demarpaint
Well-known member
I'd either sell them, give them away, or donate them to the VA. Unless they were totally useless, then they get scrapped or tossed.
I'd rather my kids be able to make good money in CS or any office job than be able to fix a lawnmower. But that doesn't give you the nostalgia of high school shop class, huh?
Fixing stuff is useful, but not critical. Using a computer is critical
false choice. and a typically elitist view of different skills in today's world.
You are comparing jewelry to old small hand tools? Seriously?
Why do you feel some wierd moral obligation to find them a good home? It's just a bunch of pieces of metal, not ancient Egyptian artifacts.
i am with the ones who said selling lump sums on craigslist, ebay and the like.
now onto the real dilemma. the wife needs to be sat down and told in no uncertain terms.
"my tools do not go into the dumpster".
she may be kidding when she says that but you need to make sure that doesn't happen. if she or someone else in your family doesn't need or want them then it is your job to ensure what happens to them. make sure they get to someone who can appreciate them. what that may be is up to you. restore, habitat for humanity, a church group, a struggling young family, somebody, anybody. all it would take is a line or a paragraph in your will to make your wishes known.
i doubt she would want her jewelry or other items she cared about thrown in the garbage. make sure your tools get where you want them.
Get the large flat rate USPS Priority Mail boxes and fill them up. Put each box on Ebay for the flat rate plus fees as tbe min bid. 4 or 5 transactions instead of a hundred.
Sent from my garage.
Don’t you think the better route is taking care of your own mess instead of dying and leaving it for her? I agree that the dumpster is about the worst place for viable tools although I’ve thrown my share of Chinese garbage in them.
The wife wasn’t joking, she was saying take care of this junk because I won’t. Can’t fault her for that.
I'd rather my kids be able to make good money in CS or any office job than be able to fix a lawnmower. But that doesn't give you the nostalgia of high school shop class, huh?
Fixing stuff is useful, but not critical. Using a computer is critical
Really? So who do you think fixes the chillers and electrical systems supplying the data centers that the servers reside in. I've never seen anyone be able to wave a ipad over one and bring it back online yet. Lose the cooling in one with almost a billion in equipment not including data and see how critical fixing stuff is. I guess using the computer is critical to be able to look up someone that can fix stuff since there isnt a yellow pages anymore.
I don't know that I'd take tools to Goodwill; odds are they'd end up scrapped.

Really? I guess using the computer is critical to be able to look up someone who can fix stuff since there isnt a yellow pages anymore.
