Camston Wrather’s aggregation sites currently handle about 25 million pounds of material each year, a number the company aims to triple by 2024. | Courtesy of Camston Wrather[/caption]
Camston Wrather, a company with a unique process for extracting metals from printed circuit boards, announced it is planning to grow and expand aggressively across the U.S., after years of keeping a relatively low profile.
Based in the San Diego-area city of Carlsbad, Calif., Camston Wrather specializes in intermediate processing of printed circuit boards (PCBs), with its system producing a precious metals-rich fraction, a fraction with various other valuable metals, and a fraction of polymers that can be recycled.
The technology is a mechanical process that involves water, and it does not use high heat, pressure or acids, the company’s CEO, Dirk Wray, told E-Scrap News ahead of Camston Wrather’s official ribbon-cutting in April.
“We reuse everything and we have markets for everything,” he said. “We have no nasties here. That's what really makes us very unique."
[caption id="attachment_21307" align="aligncenter" width="2560"]
Camston Wrather’s aggregation sites currently handle about 25 million pounds of material each year, a number the company aims to triple by 2024. | Courtesy of Camston Wrather[/caption]
Camston Wrather, a company with a unique process for extracting metals from printed circuit boards, announced it is planning to grow and expand aggressively across the U.S., after years of keeping a relatively low profile.
Based in the San Diego-area city of Carlsbad, Calif., Camston Wrather specializes in intermediate processing of printed circuit boards (PCBs), with its system producing a precious metals-rich fraction, a fraction with various other valuable metals, and a fraction of polymers that can be recycled.
The technology is a mechanical process that involves water, and it does not use high heat, pressure or acids, the company’s CEO, Dirk Wray, told E-Scrap News ahead of Camston Wrather’s official ribbon-cutting in April.
“We reuse everything and we have markets for everything,” he said. “We have no nasties here. That's what really makes us very unique."
Camston Wrather’s aggregation sites currently handle about 25 million pounds of material each year, a number the company aims to triple by 2024. | Courtesy of Camston Wrather[/caption]
Camston Wrather, a company with a unique process for extracting metals from printed circuit boards, announced it is planning to grow and expand aggressively across the U.S., after years of keeping a relatively low profile.
Based in the San Diego-area city of Carlsbad, Calif., Camston Wrather specializes in intermediate processing of printed circuit boards (PCBs), with its system producing a precious metals-rich fraction, a fraction with various other valuable metals, and a fraction of polymers that can be recycled.
The technology is a mechanical process that involves water, and it does not use high heat, pressure or acids, the company’s CEO, Dirk Wray, told E-Scrap News ahead of Camston Wrather’s official ribbon-cutting in April.
“We reuse everything and we have markets for everything,” he said. “We have no nasties here. That's what really makes us very unique."
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