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Old CRT computer enthusiast [x86VileR] recently tracked down an IBM 5153 monitor for which he had been searching several years. Unfortunately shipping a heavy glass CRT isn’t easy. In fact, i… ...
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TVs and monitors were a major influence on late 20th century home entertainment and business culture, but how do CRT screens work?
Recycling CRT glass is labor intensive, and it’s hard to recycle CRT glass into anything other than glass for new CRTs. That market has collapsed, though, because no one makes new CRTs anymore.
Recovered CRT glass had traditionally been used in the creation of new CRT displays, but the end-use markets for CRT glass have decreased considerably. To encourage the development of new uses for CRT ...
Because old-style televisions and monitors have a Cathode Ray Tube (CRT), which has glass full of toxic lead. The goal is to keep it out of our landfills. But now it will end up there after all.
Iowa’s attorney general sued the now-defunct company Recycletronics in January for storing 4.6 million pounds of leaded CRT glass, along with other e-waste, across eight facilities in two states.
An electronics and a recycling trade group are looking for ways to reuse recycled cathode ray tube (CRT) glass from computer monitors and television sets, with a US$10,000 prize for the best proposal.
A report from Robert Swett, receiver and now chief restructuring officer in the Creative Recycling Systems bankruptcy case, reveals that there are three potential buyers for the e-recycler, as the ...
But the CRT glass market, both in the U.S. and abroad, has since evaporated, and recycling companies that once could get paid a modest sum for each CRT now find themselves paying between $200 and ...
Kuusakoski Recycling US, a division of Finland-based Kuusakoski Recycling, says since opening its Peoria, Ill., cathode ray tube (CRT) glass crushing plant in November 2013 it has received and ...
Governor Terry McAuliffe announced Friday that Nulife Glass will invest $5.9 million to establish its first Virginia operation in the City of Bristol. A Manchester, England-based company, Nulife ...
An electronics and a recycling trade group are looking for ways to reuse recycled cathode ray tube (CRT) glass from computer monitors and television sets, with a US$10,000 prize for the best proposal.
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