Lurch67
Well-known member
What is the value of this Vise?
http://philadelphia.craigslist.org/tls/4168157789.html
http://philadelphia.craigslist.org/tls/4168157789.html
Youre in the northeast where old iron is cheap and his price is skyhigh. Id go maybe $30 since it looks to be in pretty nice shape.
What is the value of this Vise?
http://philadelphia.craigslist.org/tls/4168157789.html
Not sure where you get this impression. I buy and sell a lot of tools, been to 4 auctions in the last 10 days and you never see a wilton sell for $30. Now I couldn't make money on it paying $110. but it is a fair price. It would sell quickly for me though.
Not sure where you get this impression. I buy and sell a lot of tools, been to 4 auctions in the last 10 days and you never see a wilton sell for $30. Now I couldn't make money on it paying $110. but it is a fair price. It would sell quickly for me though.
He also rates cast steel anvils pretty low in quality, (his words) when in fact they're rated at the top by blacksmiths & people use anvils on a regular basis. You can take his comments with a grain of salt.

A few years ago I would have only paid $60 for that. It seems that old vise prices have gone up and it is all of your faults. People now google their vise and realized it is worth something because of Garage Journal.
With that said, I would love to find a nice little Wilton, but really can't justify the usual prices. 
I saw that as soon as it was posted on CL. As much as I wanted to take the 20 min. ride to ****** it up I need another vise like I need another wife. If you are looking for a bullet and are local, go get it. It's a stellar price. If you are looking to flip I beg to differ.
I just sold this bullet for $152 on ebay. It was as virgin as you can get with a vintage/collectable vise. I completely tore it down, de-rusted, sanded, buffed, primed and painted. I was thinking it would go for about $200, but ebay is just as unstable as anywhere else these days.
IMO, if you want the vise to use grab it. You're not gonna find one (bullet) in that price range for months on CL. If you are looking to flip it move on. The profit margin isn't too great.

What is the value of this Vise?
http://philadelphia.craigslist.org/tls/4168157789.html

but it is a vise, not a split window corvette
. 5 days later and its still sitting, I dont call that a good or fair price, I call it overpriced and hoping for the misinformed as many here are. I buy/sell a few tools to support my auction habits since I attend 30-150 most years and SWMBO works off/on at one. My father also had a side business dealing in used industrial machinery and tools for 40 years so Id say I know a thing or three about tool prices. Ive got a pair of Wiltons here currently that I dont have $10 in combined, and given that I end up with a few that cheap consistently every year without even trying to buy vises, Id say they do go decently cheap upon occasion. Golden rule of vise buying, NO MORE than $0.50/lb unless the vise is over 100 lbs, then its $1/lb. With a quick repaint, Id price that ~$50 on craigs and hope it sells within a week. If you want to make decent money selling tools, you either need to sell big items ($1k+) or turn/burn a lot of lesser items within a few days.
Thanks for the kind remark, I will have to pass that along to the next farrier after I resurface his anvil. I'm sure they will enjoy the giggle.
FWIW, an anvil from forged steel is widely considered the best (hence the most expensive) anvil you can buy. I prefer a steel forging on top of an iron body personally and know many with similar opinions, its the way most were made until a few decades ago, theyre still relatively easy to resurface/repair, and its a good compromise between cost and performance. A cast steel anvil OTOH usually is a royal PITA to repair and since its just a ground casting, theyre cheaper to manufacture and softer than anything but a plain iron ASO. Sorry, but forging vs casting of the same material.....basic material science suggests forging will win every time.
5 days later and its still sitting, I dont call that a good or fair price, I call it overpriced and hoping for the misinformed as many here are. I buy/sell a few tools to support my auction habits since I attend 30-150 most years and SWMBO works off/on at one. My father also had a side business dealing in used industrial machinery and tools for 40 years so Id say I know a thing or three about tool prices. Ive got a pair of Wiltons here currently that I dont have $10 in combined, and given that I end up with a few that cheap consistently every year without even trying to buy vises, Id say they do go decently cheap upon occasion. Golden rule of vise buying, NO MORE than $0.50/lb unless the vise is over 100 lbs, then its $1/lb. With a quick repaint, Id price that ~$50 on craigs and hope it sells within a week. If you want to make decent money selling tools, you either need to sell big items ($1k+) or turn/burn a lot of lesser items within a few days.
Two things that I have never really understood the high prices on.
1.) Vises
2.) Anvils
They seem like such simple tools that not too many folks have a extreme need for.

A few years ago I would have only paid $60 for that. It seems that old vise prices have gone up and it is all of your faults. People now google their vise and realized it is worth something because of Garage Journal.
I understand why you would say not many folks don't had a big need for an anvil,,,,,,,,,,,but who the heck doesn't need a vise if they work on just about anything?![]()
. We get to post them up like zkling did with the guy selling the spray bombed bullet for $350. That thing has been on CL around here for probably a year if not longer.The first part of you reply couldn't be further from the truth. This is the first place I go to if I question about a particualr vise that I've never seen before. Still have yet to stump the experts here on GJ.5 days later and its still sitting, I dont call that a good or fair price, I call it overpriced and hoping for the misinformed as many here are. I buy/sell a few tools to support my auction habits since I attend 30-150 most years and SWMBO works off/on at one. My father also had a side business dealing in used industrial machinery and tools for 40 years so Id say I know a thing or three about tool prices. Ive got a pair of Wiltons here currently that I dont have $10 in combined, and given that I end up with a few that cheap consistently every year without even trying to buy vises, Id say they do go decently cheap upon occasion. Golden rule of vise buying, NO MORE than $0.50/lb unless the vise is over 100 lbs, then its $1/lb. With a quick repaint, Id price that ~$50 on craigs and hope it sells within a week. If you want to make decent money selling tools, you either need to sell big items ($1k+) or turn/burn a lot of lesser items within a few days.
A few years ago I would have only paid $60 for that. It seems that old vise prices have gone up and it is all of your faults. People now google their vise and realized it is worth something because of Garage Journal.
Those things must grow on trees there. Here in Oregon, that woulld have been sold in 15 minutes to someone who called and offered him $250 to beat someone out. I paid $425 for a almost new C3 and thought I stole it. I have paid $40 for Wilton Cadets in trashed condition without regret. You all sound spoiled
Greyson
Sorry, but I disagree, most people don't Google for prices, they search Eprey, and THAT is the driver for high prices. Many will not bother to look for the completed auctions to set what an items REALLY go for generally so many things get inflated against BIN hopeful asking prices.
SNIP
Vises and even more so, anvils have skyrocketed for a number of reasons, but having a lot of collectors snapping up all the deals leaves the guys that have a real need stuck with the higher priced leavings, unless they get lucky.
So true. so so so true.
I stopped once to ask randomly if they wanted to sell it I would like to purchase it off them. Give them my number. A few weeks later they called me and said they would take $$$$ (I forget the exact # but it was well over $500) 

I never said a thing about forged steel anvils. I referred to your remark in another thread about cast steel anvils being low in quality.
And BTW, the bodies on most of the older English anvils were wrought iron, not cast iron as you also remarked in that same thread.
As far as your $.50 a lb, for most vises that is about right though I don't usually weigh the vises, but Wiltons will command more so I will pay more. Perhaps your market place is different, meaning more supply = lower prices, but I have a steady market for good used vises and the bigger the better.
I also don't agree with Justanengineers assessment as he habitually under-prices nearly everything, probably two reasons; hes buying wholesale, and selling retail for quick turn around. Second hes in an area that has a LOT of resource, and a declining populating overall. certainly the blue collar population is declining, and that is a primary basis for tool sales. In bigger metro areas you have more hobbieists (and collectors) driving the prices, simply because there are more people, so prices are higher than where he lives.