Great finds guys. It seems to be slowing down quite a bit around here. Nice weekend, yet very few sales. $20 got me this lot. There are 40 stainless drawer pulls in the bag, the trimmer is like new, but needs a pull cord (I broke it). Ax is a plumb, Ryobi sander is new and USA, has a number of new sheet packs in the box. One sale advertised "tools tools and even more tools", it was anything but.
If I can just find a gas blower asap I'll be set for those darn leaves.
Nice, is that ratchet black oxide finish or is the chrome just that far gone?
You ****. How much did you pay for the battery charger? I have one similar to it.
Sounds like an old roll a bench, was the condition of the box that bad (rust paint, dents wise)? Sounds like it was repainted white, missing casters is a bit odd. Good score on the screwdrivers and wrenches though.
$10+$10+$20=$40![]()
The battery charger cost me $20. Spent a total of $60 bucks. The roll front box is actually complete, appears to never have been used. The casters are in one of the drawers, as is the handle I thought was missing. It has not been repainted, it is white. She's firm on $200 though, I'm considering it.

The battery charger cost me $20. Spent a total of $60 bucks. The roll front box is actually complete, appears to never have been used. The casters are in one of the drawers, as is the handle I thought was missing. It has not been repainted, it is white. She's firm on $200 though, I'm considering it.
I'm ~ 98% sure it has been repainted. Back when those were produced they didn't offer any other color but red. It may have been repainted well, but still repainted. That's not a terrible price for it, as long as there aren't any major issues (Ex. slide or rot issues). Good that the casters are there. You might want to flip the cover around to check it out before purchase. The cover handle is just a simple piece of sheet metal bent at 90 with two mounting holes.
BTW, It's a KRA300 from the 70's- early 80's. Called a rolla bench.
picked all this up the other day. i should be arrested for the price that i paid![]()

What gun is that? It looks like a smg with a wire stock.
Looks like it had a wood stock at one point. Hopefully its not a full auto SMG because that would require a lot of paperwork and money to be legal.
SATISTRACTION - you have a dilemma, and a piece of history, on your hands. That, my friend, is the remains of a Volkssturmgewehr, the final assault rifle that was developed in the final days of the Third Reich to supply a cheap automatic weapon to the people of Germany, who were for the most part, forced to be soldiers to defend the fatherland against the Allied onslaught. There were only about 10K made, and most are lost forever. That one, minus the stock which is missing on yours, was probably brought home in a GI's duffle bag after the war.
Here's the dilemma, though: IT IS ILLEGAL TO HAVE. You can get 10 years in prison for owning it, since it is an automatic weapon that is not registered with the NFA branch of BATFE. The window for registering new entries into the NFA database ended in 1986, so unless you have a registered weapon (and I don't think you do) you are in possession of both a priceless historical artifact, and a worthless prison sentence. What I would do if I were you, is talk to your sheriff about what you found and how you got it, and arrange to give it to them, with the understanding that it get donated to a licensed museum, to save it for historical purposes. The NRA museum in Fairfax, VA is a good one I'd recommend, there are quite a few interesting pieces in it that were donated in similar fashion. The museums can have them, YOU CAN'T. Make it happen ASAP before someone from a letter agency shows up at your doorstep with a set of cuffs and makes you go into a museum, a museum of convicts.
If the firing pin is removed and destroyed (or turned over to the sheriff), then it could be classified as an artifact and not a firearm.
That Stihl string trimmer is about $300. I know; I bought one new after I got sick of my darn Craftsman that refused to start.
Nice find. Parts are easy to get at your local Stihl dealer.
After the FM I called a CL ad and went to pick it up.

Looks like it had a wood stock at one point. Hopefully its not a full auto SMG because that would require a lot of paperwork and money to be legal.
To legally disable a gun the receiver has to be destroyed in a way tha makes it unable to be easily put back together. Barrels can be swapped. They would have to remove the guts of the rifle and fill the receiver with weld. Typically they are cut into 3 pieces with a torch.Unless it's not in firing condition, i.e. bar welded in barrel. And the stock kinda reminds me of ak style stocks but also looks possibly like a wire one. It does look awesome though.
ARGH! I was a little misstaken - the Volkssturmgewehr weapon that SATISTRACTION has is a semi-auto RIFLE, not a machinegun! However, there was a selective-fire variant, which is still illegal. Best bet for him is to do some more research, perhaps take it to a gun museum again, I don't know, but he'll have to find someone who can tell the difference between the semi-auto variety and the select-fire one. If it's select-fire, then what I said before about getting it gone ASAP still applies. However, if it's just semi-auto, he has a valuable piece of history there!
To legally disable a gun the receiver has to be destroyed in a way tha makes it unable to be easily put back together. Barrels can be swapped. They would have to remove the guts of the rifle and fill the receiver with weld. Typically they are cut into 3 pieces with a torch.
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$75 from CL. Was actually at an auction I couldn't make yesterday, but saw it last night on CL.
SATISTRACTION - you have a dilemma, and a piece of history, on your hands. That, my friend, is the remains of a Volkssturmgewehr, the final assault rifle that was developed in the final days of the Third Reich to supply a cheap automatic weapon to the people of Germany, who were for the most part, forced to be soldiers to defend the fatherland against the Allied onslaught. There were only about 10K made, and most are lost forever. That one, minus the stock which is missing on yours, was probably brought home in a GI's duffle bag after the war.
Here's the dilemma, though: IT IS ILLEGAL TO HAVE. You can get 10 years in prison for owning it, since it is an automatic weapon that is not registered with the NFA branch of BATFE. The window for registering new entries into the NFA database ended in 1986, so unless you have a registered weapon (and I don't think you do) you are in possession of both a priceless historical artifact, and a worthless prison sentence. What I would do if I were you, is talk to your sheriff about what you found and how you got it, and arrange to give it to them, with the understanding that it get donated to a licensed museum, to save it for historical purposes. The NRA museum in Fairfax, VA is a good one I'd recommend, there are quite a few interesting pieces in it that were donated in similar fashion. The museums can have them, YOU CAN'T. Make it happen ASAP before someone from a letter agency shows up at your doorstep with a set of cuffs and makes you go into a museum, a museum of convicts.

Good score! You were down in my neck of the woods - only about 5 miles away. I saw the auction and the CL ad but I was too busy pulling beans out of the field, glad someone on here got them.
More pictures of that axe please! Most people on this board are Plomb fans, I happen to be one of the few Plumb fans. It looks newer though, so I don't know.

M. Sgt, you're going to like that drawer layout!

Ask and you shall receive.I don't have access to my heavy grinder and cup brushes at the moment, but it should clean up well. If you have any info on it I'd be interested to hear.![]()
BTW, in my humble freaking opinion, the person who prices things at my local HFH store has lost their mind. To wit:
One nice old vise with a $150 price tag.
Now I want a store - any store - to make a profit but DAMN! They did get this for free.![]()
