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2020 Garage Sale Thread

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Provincial

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Opening up from the Virus here. There was a sale on Thursday that said tools. It turned out to be a couple of older ladies that had run a second hand store, but had to quit because of the lockdown. I only found one thing, a Walden Worcester 6020 5/8 hex spinner for $2.00. Detail of the markings is photo #1.

Friday I passed by a parking lot flea market that was unadvertised. I bought a "My Buddy" tackle box by Falls City with contents for $7.00. Included were a Walden Worcester 1/2 dr. ratchet that is unmarked, a 1/2 dr. sliding T-handle that appears to be an SK bar and Indestro head, a pair of Wiss A-12 tin snips, a 3/4" "Forged in USA" auto-kit combo that has no hole in the center of the web, and a set of DOE "Forged in USA wrenches, 3/8x7/16, 1//2x9/16, 19/32x11/16, and a 5/8x3/4. Thorsen includes a 2020 5/8 combo, 3/8 dr. sockets are 626JR 13/16 spark plug, 312x 3/8 6-pt., 322 11/16 12-pt., 1/2 dr. 613 9/16 deep 12-pt., and 532 1" 12-pt. Also a bunch of mixed Kobalt 1/2, 3/8, and 1/4 drive sockets, both standard and metric. There is also a 1/4" diameter "L" arm for turning sockets with a cross-hole. I put the Walden 6020 spinner in this group - Photo #2.

Photos #3 & #4 are the the tackle box, and Photo #5 is a close up of the contents.

I went to another sale just after this, but that is another story.
 

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Provincial

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I hit another sale on my way to our tree farm to brush hog tall grass. I had been to this place last Summer, so I didn't expect much. There was stuff laid out on the driveway and lawn like last Summer, and the sellers were standing in a line in front of the open shop door, so I passed it by thinking that nothing in there was for sale. As I passed, the oldest man said "everything in the shop is for sale" so I went in. Nothing had prices marked. I spotted a few wrenches and started a pile. There was a "Whitney" punch set on the bench, with the female dies missing, and the tin box looked like a Taiwan knock-off. I spotted the dies spilled out on the bench, and matched them up, making a complete set. When I asked about the punch, the man insisted on throwing in an Alltrade pop rivet set, all for $10.00.

I nosed around more, and found a group of digital ohm/volt meters on a shelf in the back. I asked if they worked, and he said they might need batteries, but all worked when they were left there. I added them to the pile and he gave me a combined price of $30.00 for the whole pile.

Everything but the meters are shown in Photo #1. The wrenches are:
P&C 2528 DBE 3/4x7/8
P&C 2812 DOE 5/16x3/8
New Britain (2 each) NDF 208 DBE 3/4x7/8 (two different patterns)
Williams Superrench NO. 87318 DBE 13/16x7/8
Van-Chrome 1023 13/32x1/2 DOE
Amber Handle (with trace of blue paint in one groove) Cotter Pin Puller
Eklind 5mm T-handle allen wrench
Proto 2.5mm T-handle allen wrench
Vlchek WBC 1214 DBE 3/8x7/16
Proto combos:
1208 1/4
1210 5/16
1211 11/32
6114 7/16 (two of them)
1216 1/2 Professional

Whitney-Jensen Junior punch set (complete with adjusting tool)
Alltrade pop rivet set

The rest of the photos are the VOM meters. All are Fluke brand. I had to put batteries in three of them, but they all work and seem to be accurate for DC and AC volts, ohms, and the one reads frequency perfectly. They are:
Model 36, clamp type
Model 7-600 automatic selection of volts or ohms
Model 115 True RMS
Model 77/BN

And I even got an extra black test lead!
 

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Outlawmws

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Its always nice to find a Whitney punch set with all the punches and dies!

Do the punches have the lathe cut grooves to catch the jaw, or the straight notches? The straight notch type are older and a stronger dies, less likely to break.
 

3baygarage

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Some of you guys are killing it lately.

Provincial, all those Fluke meters included for $30? Looks like you did quite well there.

BMW, heck of a score on the 1/4 Action set for $2.50!

Rickster, neat find on the 16” McKaig-Hatch.
 

Provincial

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Near Salem, OR
Outlaw, they are the straight cut notches.

3bay, yes, all for $30.00. I would have been happy spending $30.00 just for the other stuff.
 

duddly

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Aug 25, 2013
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596
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Southern MD


... Starrett plumb bob, ...

Is that a Starrett 87? The old mercury filled one (shake it to find out)? I have a special love for those due to family lore. I had a great, great...(well several of them) grandfather who was a personal friend of Henry Ford, borrowed tools, and well, didn't give them back. I think actually, he was given a bunch of tools from the old Ford Rouge River plant. As kids we had an old wooden tool stack with several drawers filled with tools marked Ford RR. When my father's health began failing I am told they were sold off as old tools at a yard sale sometime in the 90s. The only things that survived were the Starrett plumb bob that I was using to finish my basement, and the top of the wood stack (unmarked and now painted shabby chic white that my mother still has.
 

duddly

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Yes, the plumb bob is an 87 Starrett. My wifes grandfather worked at Rouge River at one point also. I don't know his name though.


That's awesome. My relative "wisely" turned down the chance to invest in Henry Ford's foolish venture, but later had a dealership. Here are pictures of the markings, "Ford RR 6002".

FYI, Brown and Sharpe also made a mercury filled plumb bob, but i think Starrett held the patent.
 

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LesserSon

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HAPPY FATHERS DAY 2020!

Back to Jake’s today. Apparently, the opiner’s conference was over, because it was all business today. Seemed to be 10 times the vendors, so I feel I did right spending 10 times the cash ($20). I noted that mask-wearing was below 10%, but continued to wear mine. Some people seem determined to “spike the curve.” I heard a good deal of bellyaching about when will the whole state go to “green?” I’ve noticed for years that most people fear artificial consequence (humiliation from being asked to put on a mask by a store clerk) more than natural consequence (contracting and dying of COVID19).

For my $20, I got an unmarked vise Bonney termed “standard” after the patent ran out. I don’t know who actually mfd it, but I like it anyway.
Six different pliers (Kraeuter gas, Utica 1033-6, Barcalo and Crescent slipjoints, Crafty adjustables, and something I don’t recognize).
Cornwell 1/2dr tee handle. 3 Ford script wrenches. Springer Separator Co wrench. Several hex-drive sockets. 4 Duro Chrome wrenches in an metal box with no divider and no paint or label (a blank canvas!).
5 old 1/2dr sockets: SO overstrike 19/32, 1927 SO 11/16, 1928 SO 3/4 (last two are struck with an “X”), Hinsdale 25/32, Blackhawk 8224 3/4 (also struck with the “X”).
A decent B&S 1128 DOE with sizes in USS. A Proto Los Angeles 1/2dr 5461 ext. Unopened pack of brass-plated 1” hinges (for future chestnut socket boxes). Irwin adjustable auger bit, a big fake Rigid-knockoff pipe wrench, and a pile of various wrenches.
A pouch of 1950s SO hex keys, missing 3/16,5/32,9/64,1/8 (but there’s a second 7/32). Pouch of french curves...when Mrs LS and I first looked at the house we live in, the previous owner (deceased) had left several oil paintings he had done hanging on the walls. None were titled, but immediately knew what the title was. It combined a stylized female **** with an abstraction of...French Curves. It can’t have had any other title. If it had included a bottle of Bordeaux and stemware, it would have been a true masterpiece.

SEEN BUT NOT BOUGHT:
Vintage magazine with a curvy lass (French?) on the cover, but what drew my attention was the article by Nikola Tesla. IIRC from documentaries, the weapon is a proposed death ray. For $4, I almost bit, but despite the alluring promise of the cover, I’ve been trying not to collect any more paper.
The complete-in-box Craftsman auger bits with their little blue bonnets were another temptation, but $30 just wasn’t my price. I’ve got coffee cans of auger bits, two of which retain their little bonnets.
 

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ssdave

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Farm estate auction today. Good luck is they started with the tools, and I was out of there in an hour or less. This guy had bought used tools at auctions or sales and then worn them out. And then stored them in a pole building open to the birds where they roosted over them. Not a choice sale. I bought 4 lots, for a total of $52.50 with buyers premium. Hard to see why, right?
 

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ssdave

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So, after the teaser post above, here's what sorted out of the $52.50 lot:

I went to the sale specifically to buy the blue handle craftsman speeder I had seen in one of the preview photo's. 5 quality USA made unused files still in the oiled paper and one used a bit on brass, the large drill bits are a good deal to throw in with my spares, there's most of a set of 1/4" craftsman -v- sockets and ignition wrenches not shown. Plus the ubiquitous craftsman that I'm always cursed with getting rid of. The rest of the stuff went into the scrap metal and the trash.
 

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47jlk

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Aug 25, 2014
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23
Only one stop this weekend, parking lot flea market find:

- Lufkin 10' white clad tape W9210
- SK 3/8" drive deep sockets
- SK 3/8" drive allen socket set, missing 3/16" and 3/8"
- Chamfer bit

Now to hunt down the missing pieces from the SK set . . .

JLK
 

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Outlawmws

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There is some suckage there Dave! Haven't seen a ratcheting speeder posted in a while!

And you never mentioned the Winchester Nippers! that's suckworthy also!
 
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LesserSon

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Couple surprises under the rust. The 18” pipe wrench turned out to be USA - nice. A blocky dog-bone of rust turned out to be large Plomb, eroded almost to anonymity. Some people just don’t care for their tools.

And this thing. When I picked it out of the mass, I thought from its light weight, it must be plastic. Then it clanked against a wrench. Aluminum alloy painted OD? But WHAT is it? Part of something larger, but how much larger? Part of a latch? Part of...dunno
 

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cbacres

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I hit another sale on my way to our tree farm to brush hog tall grass. I had been to this place last Summer, so I didn't expect much. There was stuff laid out on the driveway and lawn like last Summer, and the sellers were standing in a line in front of the open shop door, so I passed it by thinking that nothing in there was for sale. As I passed, the oldest man said "everything in the shop is for sale" so I went in. Nothing had prices marked. I spotted a few wrenches and started a pile. There was a "Whitney" punch set on the bench, with the female dies missing, and the tin box looked like a Taiwan knock-off. I spotted the dies spilled out on the bench, and matched them up, making a complete set. When I asked about the punch, the man insisted on throwing in an Alltrade pop rivet set, all for $10.00.

I nosed around more, and found a group of digital ohm/volt meters on a shelf in the back. I asked if they worked, and he said they might need batteries, but all worked when they were left there. I added them to the pile and he gave me a combined price of $30.00 for the whole pile.

Everything but the meters are shown in Photo #1. The wrenches are:
P&C 2528 DBE 3/4x7/8
P&C 2812 DOE 5/16x3/8
New Britain (2 each) NDF 208 DBE 3/4x7/8 (two different patterns)
Williams Superrench NO. 87318 DBE 13/16x7/8
Van-Chrome 1023 13/32x1/2 DOE
Amber Handle (with trace of blue paint in one groove) Cotter Pin Puller
Eklind 5mm T-handle allen wrench
Proto 2.5mm T-handle allen wrench
Vlchek WBC 1214 DBE 3/8x7/16
Proto combos:
1208 1/4
1210 5/16
1211 11/32
6114 7/16 (two of them)
1216 1/2 Professional

Whitney-Jensen Junior punch set (complete with adjusting tool)
Alltrade pop rivet set

The rest of the photos are the VOM meters. All are Fluke brand. I had to put batteries in three of them, but they all work and seem to be accurate for DC and AC volts, ohms, and the one reads frequency perfectly. They are:
Model 36, clamp type
Model 7-600 automatic selection of volts or ohms
Model 115 True RMS
Model 77/BN

And I even got an extra black test lead!

Nice haul on the meters.

For less than $30, you ****!
 

b.well

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May 13, 2020
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391
Location
NY
I am really curious how much of everyone's finds are kept vs sold. Also how much of the vintage stuff gets used. And by vintage I mean before chrome :).

I am picking up my first set of really old (before chrome) wrenches, "S" wrenches, what looks like a wooden level, scissors/shears(what were these used for anyway?), six pipe wrenches, wooden hammers/screwdrivers, cleaver, bench brush........ not sure what i'll do with half of it but it's all or nothing. I'll take/post pics after I get them.

I love the hunt. Curious what to do with the bounty. I am taking a liking to sets in metal boxes; easy to stack and store if so desired.
 

Old Radar

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Apr 17, 2019
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San Antonio, TX
Everyone seems to be making some great finds--congratulations all!

Here's my story:

I drove out to Seguin on Thursday to a sale that promised two sheds with tools. There were a lot of interesting pictures including a couple of small vises and a couple of CM stacks. The vices were too pricy for me and both the CM stacks sold in the three minutes I was late for the opening...

I did find a few things I couldn’t pass up. The gray plastic tool box contained all the pictured screwdrivers and most of the wrenches, a Proto Pro 3/8 speeder, Indestro 6272 3/8 ratchet, SO ¼dr 6” extension, Vlchek WBH 3032 DBE, CM Long C DBE (CI), CM (circle U) 3/8 flex handle, a cool Tecalemit (England) grease gun—and the most exciting—a large group of J.H. Williams USA ½dr chromed sockets. The guy in charge told me the estate was a mess—as far as the tools went—with tools randomly spread out in every place imaginable. He was a tool guy and had been trying to collect and combine the older names as he ran across them in the run up to the sale and he had put all the Williams stuff he found in the tool box. After some good-natured talk and cajolery he came down to $15 for the box and contents but wouldn’t go lower. I agreed to his price with the caveat that any other Williams items associated with the sockets would be included in the price. Deal!

I spent another 30-40 minutes looking around and found a roller stool, $12; a Proto Challenger 3/4dr breaker bar, $2; CM ball peen hammer, $1; unused hammer handle, $0.50; a Chinese DP clamp, $1; and best of all—both the 5” and 10” Williams ½” extensions and the S-52 Superratchet! The guy was great and didn’t bat an eye about the extra Williams finds. He did ask if I had seen the CM wrench set in the house. He walked me in there and showed a very nice set of large combo wrenches, mostly Gs but a few Vs and VVs. I wasn’t interested in the $75 price, but looked next to them and saw a Holo-Krome No.66 Hex set for $12. Well, after all the discussion about the No. 22 and No. 44 sets a couple of weeks ago, I couldn’t just leave it there. Turns out only about a third of the contents were HK. Out the door for $43.50.

The second stop was back in town. Plenty of tools but nothing I could really get interested in except the Scherr-Tumico 8” Vernier Caliper. The agent in the garage didn’t know what it was and when the boss said he needed $20, I handed it back to him. We ultimately settled on $8.

Side note: I examined a New Britain 3/8dr flex head ratchet and noted with some horror that the handle was bent about 20 degrees, and about 10 degrees left of the drive head. The old sales agent saw me looking at it and claimed it had been “special ordered” that way to enable the owner to reach some bolt on his 10 year old truck. I told him even if New Britain had consented to supply a wrench with a bent handle, there was no way they would have made the bend out of plane with the drive head. I also told him the owner would have had to have had the foresight to order it 50 years ago. He didn’t much care for that, but assured me as I started to leave that I would be back the next day to buy that $40 bent ratchet when it was 25% off. I assured him I would not.

When I got home and started to examine my goods, I quickly realized three things. First, when I departed the first sale, my hands were full I didn’t realize I left the roller stool under the hold table—a quick call and I was assured the stool was there and I could pick it up anytime. Second, was that the PO was a dedicated tool marker—almost every piece of metal (except ratchets!) was inscribed with KARL or splashed with red paint, or both. Oh, well. Third, was that the Williams set was missing three sockets. The set ranged from 3/8 through 1-1/4 and I was missing the 3/8, ¾ and 15/16.

The next day I drove all the way back to Seguin to retrieve my stool and of course look around for those missing sockets. I picked up the stool and marched it straight out to the car so I wouldn’t forget it again. I told the boss about the missing sockets and he said if I found any he would consider them part of yesterday’s deal. What a guy!

I rummaged around for about an hour and picked up a nice collection of things but no more sockets. I found a Proto 810 10” pipe wrench, Proto LA ½dr slotted driver socket, a Proto LA sliding T, some Craftsman items: ¼dr 2” extension (G), ¼dr 1-¼" extension (circle U), Phillips #0 (C) and a ¼dr V-selector ratchet; a New Britain NM45 ¼dr ratchet, two tiny Vlchek W068 ¼“ wrenches and an interesting set of drill bits made of Vitallium. $7 total. I also snagged a 1990 Tripp Lite 4.5 Amp, 13.8 volt DC power supply to possibly experiment with electroplating… $8.

Finally, I was very excited to find an orange metal tool case with a socket section that I just knew belonged to my Williams sockets. It was beginning to look like I was in partial position of a Williams S-5 set. When I related my belief, my buddy gave me the case.

Unfortunately, when I got it home, the four largest sockets were too tall for the case. I don’t know who else had orange cases, but my hopes were dashed—at least until next week!

18 Jun 20-1.jpg18 Jun 20-2.jpg18 Jun 20-4.jpg

18 Jun 20-5.jpg18 Jun 20-6.jpg18 Jun 20-3.jpg
 
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gpw_42

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And this thing. When I picked it out of the mass, I thought from its light weight, it must be plastic. Then it clanked against a wrench. Aluminum alloy painted OD? But WHAT is it? Part of something larger, but how much larger? Part of a latch? Part of...dunno

LS, that looks to me like a rope adjuster for a GI tent, bigger than a shelter half, so think General Purpose-series. GP Small (6), GP Medium (12-16), GP Large (a bunch...think MASH tents), probably made post-WW2. My estimates of number of people per tent size are SWAGs, so I wouldn't be surprised to be corrected. But that adjuster would be used to keep the guy lines tight as the canvas expanded/contracted with temperature and moisture changes.
 
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LesserSon

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I am really curious how much of everyone's finds are kept vs sold. Also how much of the vintage stuff gets used...
I love the hunt. Curious what to do with the bounty.

If you love the hunt, you’ve got your answer. You just have to deal with the consequences.

IMO, the drive to find and collect stuff is part of our biology, but manifests in different ways in different people. I am solid-object-oriented, so physical storage is the main snag. MrsLS is personal/social network-oriented, so her only limitation is memory-capacity, LOL. I occasionally strive to detach from my hoard of books, furniture, tools, etc, but the recurrent experience of “if I hadn’t gotten rid of that last week, I could have used it this week” creates a powerful disincentive to purge anything.
There are some guys here who are flippers. They don’t form an emotional attachment to the stuff they find, and find ways to resell. They can really profit if they have the expertise to make quick, inexpensive, value-added repair, like getting small engines to start.
But BECAUSE the venues I haunt are notable for cheap prices, they are not the places to sell at profit. You should HEAR the vendors bitching about how tight-fisted the buyers are around here.
MrsLS points out that my hobby is in the category of entertainment, which in many cases (museums, parks, shows) does not create storage or maintenance problems (boats, pets, cars). She has repeatedly floated the proposition that we pay the $10/day fee and sell some stuff (at a loss if necessary) to recover some quality-of-life space in our home, a concept she calls “Buy/Donation.” I haven’t come around to that POV.
Selling on eBay has made a small dent. When you see the astronomical prices of stuff you can source locally for a buck or two, it seems like a no brainer. But stuff often sits unbid-upon for weeks and months at those prices. And there are COSTS. I just sold something for $25 that I probably paid $1-2 for. Woo-hoo! right?
But I’m shipping it across the country. $21.10 Flat Rate. $23+ Retail Ground. Hmm... Plus, PayPal clipped $1.03 and eBay will charge maybe $5-6 final value fee next month. Yikes! Only reason I’m going to be close to breaking even is prepaying through eBay affords a 13% discount on shipping fees. So that $24 markup adds up to zero profit. If you factor cost of tape, gas and time, that sale is a definite loss. I think eBay works for small, expensive stuff or larger stuff with local pickup option, but if there’s real profit in it, I haven’t solved the equation.
 
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tym

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^ Agree fully. I've used eBay to offload extra stuff before; these days it's barely worth the hassle.
 

bmwrd0

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Beaver Fever Oregon
I no longer need tools for my day to day life (pretty much retired) but I too love the hunt, and I do collect. But! I often find myself buying somethings, not because I need them, but due to the rediculously low prices. And I might know someone who will really want them, or they will sell either here at the Journal or eBay or flipped on craigslist, or.... somewhere. I the far garage I have totes of misc. tools that I plan to put out on $1, $5 and more tables at a swap meet, as soon as we are allowed those again.

But the important part really is that I enjoy it. I spend comparatively little money on it (I tell myself) I find myself little projects to work on, I meet and talk to people, and I get out of the house.
 

r_olson_06

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 12, 2012
Messages
4,132
Location
SD
If you love the hunt, you’ve got your answer. You just have to deal with the consequences.

IMO, the drive to find and collect stuff is part of our biology, but manifests in different ways in different people. I am solid-object-oriented, so physical storage is the main snag. MrsLS is personal/social network-oriented, so her only limitation is memory-capacity, LOL. I occasionally strive to detach from my hoard of books, furniture, tools, etc, but the recurrent experience of “if I hadn’t gotten rid of that last week, I could have used it this week” creates a powerful disincentive to purge anything.
There are some guys here who are flippers. They don’t form an emotional attachment to the stuff they find, and find ways to resell. They can really profit if they have the expertise to make quick, inexpensive, value-added repair, like getting small engines to start.
But BECAUSE the venues I haunt are notable for cheap prices, they are not the places to sell at profit. You should HEAR the vendors bitching about how tight-fisted the buyers are around here.
MrsLS points out that my hobby is in the category of entertainment, which in many cases (museums, parks, shows) does not create storage or maintenance problems (boats, pets, cars). She has repeatedly floated the proposition that we pay the $10/day fee and sell some stuff (at a loss if necessary) to recover some quality-of-life space in our home, a concept she calls “Buy/Donation.” I haven’t come around to that POV.
Selling on eBay has made a small dent. When you see the astronomical prices of stuff you can source locally for a buck or two, it seems like a no brainer. But stuff often sits unbid-upon for weeks and months at those prices. And there are COSTS. I just sold something for $25 that I probably paid $1-2 for. Woo-hoo! right?
But I’m shipping it across the country. $21.10 Flat Rate. $23+ Retail Ground. Hmm... Plus, PayPal clipped $1.03 and eBay will charge maybe $5-6 final value fee next month. Yikes! Only reason I’m going to be close to breaking even is prepaying through eBay affords a 13% discount on shipping fees. So that $24 markup adds up to zero profit. If you factor cost of tape, gas and time, that sale is a definite loss. I think eBay works for small, expensive stuff or larger stuff with local pickup option, but if there’s real profit in it, I haven’t solved the equation.
Well said. I have a similar rationale with tools but I can detach from most of what I buy with the simple mindset of what I can buy with the earnings. With a very strong focus on a single brand (Plomb). I can pick up a pile of craftsman or SK and sell that off to buy a rare Plomb. This is so much so that I can almost see what the net of a purchase would be. Example I bought a leather stamping set for $5 that I knew I could sell for $50. I knew that could net me a Plomb DR-8 ratchet which I would buy for $5 in the wild if I ever ran across one. I know there is some effort that takes place in the selling aspect but if you know who to work eBay you can do this transaction for reduced commissions and at scale. This has allowed me to add over 500 Plomb tools last year to my collection with NO out of pocket expenses just some time hunting and some time selling. I really do enjoy the hunt as others have said.

Looking for a Plomb 3061 Pebble Open End.
 

b.well

Well-known member
Joined
May 13, 2020
Messages
391
Location
NY
LesserSon. Tough shipping. Large flat rate box requires a full mechanics set to be profitable :)
I think the best profit sales on ebay do fit on one of usps flat rate shipping materials. The small flat rate box good for socket sets($8). The medium flat rate box is necessary if the socket sets are on racks($15); it can actually fit alot. Longer stuff like wrenches, breaker bars do good in the flat rate padded envelope($8). Of course pack the tools secure inside. I haven't calculated the ebay fees in awhile but I recall it being %10. Generally a USA (Craftsman or equiv) single socket set (7-10pcs) sells for ~20 plus ship or ~30 free ship. Combo wrench sets of the same size similar price, maybe +$5-$10. I local bought a minty 3pc flare -V- for $5; they sell on ebay 30-40 free ship. The 11pc Husky USA 3/8"-1" I bought for $20 (well got at least $10-15 off the bundle so less actually) I see sold on ebay for $100 plus ship, loco, if I get $75 plus ship($8) that's about $67 back to me. I'll let it ride and see what happens.... My big SAE Craftsman combo wrench set is 6pt; so worst case these can be my 12pt ehhhh beaters. It's great if a couple pieces in a lot can cover the price of the whole lot :)
 
OP
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LesserSon

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 7, 2016
Messages
5,075
Location
PA USA
Well, b.well, it seems like you know what you’re into.
All - please don’t think I’m complaining about any of this. Just doing the math.
I do love it.
As bmwrd0 points out, it’s an amusement - not my bread-and-butter. And like r_olson_06, as I’ve found a focus (Bonney), I’ve been more purposeful in my purchases (mostly).
Wow, ssdave, that IS a lot of volume, because I think your prices are reasonable.
 

b.well

Well-known member
Joined
May 13, 2020
Messages
391
Location
NY
Well, b.well, it seems like you know what you’re into.
All - please don’t think I’m complaining about any of this. Just doing the math.
I do love it.
As bmwrd0 points out, it’s an amusement - not my bread-and-butter. And like r_olson_06, as I’ve found a focus (Bonney), I’ve been more purposeful in my purchases (mostly).
Wow, ssdave, that IS a lot of volume, because I think your prices are reasonable.

Thanks! I agree, not a bread and butter activity, nice to have ebay to unload the excess and keep the wheels greased :)
 

Username already in use

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 4, 2015
Messages
2,177
Location
Ohio
Just a quick note on shipping via USPS. Everyone should get some of the REGIONAL RATE BOXES from the USPS. They're free and shipped to your door. They're equivalent in size to the medium and large size boxes. They ship based on weight and destination, but can really save a bunch on the shipping cost.

Regional rate is a bit of a misnomer, because you can ship them to anywhere in the US. Just the cost varies by region. Check them out and save a few bucks.
 

gpw_42

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 24, 2017
Messages
717
Location
NC Sandhills, USA
GPW, All the adjusters I've seen are wood. -Not saying you are wrong, but I've never seem one like that.

Outlaw,

I just learned that the newer tensioners are available in magnesium and some sort of plastic/fiberglass/delrin/whatever; I lifted the attached picture from https://military-tent.com/18teroslhedu.html I think the wooden ones are probably Vietnam-era or older

I've done OK since estate sales & flea market opened up here about 3 weeks ago. I haven't hit any garage sales yet, but haven't seen any TOOs or looked for advertised ones.

Highlights:
- Duro E65 ignition wrench (WW2 vintage)
- Fordson box and 4 Ford DOEs
- 12" Crescent wrench (I think WW2 vintage)
- 14" Ridgid pipe wrench (maybe WW2 vintage)
- (not pictured) frame and storage bags from a surplus Tent, Combat, One Person which I picked up on Saturday...timely for the GP tent tensioner discussion, and has had me on a "modern" GI tent deep dive.
- Bunch of non-GJ surplus insignia/gear
- breakfast burrito from the Mexican food truck at the flea market (not pictured, but h/t to LS(?) for his pics from the past)

Don provided a bunch of other pieces which helped keep me going through the lockdown, so I felt a portion of his disappointment over the closure of the Tahoe flea:
- Irwin ink-stamped heavy duty screwdriver
- Duro cad plated 1/2" dr. socket set (not pictured)
- Starrett 604 rule
 

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