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  1. Galvabar vs. Epoxy-Coated Rebar: Which is Better for Coastal Infrastructure?

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    Coastal infrastructure must prioritize one overarching hazard that other infrastructural environments don’t: extreme corrosion. When bridges, overpasses, and utility installations are along the coast, they face continuous exposure to salty sea air, highly alkaline soils to the north and acidic soils to the south, and even direct seawater. Construction teams don’t just need advanced processes for tackling corrosion and building long-lasting infrastructure; they need materials that can handle coastal corrosion and salts.

    Both hot-dip galvanized rebar, also known as galvabar, and epoxy-coated rebar can resist different types of environmental decay, but galvabar offers superior durability and performance for coastal infrastructure. With this guide, you can compare the different attributes of Galvabar vs. epoxy-coated rebar to order your inventory and support your customers’ needs with confidence.

    Galvabar Overview

    Galvanized rebar is hot-dipped galvanized metal that is ASTM A1094-compliant and easy to work with in a wide range of applications.

    Process

    Manufacturers produce galvabar by hot-dipping steel rebar into zinc, giving it a seamless protective coating that can resist corrosion. Galvabar fabricators apply the coating with a Continuous Galvanizing Line (CGL) before forming and bending (unlike traditional hot-dipped galvanized rebar), which provides better protection without brittle coatings, cracks, or peeling.

    Benefits

    Galvabar offers the construction and infrastructure industry many advantages for coastal projects. Because Galvabar coating adheres better to the material surface, the bar is more flexible and can bend without flaking. This saves time and reduces bottlenecks because companies can order pre-galvanized rebar and bend or shape it based on unique project demands without having to send it back for additional processing. The high-purity zinc coating of galvabar’s CGL process is thinner and more uniform, ensuring a more consistent product.

    The primary benefit of galvabar is its corrosion resistance. The hot-dip zinc coating creates a solid protective layer against moisture, salt spray, and humidity, mitigating the risk of rust and helping structures stay strong with less maintenance. The layer of protection is sacrificial or “self-healing,” meaning scratches won’t make the underlying metal vulnerable to rust and corrosion. The material bonds well to concrete and performs well in all installation conditions.

    Applications

    Galvabar is well-suited to these infrastructural applications:

    • Cable hooks in railway roadbed cable troughs
    • Railways
    • Highways
    • Subways
    • Bridge deck installations
    • Docks
    • Jetties
    • Foundations

    Epoxy-Coated Rebar Overview

    Epoxy-coated rebar also offers corrosion protection. However, the coating can fail, leading to corrosion developing at the failure point and quickly damaging the metal under the remaining coating.

    Process

    Fabricators can apply fusion-bonded epoxy coatings through a simple process. First, the rebar undergoes surface preparation, such as cleaning. Fabricators also pre-bend and form the rebar before the coating process occurs. Next, fabricators heat the surface, apply the powder, and cure it. Some processes apply epoxy coating by painting, applying layers that dry in place on the rebar surface.

    Benefits

    Epoxy-coated rebar offers significant corrosion resistance. The epoxy coating protects the metal underneath from strong chemicals, especially heavy pollutants and industrial chemicals. While the coating can scratch or crack during handling and post-coating forming, it is possible to repair the coating. Epoxy-coated rebar also has a smaller initial price than galvabar, making it a more budget-friendly option.

    The green epoxy coating makes it easy to inspect the surface of the rebar for damage. If you need a cost-effective option for moisture-rich climates and coastal settings, experienced crews can make long-lasting structures with epoxy-coated rebar.

    Applications

    Some of the applications for epoxy-coated rebar are:

    • Water treatment facilities
    • Parking garages
    • Marine and coastal installations
    • Repairing existing coastal structures

    Contact Adelphia Metals to Learn More

    Galvabar is the superior choice for most coastal infrastructure projects, and getting the right rebar delivered to your build sites is critical for long-term infrastructural success. Adelphia Metals is a trusted rebar distributor. We source high-quality rebar from trusted fabricators to construction companies, rebar finishing companies, concrete precasters, and more based on their unique project needs, and we can meet requirements for volume size, lead times, and specialty features so you can support all downstream demand.

    We excel in fast, reliable distribution, so you can turn to Adelphia Metals when you have tight timelines or run out of steel on your jobsite. Contact us today to tell us what you’re looking for or request a quote to start your order.

  2. How (and Why) to Keep Up with the Price of Scrap Metal

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    Like the stock market, groceries, and other commodities with prices that change often, the price of scrap metal fluctuates too. It’s not always possible to predict the timing or degree of change because prices are based on many factors that interact with each other. Often the best choice is to keep track of daily prices and note how they’re trending in your area and nationally.

    One way to stay on top of changing prices is to track with an online price update tool or app. Here we’ll look at what these tools are, the things that influence scrap metal prices, and how that impacts the goods and materials you buy for your business.

    What is a Scrap Metal Price Updator?

    A live scrap updater is a website or app with a real-time feed of pricing data. It lists current scrap metal market prices and updates them automatically, often every few seconds or minutes, based on commodity market data. It may be focused on average prices in the US as a whole, or by region. 

    Some updaters include prices by type of metal broadly (e.g., steel), others break the data down into subcategories (e.g., carbon steel and heavy melting steel (HMS), shredded steel, turning scrap, sheet scrap). Another common feature is icons or graphs that illustrate if the price is trending higher or lower over time. 

    How it works:

    While features and details vary from site to site, most scrap metal price updaters share these characteristics:

    1. Data Source: Pulls pricing from steel and scrap metal exchanges (e.g., AMM/Fastmarkets, LME, regional scrap yards).
    2. Automatic Refresh: Feed updates in real- or near-real-time, and is often embedded in a website dashboard or internal ERP system.
    3. Integration with Inventory & Orders: Some automatically update sales quotes, inventory valuations, or supplier cost sheets.

    What influences scrap metal prices?

    It’s important to remember scrap metal prices can vary from region to region, and even within the same locality or from scrap yard to scrap yard. With that understood, the following interconnected factors combine to exert the largest influence on prices:

    • Industry demand. When the industries that use specific types of metal demand more of it, prices for that metal go up.
    • Proximity and transportation. This includes how close suppliers are to steel processing facilities, transportation hubs/infrastructure, and the price of fuel. In other words, how much it costs to get the scrap where it needs to go.
    • Condition and quality. Newer scrap that’s in larger pieces, non-corroded, uncoated, and otherwise easier to process scrap may command a higher price.
    • Current supply levels and intake quantities. How much of a particular metal buyers and manufacturers have on hand, and how much sellers bring them, compared to current demand. 
    • The economy in general. In addition to the stock and commodities markets, everything from the job statistics to tariff policies to global geopolitical events can have an effect on the larger economy.

    Spotlight on scrap steel and rebar

    If you’re in an industry, such as construction or infrastructure, that relies on products made out of scrap metal, knowing current prices can give you a clue about the price you might pay for your next order. Steel is especially important in this context.

    Domestic rebar is made from up to 97% recycled steel. Scraps are melted, refined, cast into billets, rolled, deformed, and finally, cut to length. And generally, prices for carbon steel, heavy melting steel (HMS), and low-alloy steel scrap are directly related to rebar prices. Domestic rebar up to 97% recycled (from domestic scrap).

    For rebar and other steel products, a price updating tool is used to:

    • Track fluctuating scrap prices. Since scrap metal is a major raw material in steel production, changes directly impact rebar costs.
    • Help suppliers adjust quotes. Steel mills, fabricators, and distributors may adjust their selling price based on scrap movements.
    • Give buyers transparency. Contractors or purchasing managers can time their purchases for when raw material costs are more favorable.

    For example, if the live scrap updater shows that shredded ferrous scrap prices jumped $25/ton today, a rebar supplier may anticipate higher mill pricing in the coming weeks and adjust bids accordingly.

    If you’re in construction, infrastructure, metal fabrication, a buyer for retail building or home centers, or in other industries where steel rebar is used, keeping an eye on scrap steel prices can help you plan and budget for materials and anticipate changing rebar prices. It can also inform decisions you make about pricing the products and services you supply to your own customers.

    Trust Adelphia Metals for Your Concrete Reinforcement Needs

    At Adelphia Metals, we think informed customers make better decisions, so we do our best to share useful resources like our market update reports, scrap metal price updater, and blog.  

    Adelphia Metals is a national leader in the concrete reinforcement industry, and we provide high-quality rebar products to customers from over 50 distribution points across the US. Our product line includes black rebar, steel remesh, fiberglass rebar, epoxy-coated rebar, ChromX (MMFX), coiled/spooled rebar, and GalvaBar. We also supply fabricated rebar, which we can cut and bend to your specifications.  

    Contact us with questions about our selection of rebar products or request a quote for your next project.

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