Some things really need to be left in the trash.
My parents owned a motorcycle shop and we had someone come in
with a blown out front tire on their motorcycle. They were
screaming about suing the shop until I looked at the bike and
saw this loser had taken the rock hard crap tire I had thrown
into the dumpster last week from my RD350LC and mounted it
wrong direction on his front rim.
He was asked to leave or be arrested. Then we had to resort to
cutting 1 or 2" of bead from each tire thrown out. (You guessed
it, tire recyclers would not pick up motorcycle tires for any
price, so they could only be thrown out.)
So, I can see someone damaging a product beyond use so the
business does not get sued for a product it never sold in the
first place.
Bart D. Hull
Tempe, Arizona
Check http://www.inficad.com/~bdhull/engine.html
for my Subaru Engine Conversion
Check
http://www.inficad.com/~bdhull/fuselage.html
for Tango II I'm building.
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Don Bruder wrote:
In article ,
" wrote:
wallster wrote:
I'm here to admit my addiction. If i'm driving along and i see a discarded
lawnmower or mechanical something, i have to stop and will most likely take
it. I just cant seem to pass up something that can be made to work again in
one way or another. Most of my tool carts have old wheels on them that i
found thrown away. I have also sold a couple of dozen lawnmowers over the
years that needed a little tlc to get them running. How many other people in
this newsgroup stop and pick up discarded stuff?
walt
http://www.nykeglawsucks.com
To alcohol! The cause of - and solution to - all of life's problems.
-Homer Simpson
we all probably do.. the best laugh i had was when i stopped by the rear
of a Sears Store and you could see the wheels of a new lawnmower
sticking up from the trash.. had to stop and checked it out... well the
wheels were plastic and broken (all four of them)..no problem... then i
looked at the gas tank, split open plastic.. the i looked at the control
cables, all pulled apart and the wires cut in several places... the
plstic top cover of the new mower was also pulled off the broke, the
heat of the engine had the fins on it broken off.... it either fell of
the top shelf in storeage or the manager got mad and went to it with a
maul.... a real no nothing.... but they threw it away... i could find
nothing good on that mower and just passed on that one, but it looked
brand new, still had the stickers from the store on it.....
That's another classic "dog in the manger" outfit.
"Boss, there's a chip on the floor model. How can we sell that?"
"Easy, we don't. Write it off, then take a hammer to it and toss it in
the dumpster."
The mower you found was deliberately mangled, specifically to stop
dumpster divers from pulling it out and fixing whatever minor problem it
might have had. The logic is *SOMETHING* like "If they can pull it out
of the dumpster, why would they spend any money in here?", which, to be
honest, does make a certain amount of sense, but only if you're such a
greedy prick that you'd try to put a price sticker on the dust-bunnies
at a going out of business sale.