious volume

For occasional scrappers with under 50 lb of mixed wire, selling as-is is usually the right call. For regular scrappers handling demolition jobs, a stripping machine and a few hours of weekend labor can recover thousands of dollars per year that would otherwise go to the yard.

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