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20th October 2018, 07:33 AM #1Senior Member
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- Apr 2004
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- 383
Extreme Case of inherited handtools nightmare
On the NZ TradeMe site (= New Zealand's version of eBay) there are a bunch of for-sale postings featuring Stanley 45s, 55s, bench planes, etc.
The person inherited all these from their father-in-law after he died.
The catch is that the father-in-law had a hobby of tool trading and had taken every tool apart and bundled like parts together.
The person doesn't know anything about antique tools and just wants to get rid of them in job lots, but the lots are not well assembled.
See this link:
https://www.trademe.co.nz/Members/Li...member=1243283
You have to scroll down past a number of postings about other stuff to get to the relevant handtool postingsNew Zealand
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20th October 2018 07:33 AM # ADSGoogle Adsense Advertisement
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20th October 2018, 09:38 AM #2Woodworking mechanic
- Join Date
- Jan 2014
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- Sydney Upper North Shore
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- 4,470
That looks like one expensive spend to get all the bits and pieces and what if there’s bits missing?
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20th October 2018, 02:07 PM #3Gatherer of rusty
planestools...
Proud member of the Wadkin Blockhead Club .
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20th October 2018, 02:36 PM #4
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21st October 2018, 01:04 PM #5Senior Member
- Join Date
- Apr 2004
- Posts
- 383
Yes, the person doesn't understand the dynamics of how TradeMe auctions for tools work.
My personal recommendation to the seller would be to accept that it's high risk for anyone buying an auction from him as there will be missing parts and instead aim to get some $ in the hand, e.g. $100, rather than try for theoretical maximum. I think the pricing for these auctions is $150 start and $300 reserve(???) - I would have recommended $100 start and no reserve to get some action.
The other option is to offer them all to a UK tool dealer who can take the risk given the current NZ $2 = 1 GBP exchange rate.New Zealand
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