Recycling

Visit
our new Recycling Center
We
Recycle Your Old Computers/Components, Monitors, Printers
& Software!!!
Give
Us A Call Or Just Stop In And Drop It Off Today.
Computers everywhere!
A new generation of computers is born every 18 to 24
months. The rapid turnover in computer technology is
having a troubling side effect: each year millions of
computers come to the end of their useful life. A recent study
estimates that about 40 million computer systems become
obsolete in the U.S. annually. By 2010, about one billion PCs
will likely have become obsolete!
It’s estimated that three-quarters of all computers ever
purchased in the U.S. are currently stored in warehouses,
attics and office closets. Some are being recycled. Of those
computers that become obsolete, only 5-15% are recycled. The
rest are ending up in landfills or incinerators.
Why are used computers a potential problem for businesses
& institutions?
Businesses and institutions need to be concerned about what
happens to their used computers because they contain toxic
metals which may make them subject to full hazardous waste
regulation if landfilled or incinerated. However, the good
news is that these same computers are subject to reduced
hazardous waste regulation if they are reused or recycled.
Why can used computers be regulated as hazardous waste?
Hazardous waste toxicity characteristics are defined by a
common laboratory test known as the toxicity characteristics
leaching procedure, or TCLP, and by regulatory levels for 39
chemicals, including 8 metals. Computer monitors, central
processing units (CPUs), keyboards and printers all have
printed circuit boards that contain metals and likely exceed
toxicity characteristic levels. In addition, lead in the
monitor’s cathode ray tube (CRT) generally causes it to
exceed the toxicity characteristic level for lead. (Lead
usually makes up about 4-8 lbs of the total weight of the
monitor.)
Hazardous waste regulations may prohibit businesses and
institutions from disposing of waste computers in solid waste
landfills and incinerators if they exceed toxicity
characteristic levels. If computer components are burned or
landfilled, the heavy metals in them can be released to the
environment and threaten human health and the environment.
Computers are know to contain beryllium, cadmium, chromium,
gold, lithium, lead, mercury, nickel, silver, and zinc.
What are the toxic and hazardous materials in your
computer?
- Lead, cadmium and other metals from cathode ray tubes
found in monitors and terminals
- Chromium, lead, beryllium, mercury, cadmium, nickel,
zinc, silver and gold from printed circuit boards found in
all components
- Nickel, cadmium, lithium, mercury and lead from
batteries found in CPUs, laptops & portable printers
- Mercury from relays and switches found in CPUs, monitors
and terminals. Mercury may trip the TCLP from laptop
LCDs.
eCycling
Product reuse and resale – testing
and/or remarketing of electronic products and components.
End-of-life equipment recycling –
recycling of personal computers, monitors, servers, storage
devices, peripherals, circuit boards, chips and other computer
components, consumer electronics, copiers, phones, fax
machines and much more.
Certified data destruction – as
part of our recycling services, we can verify the complete
destruction of all sensitive or proprietary files,
applications and other data from computers, servers and
storage devices.
120
S. Antrim Way
GREENCASTLE, PA 17225
Located
in the lower level of the Antrim Way Plaza
Phone: (717) 593-9855
EMAIL:
contactus@thepcrepairstore.com