THE SECURE WAY TO RECYCLE YOUR COMPUTER ELECTRONICS
Back in 2006, I tried to answer that very question. This was the humble beginning Of Computer Crusher Recycling. It seemed to me that the only way to convince people that I would really destroy their hard drives was to be able to do it in front of them. In 2006 I found this to be a very challenging task! I began experimenting with all different types of contraptions. I remember buying a tree limb shredder off Craigslist and quickly destroyed it during the “experimental phase”. I really thought the log splitter would do the trick but could not find a safe way to pull it off. Over the years I have heard many people say, “I could just take them out behind the house with a .45 caliber and take care of them”. Somehow, I did not see that as a very popular option in the customers parking lot.
I really had two problems I was trying to solve. I needed to start with finding a way to destroy a hard drive period. I discovered that many of the drives were made from aircraft aluminum. It seemed that aluminum would be easy to pierce but I soon learned that was not the case. The only part of the hard drive that holds any type of data is the soft aluminum platters. The platters are easy to destroy but buried in the super strong aluminum case.
The other issue was finding a way to destroy the drives onsite so our customers could witness the destruction. I finally gave up on trying to destroy the entire hard drive and decided the only way to ensure destruction of the data was to remove the platters from the hard drives. This was a very tedious and time-consuming process, but I could not figure out a better option. So, for the first years of my business, I stood by the tailgate of my truck and took them apart one be one. There were at least 15 screws per drive and the whole operation would take about 5 minutes per drive. That is not a big deal when you only have 3 drives but impossible for 500!
I eventually came up with a plan. I bought a large metal shear that looked like one of those old school long armed paper cutters. The shear was mounted in the back of my Chevy truck. After 5 minutes of removing screws I would slice the platters up and start on the next one. I’ll never forget the first “real” customer that called and said they had 500 hard drives that needed to be destroyed onsite. I was terrified but determined. It was a large government agency. I arrived early and hauled all the drives out to my truck and began the days long process. In the late afternoon I saw a group of men in suits coming my way. They came out to see how the process worked and when I would be finished. I was not even a quarter of the way through. There is no telling what they were thinking to themselves as they observed my operation out in the parking lot. But I believe they sensed some honesty in my character and more likely pity! After observing what I had done one of them said, “If you want you can take those with you and bring them back on Monday”. I was so relieved! I had thought I would be in their parking lot for days.
The picture shown here is me and my dad sitting under a tree in my backyard fulfilling the promise I made to them that every drive would be destroyed. My father probably had as much pity on me as my customers and pitched in over the weekend to get it done. How amusing it can be to look back to your early days. We still destroy customers hard drives onsite. Although we have a little faster method. Our air powered press can destroy 3 hard drives in 60 seconds with a push of a button. We tackle projects of thousands of drives per day with certificates of documentation provided. I am also proud to say that the first customer who trusted me with 500 hard drives is still our customer today!
All Rights Reserved