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it's 2013 garage sale season!...

jakemac

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Joined
May 21, 2013
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9,035
Location
New England
Me too! I've still got my stage pin splitter, and my gam chek tool in my bag. I've got a case of Union stage pins in my gig box, just waiting for the next time I'm drafted to work at some tiny community theatre, where I spend most of my call time fixing gear.... been a long time though, and likely to be longer still. I just can't afford theatre anymore.

(still wrap up all my cords with an over and under "video wrap" too...)
(and I've got trick line ties on all my cords and air hoses)
(and most of them have color coded tape on them for length...)
(and half the stuff in my house has my name on it in sharpie, or written on board tape)

zuk

I've got a box of 3 pin plugs somewhere in storage. All my cords are "trained" to coil to my arms length. And I finally just traded out my trick line ties for velcro wraps after 20yrs. Never had a Gam Chek, just waited for sparks :lol:. As for splitting pins, I just used my Gerber (I have the thumb scars to prove it ;)).

Welcome brother ! :thumbup:
 
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jeffmoss26

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May 25, 2011
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Cleveland, Ohio
I always liked tie line better than Velcro. I had to replace the Velcro ties at least once a year on mic cables and extension cords that got daily use.
 

WNYflyer

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Joined
Sep 13, 2009
Messages
2,115
Location
Lockport, NY
Picked up my first real tool box today from CL. Paid $160, so it seemed like a pretty good deal. I also stopped at Lowes to pick up some socket organizers. I'll still need some drawer liners and a top mat.
Susposedly, the top box is Proto and the bottom is Snap On. It's missing the bottom door, but that's alright with me.


Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I747 using Tapatalk 2

Nice pick-up soloz2. I bet those boxes are well built. Did you pick them up off of the Rochester NY Craigslist? I thought I saw that box on there. If so it looks like the guy refurbishes box from what I can tell. For the price looks like you did well. Enjoy.
 

zuk123

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Mar 25, 2012
Messages
957
Location
Houston TX via Chicago, Phoenix, LA, and San Diego
soloz2- you can get pretty good drawer liner from HD-- look by the appliances for the rolls (it's the shelf liner, not the stuff specifically for toolboxes). Cheap yoga mats work too, and the sears outlet by me has a mat that goes under exercise equipment that is black, heavy, and dense if the yoga mat is too flimsy. Others here have used other materials too.

great find by the way!

zuk
 

Duct Tape Man

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Joined
Jul 13, 2013
Messages
994
Location
Shenandoah Valley, VA
Hit the flea market today after church, saved some goodies.

First pic are the good tools - Craftsman 7-oz finishing claw hammer in new condition (surface rust on head from basement storage), 5 Plomb sockets, 4 Proto LA sockets, and 1 Craftsman deep socket, and a Proto Phillips-head screwdriver. All for $10

Other three pics were all FREE stuff I snagged out of one gent's free bins. Includes:

"skini-dip" metal polishing kit, brick trowel, two plastic flashlights, set of 4 antique wood caster wheels, new space-age space blanket, kitchen sink hose sprayer, muffler bracket, old vintage prop-up bracket of some sort, some door hinge accessories, a cheap timing light, muffler "bandage", a "CD Stomper" whatever that is, and a couple other odds and ends. Nothing beats free!
 

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zuk123

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Mar 25, 2012
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Houston TX via Chicago, Phoenix, LA, and San Diego
Jakemac- just say no to the velcro! Trick line works and lasts so much better. The velcro picks up every bit of sawdust, every random thread, every metal sliver, folds against itself, etc. The only place I use the velcro is on cords that won't lay on the floor, like computer stuff (or cat5 which could be damaged by the tie line, or maybe mic line.) Of course, then you need to decide if you put the tie at the male or female end of all your cords........

And yeah, I still carry my gerber in preference to a leatherman, but I won't use it as pliers without wearing gloves :) Pinch me once shame on me, pinch me twice--I guess I must be using a Gerber.

Back on topic! I got this last week at a semi-permanent yard sale, $5. I've been looking for a pellet or bb pistol, and this spring powered one is the first I've seen. I'd much prefer a break action pump, but this might help keep the cats from sh!tting in my daughter's sandbox. On the other hand, it's worth $20 on ebay, so that would put me closer to a pump action, if I could find one.

Good hunting all!

zuk
 

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zuk123

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Houston TX via Chicago, Phoenix, LA, and San Diego
Duct Tape Man- the cd stomper works with sheets of labels to align it on your homemade CDs. Not much used anymore. My latest laptop doesn't even have a CD slot...

I've seen some cool online projects to add leds to the old style lantern flashlights, and you are right, nothing beats free!


zuk
 

jakemac

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May 21, 2013
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Location
New England
Jakemac- just say no to the velcro! Trick line works and lasts so much better. The velcro picks up every bit of sawdust, every random thread, every metal sliver, folds against itself, etc. The only place I use the velcro is on cords that won't lay on the floor, like computer stuff (or cat5 which could be damaged by the tie line, or maybe mic line.) Of course, then you need to decide if you put the tie at the male or female end of all your cords........

And yeah, I still carry my gerber in preference to a leatherman, but I won't use it as pliers without wearing gloves :) Pinch me once shame on me, pinch me twice--I guess I must be using a Gerber.


Velcro - I'm using the GB brand Grip Strip (which may be discontinued) it's more like micro velcro and doesn't pick up as much debris.

Gerber - My multi was a Leatherman. I didn't have the Gerber multi-tool, I used the Gerber side-lock knife for opening one handed (useful more than once unloading in alleys in the middle of the night). I gave it up in favor of a Sheffield folding box cutter when I got a "real job" as a shipper/buyer at a hardware store.

M/F end - the tie always goes on the male end, so it isn't in your way when you're working at the female end of the cord/hose.
 

Provincial

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Sep 21, 2011
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6,855
Location
Near Salem, OR
All the talk of extension cords reminded me that I picked up one at a garage sale a couple of months ago. It is 10/3 wire, still had the factory male plug on one end, with a broken female receptacle on the other end of 100 feet!!! And I paid $10.00 for it. :beer:

My wife thought I paid too much! :dunno:
 

jakemac

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May 21, 2013
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9,035
Location
New England
10/3 @ 100' ? - That must weigh a ton to move around. I used to drag generator leads around. I'd hate to have that in my shop. After years of coiling 100-150 foot 12/3 cables, I refuse to have anything in my shop longer than 50'.

$10 ? - good job :thumbup:
 

Mohawk Dave

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Oct 7, 2012
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5,068
Location
SoCal
off CL today for $50. Dayton 6" VS on Baldor Stand. Needs good cleaning.
 

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Mohawk Dave

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Oh yea...and a Morgan Chicago for 5 bucks. Excellent condition. I don't think dude knew what he had.
 

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SackOHammers

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Joined
May 28, 2013
Messages
186
Location
Blaine, WA
This is an alcohol torch. I just sold one the other day out of our miscellaneous bin that was in the box still.

Here is a 1936 flyer I found on eBay with one.


I've been waiting to see if anyone knew what kind of torch that was. I have one, too. But there wasn't any marking to go by to look for info on it. The fellow I got mine from had two of them and crushed the cylinders on one trying to open it. He said that some sort of fluid came out but didn't know what it was. So it sounds like it takes stove alcohol. That's one question on my mind solved and two left: Do both cylinders fill with alcohol? And who lights theirs first? :lol:
 

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zkling

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Jan 23, 2007
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I will PM you an instruction sheet. I think..... I may need your email address.
 

msgtsmithret

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Joined
May 5, 2013
Messages
409
Location
Raleigh NC
Here are a few finds from the thrift store today. I love to hit this place once in a while because they have this large plastic tub they just throw all the tools in. I have to dig thru it each time and it's like a kid opening a present!
 

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zkling

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Jan 23, 2007
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Mohawk Dave seems to have a nose for cheap boxes. :lol_hitti They appear to gravitate towards him. :headscrat
 

bluebolt

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Dec 28, 2008
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5,434
Location
Benton LA
Nice scores everybody! I was in New Orleans from Thursday to Sunday afternoon so no sales for me this week.
 

SackOHammers

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May 28, 2013
Messages
186
Location
Blaine, WA
I have mixed feelings about some of the stuff I found this weekend. Most of them wanted insane prices on everything. Here's Sat. finds:
Oak file box $1. Clump of 4 C Clamps $3. 2 monkey wrenches $1. RCA repairman box (sweet) $10. Soviet military oil tin $1. Mint 1950's gas mask bag to replace my pr-WWII lunch gas mask bag that's falling apart $3. 40" bed no name wood lathe made by mystical communists in a far away land, $30. And an old lunchbox full of rebuild tools for $6.
I didn't find my favorite thing, the box of mystery junk to take home and pick through...until Sunday. An old lady had just set up a yard sale and had two tackle boxes for $1 ea. It was the Wizard box that caught my attention. And the Craftsman box partly hidden under a table. Very heavy and full of stuff. She told me it was her first tool box and let it go for $2. Nice old lady. Kind old lady.
Got them home and went through the tackle boxes first. From a receipts, it looks like they were last used in the early 60's. Everything was melted together inside of them for some reason and not from heat, more like a chemical reaction. So I ended up tossing the contents after saving a couple of Lbs of lead out of them.
Then it was on to the C-man box.I was giddy with excitement. Very beat up on the outside. Pried it open and started picking at the stuff in the top tray. Badly broken car parts and broken tool parts. Same thing in the bottom of the box, only mixed in with cigarette butts from a bygone era. And dirt. Even the dirt is dirty. The only thing that resembles a tool out of it is an old Andree wrench. I don't think the box is even salvageable, not even the tray. Pure garbage. I've got a 20 lb box of anti climax to haul to the dump.
On the other hand, it was only two bucks. For that its worth leaving out as as a "bait" box to see if some one steals it.:)
 

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Outlawmws

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Aug 9, 2011
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39,080
Location
The Badlands
Sack, nice finds and story!

The RCA box is worth something to the right person in the tube crowd.

That wood lathe appears to be identical to one I got off Freecycle, and re-gifted to a friend.

And ditto on saving the label off the red carry box.
 

zkling

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Jan 23, 2007
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16,939
Oak file box $1. Clump of 4 C Clamps $3. 2 monkey wrenches $1. RCA repairman box (sweet) $10.

Nice stuff Stack :thumbup: The clamps are nice for ~$1 each. :drool:

I'm pretty sure my grandfather has that same box or two. He was a repairman for RCA after he "graduated" from the war as he so puts it. He has a bunch of old RCA stuff, like the first remote and what not. I will have to email him a pic (if you don't mind) of the box you got, it looks real clean. Was there anything in it? Tubes or the like?
 

zkling

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Jan 23, 2007
Messages
16,939
Not just the emblem, but the hasps and handle as well. Wasn't one of the members looking for new hasps for a box he was refurbing last week ?

O.. as well as the tray. There was a guy looking for a tray a few days ago. I'm sure he would really appreciate it. Make that box an organ donor. :thumbup:
 

Flatintoone

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Aug 10, 2011
Messages
795
Location
West Bend, WI
Seriously. I have a fascination for old plants and facilities. I rarely get to indulge, but the attraction is there...

I used to work in a plant that was built more than 100 years before as a creamery. It was a cool place. I never got tired of looking at the old photos of the line. And we always ended up playing "What Year Was It?" with photos of the parking lot.
 
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