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He bypassed the heaps of aluminum siding and tangled copper wires. Instead, he headed toward the "heavy ferrous" section. He knew that was what he needed—medium carbon steel that was thick, machinable, and held its strength through the most brutal heat.

He found it near the back: a massive, used lathe bed from a defunct factory. It was scarred with decades of oil and work, but beneath the grime, the steel was solid. It was the kind of find that would cost a fortune brand new, but here, it was priced by the pound—a that made his business viable. The Art of the Inspect buy used metal

: Under a tarp, he spotted a cast iron Dutch oven . It was caked in rust, but Elias knew that once it was stripped and seasoned, it would outlast any modern non-stick pan by a century. The Cycle Continues BICAS Artist: Cathy Franklin He bypassed the heaps of aluminum siding and

His workshop, tucked away on the industrial edge of the city, was a graveyard of things people had forgotten. To most, it was a mess of jagged edges and orange decay. To Elias, it was a library. He was a professional seeker of used metal, a man who didn't just buy scrap—he bought potential. The Search for the Core He found it near the back: a massive,

One Tuesday, Elias stood in the center of , a sprawling yard where mountains of iron and steel reached for the gray sky. He wasn't there for the easy finds. He was looking for something specific: a heavy-duty industrial core for a client's custom forge.

: He found a pile of old pipes and wires. Most people didn't realize the cash hidden in their ceilings or behind their walls during a renovation.

He bypassed the heaps of aluminum siding and tangled copper wires. Instead, he headed toward the "heavy ferrous" section. He knew that was what he needed—medium carbon steel that was thick, machinable, and held its strength through the most brutal heat.

He found it near the back: a massive, used lathe bed from a defunct factory. It was scarred with decades of oil and work, but beneath the grime, the steel was solid. It was the kind of find that would cost a fortune brand new, but here, it was priced by the pound—a that made his business viable. The Art of the Inspect

: Under a tarp, he spotted a cast iron Dutch oven . It was caked in rust, but Elias knew that once it was stripped and seasoned, it would outlast any modern non-stick pan by a century. The Cycle Continues BICAS Artist: Cathy Franklin

His workshop, tucked away on the industrial edge of the city, was a graveyard of things people had forgotten. To most, it was a mess of jagged edges and orange decay. To Elias, it was a library. He was a professional seeker of used metal, a man who didn't just buy scrap—he bought potential. The Search for the Core

One Tuesday, Elias stood in the center of , a sprawling yard where mountains of iron and steel reached for the gray sky. He wasn't there for the easy finds. He was looking for something specific: a heavy-duty industrial core for a client's custom forge.

: He found a pile of old pipes and wires. Most people didn't realize the cash hidden in their ceilings or behind their walls during a renovation.