View Single Post
  #15   Report Post  
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking
Martin Eastburn Martin Eastburn is offline
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2,013
Default hiring someone to sell equipment

I'd suspect the prices are different across the US.
East and maybe gulf is scrapping Ships and containers.

Dallas is another issue. Tyler another issue. Tyler used
to get all of the iron pipe from Dallas/area. Don't know what
they produce from now.

Martin

On 12/26/2015 12:05 PM, Larry Jaques wrote:
On Sat, 26 Dec 2015 11:37:34 -0600, Ignoramus29630
wrote:

On 2015-12-25, Larry Jaques wrote:
On Thu, 24 Dec 2015 12:07:24 -0600, Ignoramus7100
wrote:

On 2015-12-24, Tom Gardner wrote:
A year after selling the body of production equipment I'm still left
with presses, machine tools, welding equipment, office equipment,
forklifts and tons of other stuff. There will be a state boulevard I
would like to just hire a person to advertise, meet with buyers and sell
the stuff for a reasonable return. What would be the best way to find
somebody and what would be a good way to compensate him?

You can sell everything in an auction.

You certainly can. I've seen whole towns and girls' -virginity- sold
on eBay, for a taste of the gamut. g


Call Cincinnati Industrial Auctioneers.

That's probably not a bad idea. Auctioneers can jack up the action so
idiots are bidding against each other enough to pay for the auction
fees, and get him a better price than a "help me out" ad.


Even if not, auctioneers will help get a more or less fair price where
a reseller can buy and still make some money resellin on ebay.

Scrap metal is worth nothing nowadays and expect to get almost nothing
for scrap machinery, or even pay for removal.

Gawd, scrap iron is back down to $15/T? It's hardly worth the gas.
https://rockawayrecycling.com/scrap-metal-prices/


It is worth about 50-60/ton in chicago in a semi truck quantity.


That much? Wow, is someone remelting it near there?

--
Creativity is allowing yourself to make mistakes.
Art is knowing which ones to keep.
-- Scott Adams, 'The Dilbert Principle'