View Single Post
  #18   Report Post  
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking
Michael A. Terrell Michael A. Terrell is offline
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 12,924
Default Oddest story of the year.


Rex wrote:

On Wednesday, December 25, 2013 8:18:27 PM UTC-6, Ignoramus5946 wrote:
On 2013-12-25, Jon Danniken wrote:

On 12/24/2013 08:19 AM, Ignoramus29935 wrote:


Last summer, someone dumped garbage in the back yard of my


warehouse. I am sure that whoever did it, did it to not pay for


disposal. It was non-food garbage,fortunately. As I was cleaning it, I


guessed that it belonged to a deceased person whose house probably was


cleaned up by their children.




Pretty boring so far.




As I was cleaning up, I noticed a bunch of solder spools and


accessories for making stained glass windows. (and lots of stained


glass pieces).




I put up that stuff on ebay as one lot and it sold yesterday for


$150.




Well you know what they say, one man's trash is another mans treasure.


Good job Ig. I think the "luck" here is that Iggy can recognize value that others don't see. Almost everything has a value to someone else, if you can identify the thing(s) properly.
I bought a pallet of "junk" at an online auction a few weeks ago. I bid on it mostly because it had a bunch of 5C collets. they were gold-colored so I assumed they were those plated SB collets. Plus there were some toolholders and other stuff. I knew I had overbid it at $130. Especially when I got it home and found all the collets had been machined.
Turned out they are brass 5C emergency collets. So far I have sold $700 worth of them and still have a third of them left. There were also a couple of shaper toolholders, worth the price of the pallet by themselves. A couple of years ago I would not have recognized them for shaper tools.
Similarly, Mom has an ugly tea set made of amber glass. She couldn't sell them at a garage sale. I did some quick research and found people collect that stuff, and will pay hundreds for her complete set.

the secret to making silk purses is finding someone who values sow's ears. These days that is much easier.



I worked part time t a TV shop while in Jr. High. They owner gave me
the B&W trade ins, and delivered them to my house. I would clean them
up a little, and sell them to the kids at school. I made a lot more
from selling used TVs than from repairing them for customers. That was
almost 50 years ago.


--
Anyone wanting to run for any political office in the US should have to
have a DD214, and a honorable discharge.