Supplier: Aluminium ( ingots, t bars, sows, rods), copper (cathodes, cakes, billets, ingots, rods), lead (ingots), nickel (cathodes both cut and uncut briquettes, pellets, discs, etc.), tin (ingots, etc.), zinc (ingots both regular size and jumbos), steel billets (all types including crc, hrc, hdgc, plates, sheets), concentrates and ores for above items including bauxite, manganese, clinker and iron ores etc), scraps of above items including hms 1&2 and steel scraps
Buyer: Aluminium ( ingots, t bars, sows, rods), copper (cathodes, cakes, billets, ingots, rods), lead (ingots), nickel (cathodes both cut and uncut briquettes, pellets, discs, etc.), tin (ingots, etc.), zinc (ingots both regular size and jumbos), steel billets (all types including crc, hrc, hdgc, plates, sheets), concentrates and ores for above items including bauxite, manganese, clinker and iron ores etc), scraps of above items including hms 1&2 and steel scraps
Supplier: Cast iron skulls, cast iron borings and turnings, steels skulls, eaf skulls, plate iron, mill scale, metal scrap, incinerated scrap (e46)
Electro galvanized wire BWG20 , wire diameter: 0.93-0.95 mm.
Steel billets result from the second stage of the steel production process. They are hot-rolled or forged from an ingot or strand cast. steel billets from 45 x 45 mm to 150x150 mm, and round steel billets from 120 mm to 270 mm in diameter. Length : Specifiable up to 12 m Quality : In various internationally well known standards including afnor (nf), aisi, astm, bs, din, euronorm, gost, jis, iso, sae, si, ts, uni, etc. (eg. Astm a 615 gr 40 or 60, bst 420 s, din 488, st 37.2 din 17100, nfa 35015 and 16, bs 4449 (gr 250 or 460), jis g 3112 (sd 30, 35, 40), si 739 s 400, si 739 s 400 w, feb 44 k, 3 sp/ps or 5 sp/ps gost 380 88, 35 gs or 25 g2s, gost 5781-82, etc) Other grades available according to customer's request
Supplier: Shampoo, soap, toothpaste, shaving razor, hand body lotion, household cleaning products, coffee beans, instant coffee, coffee mix, tea, chocco, biscuits, wafer, cookies, milk, candy, canned food
Services: Buying & sourcing agent
The Incinerated scrap or E46, is the by-product derived from the reprocessing of incinerated domestic waste. After the combustion process, the furnace output (IBA Incinerator bottom ash) is firstly washed, magnetically separated and screened to separate any no ferrous material. At a visual inspection, the material is fragmentized, with iron and steel parts, resulting partly cut or in shredded form. The stock appears heterogeneous and contains all kind of cut or dismantled steel parts such as sheets, bars, frames, wires, bolts and other iron/steel household residues. The incinerated scrap is eventually oxidized, due to the thermal and cooling treatments, that the material has been submitted to. The burnt scrap also contains minor slag parts, ash and iron oxide, due to the recovery process. Such components are inherent and adhere to the scrap surface. The total impurities, can be sorted, but not fully removed. The consignment does not contain any type of arms, ammunition, mines, shells, cartridges, radioactive contaminated, or any other explosive material in any form either used or otherwise. The collected stock, is stored in open air, on cemented flooring. It can be loaded loose in 20â?? heavy duty container. Please feel free to contact us for further details.
We offer a wide plethora of Zinc in many forms including LME registered and non registered Special High Grade Ingots and Jumbos, cathodes, dust, foil, granules, powder, pieces, anodize activated powder, shot, and a mossy form. Zinc is a bluish-white, lustrous metal. It is brittle at ambient temperatures but is malleable at 100 to 150°C. It is a reasonable conductor of electricity, and burns in air at high red heat with evolution of white clouds of the oxide. Plating thin layers of zinc on to iron or steel is known as galvanizing and helps to protect the iron from corrosion.
We are able to supply Tin in many forms including LME registered and non registered, ingots, slabs, bars, foil, granules, powder, anodized activated powder, shot, wire, sticks, ingots, and “mossy tin”. Tin is a silvery-white metal, is malleable, somewhat ductile, and has a highly crystalline structure. The element has two colours, with a cubic structure which changes at allotropic forms. On warming it is grey, the ordinary form of the metal. When Tin is cooled below 13.2°C, it changes slowly from white to grey or tetragonal structure. This change is affected by impurities such as Aluminium and Zinc, and can be prevented by small additions of Antimony or Bismuth.