RWL
Sorry to have been away in LA. Did ya get it?
Gunner
"I am for doing good to the poor, but I differ in opinion of the
means. I think the best way of doing good to the poor, is not
making them easy in poverty, but leading or driving them out of
it. In my youth I travelled much, and I observed in different
countries, that the more public provisions were made for the
poor the less they provided for themselves, and of course became
poorer. And, on the contrary, the less was done for them, the
more they did for themselves, and became richer." -- Benjamin
Franklin, /The Encouragement of Idleness/, 1766
>On Tue, 12 Jan 2010 05:34:52 -0800 (PST), RWL <geo...@ptd.net> wrote:
>
>>What's the going price for a KO Lee tool & cutter grinder with some
>>tooling?
>>
>>RWL
>
>Sorry to have been away in LA. Did ya get it?
>
>Gunner
Nope. The seller cancelled the visit when I told him I was thinking
in the $500 range and his starting price was $3000. His isn't the
only machine in the US.
RWL
Sounds like he is living in a very sheltered location..or his own
private fantasy world. Or the thing is brand new. Shrug
Which part of the US do you live in? Ill look around a bit.
>Sounds like he is living in a very sheltered location..or his own
>private fantasy world. Or the thing is brand new. Shrug
>
>Which part of the US do you live in? Ill look around a bit.
>
>Gunner
Thanks, but probably not economically feasible. I'm in central PA. I
don't see them very often on the Craigslists near me, but they do show
up.
The guy that cancelled the visit lived outside Philadelphia. A dealer
in the Scranton area gave me a rough quote of $1500 for a tooled
K.O.Lee that he's waiting to arrive when the riggers get it out of the
factory.
RWL
I have never found a way to get such sellers back in touch with
reality. Fortunately, with enough looking, you can find truly great
deals.
i
>>>>Nope. The seller cancelled the visit when I told him I was thinking
>>>>in the $500 range and his starting price was $3000. His isn't the
>>>>only machine in the US.
>>>
>>>Sounds like he is living in a very sheltered location..or his own
>>>private fantasy world. Or the thing is brand new. Shrug
>>
>> Thanks, but probably not economically feasible. I'm in central PA. I
>> don't see them very often on the Craigslists near me, but they do show
>> up.
>>
>> The guy that cancelled the visit lived outside Philadelphia. A dealer
>> in the Scranton area gave me a rough quote of $1500 for a tooled
>> K.O.Lee that he's waiting to arrive when the riggers get it out of the
>> factory.
>
>I have never found a way to get such sellers back in touch with
>reality. Fortunately, with enough looking, you can find truly great
>deals.
The only way I've found is to inform them of the reality of the
marketplace - with enough details and facts to convince them you
aren't bullshitting, and leave your name and number.
When they get tired of sitting on the grinder (or whatever) at their
price, they may come down to yours.
They put a $25 price tag on an empty fire extinguisher that is $40
brand new, and will need a $25 Hydro and fill to put in service. I
had a few realistic "Okay, then how's $2.50?" counter-offers, and a
few who thought I was trying to cheat them. Their loss.
Can't even do that anymore, because now any extinguisher over ~25
years old (1981?) is trash. "Doesn't meet the current labeling
requirements" and no shop can legally fill them. (Don't worry, we'll
gladly sell you a new one!)
Unless you are buying an antique brass Soda-Water flip-and-bounce to
make into a table lamp, it's just an old pressure cylinder that cant
really be repurposed. Or like that Tool & Cutter Grinder, a piece of
gear that is rarely needed anymore outside a museum or a hobby shop.
--<< Bruce >>--
Mine has the air floated endmill/drill sharpener, the second motorized
turning fixture and something else I cant remember..a big fixture of
some sort. Got about 50 wheels of all sorts, cups, various other
wheels, diamond..oh..also got a electric magnetic chuck as well, but
since I have the big 618 surface grinder..never use it.
> Unless you are buying an antique brass Soda-Water flip-and-bounce to
>make into a table lamp, it's just an old pressure cylinder that cant
>really be repurposed.
Are you kidding?!? I made a flame thrower when I was 16 out of and
old fire extinguisher. I used diesel thank goodness.
I also tried to make whipped cream in one too. Not as successful as
the flame thrower.
I used one as an air tank so I could have an air horn (from a train)
in my car. (may have been the same extinguisher from the flame
thrower)
--
Dan H.
northshore MA.