Nobody-named-Olli
Well-known member
Not sure how this can help you, but to me, the main questions when looking at stuff are always the same:
Will I realistically use this? / Do I still enjoy this?
How long until I will probably use this? (This is a BIG one, especially with, but not limited to, leftover building materials.)
What will be the cost to replace/ re buy this X years down the road & does that justify to keep it/ sacrifice the space it takes up. (And when renting storage space costs actual $$$ taking that obviously into the equation.)
Everything I/we part with that is in good & fully usable (or wearable for that matter) condition gets donated to our local variant of “goodwill”. Hand tool sets they will accept, but no single items - they are not a “hardware store”.
I have zero problems with trashing broken, worn out or otherwise no longer usable stuff. Same goes for building materials and the likes that simply will go bad at some point anyway. No need to store that for 6 to 12 months and then trash it as opposed to trashing it after the project is finished and necessary touch ups have been completed.
Metal I like to give to our local scrap driver. I have given him buckets full of old hardware, single tools, … . An I’d rather support him, than the city’s over-managed recycling yard.
In one case, because my life changed drastically, I traded in some Snap-On tools with my Snappy (whom I had bought them from, for a specific project/purpose, before). He even offered to sell them on my behalf, but I thought it was only fair if the money stayed “on the truck” so I bought other Snap-On tools that I still could & would use.
My other focus is organization & accessibility. Everything I keep has to be sorted, labeled and stored in a more or less easily accessible manner. Nothing worse then if you want to do something really quick, and then you have to start pushing around boxes, emptying whole shelves just to get to an item.
Many years ago I did an experiment and bought a (hand) toolbox of eBay because I basically wanted a single item from it. But it was filled with quality, flying under the radar, brand name tools. Bad out of focus pictures, ****** description, only a few hours left. Got it as expected for “pocket change”.
Arrived, took out the one item (that later became two or three items). Cleaned everything. Then made sets, took good pictures, put them on eBay. Recouped my money and some more easily. Sounds great? Wrong. Putting, most importantly time, solvents, rags, … into the equation I didn’t even break even. Never did that again. I could as well have simply bought that one item new from a dealer - and not deal with everything else.
I don’t feel any guilt giving away or simply “trashing“/recycling stuff.
Kind regards,
Olli
Will I realistically use this? / Do I still enjoy this?
How long until I will probably use this? (This is a BIG one, especially with, but not limited to, leftover building materials.)
What will be the cost to replace/ re buy this X years down the road & does that justify to keep it/ sacrifice the space it takes up. (And when renting storage space costs actual $$$ taking that obviously into the equation.)
Everything I/we part with that is in good & fully usable (or wearable for that matter) condition gets donated to our local variant of “goodwill”. Hand tool sets they will accept, but no single items - they are not a “hardware store”.
I have zero problems with trashing broken, worn out or otherwise no longer usable stuff. Same goes for building materials and the likes that simply will go bad at some point anyway. No need to store that for 6 to 12 months and then trash it as opposed to trashing it after the project is finished and necessary touch ups have been completed.
Metal I like to give to our local scrap driver. I have given him buckets full of old hardware, single tools, … . An I’d rather support him, than the city’s over-managed recycling yard.
In one case, because my life changed drastically, I traded in some Snap-On tools with my Snappy (whom I had bought them from, for a specific project/purpose, before). He even offered to sell them on my behalf, but I thought it was only fair if the money stayed “on the truck” so I bought other Snap-On tools that I still could & would use.
My other focus is organization & accessibility. Everything I keep has to be sorted, labeled and stored in a more or less easily accessible manner. Nothing worse then if you want to do something really quick, and then you have to start pushing around boxes, emptying whole shelves just to get to an item.
Many years ago I did an experiment and bought a (hand) toolbox of eBay because I basically wanted a single item from it. But it was filled with quality, flying under the radar, brand name tools. Bad out of focus pictures, ****** description, only a few hours left. Got it as expected for “pocket change”.
Arrived, took out the one item (that later became two or three items). Cleaned everything. Then made sets, took good pictures, put them on eBay. Recouped my money and some more easily. Sounds great? Wrong. Putting, most importantly time, solvents, rags, … into the equation I didn’t even break even. Never did that again. I could as well have simply bought that one item new from a dealer - and not deal with everything else.
I don’t feel any guilt giving away or simply “trashing“/recycling stuff.
Kind regards,
Olli



