What goes where

=Ribbon Cable= Home for all flat IDE and SCSI type cables. On occasion they will be attached to a steel faceplate held on by nuts. The nut driver should be used to remove the faceplate so that the ribbon cable can be placed in the bin.

=Plastic= Check all plastic for metal clips, screws, and locks before placing plastic in this bin.

=Colored wire= This is where the multicolored wire clipped from the power supply goes. This wire is sorted for its light insulation to copper ratio, not for its color, so remember that black, white, and gray are also colors. All "skinny" wire goes here.

=Heavy Insulated Wire= Thick heavy cords like those found on keyboards, mice, power cords, and the like go in here. This is the place for cords that are thickly insulated, way more plastic than wire.

=Motor Bin= Here is where CDROM drives, *Floppy drives, and power supplies come to rest. Power supplies include "wall warts" as well as the ones found inside computers. In either case, the procedure is the same. Clip the wires off of the power supply and put that wire into the colored wire bin. Place the unopened power supply in the motor bin.

=Printed Circuit Board= Placing things here is tricky, things must be checked before going in. A motherboard must have the processor and battery removed before placing it in the bin. A daughter board must have the steel faceplate removed and should have the gold contacts or fingers cut off before coming to rest in the Circuit board bin. If it does not, place it in daughterboard pre-op, or remove the faceplate and cut the fingers off.

=Steel= Computer Case steel goes here. This is the white postal tub that is armored with aluminum plates. Very Mad Max. This cart has wheels, but it is designed to roll on smooth, clean, unobstructed cement. It is important to note that the recycling floor and the parking lot outside are none of these things. When this bin becomes full, it needs to be rolled outside and tossed by hand into the forty yard drop box in the parking lot. Gloves are recommended as the inside edges of case steel are usually unfinished and brutally sharp. If today is Friday or Saturday, you will need to make it clear to all volunteers to fill the back of the bin as the front will almost certainly be full at this point in the week. There are wooden stairs that you can safely climb to check the level of this bin or add things to it. If the Mad Max cart is too full, and it will get this way often without supervision, it is highly recommended that you empty it by hand from where it sits until the level of steel is low enough to allow it to be rolled outside safely.