Over the course of the past year, I've taken a few curious peeks at
Craigslist.com. A few days ago a neighbor mentioned it took just a few
days to get a response to an ad he placed, so I thought what the hell,
I've never done the Ebay thing (guess I'm old fashioned...well maybe
NOT...I DO have an iPod), but I wanted to sell a tool I just relegated
to the corner by purchasing a new and improved model. Besides which,
that'll soften the blow when the credit card bill comes in.
On Thursday I went to Craigslist, read their help section, composed the
ad, got stuck for a bit on adding a picture until I saw a link at the
bottom of the page, and "published" my ad. Damn if I didn't get the
first response in 20 minutes!! All together I got 8 emails and several
phone numbers. The first guy that I contacted said he'd take it and
Friday mid morning he came by to exchange some green for a tool. Nice
guy. My trusty saw had found a good new home. I hope his wife wasn't
expecting him home sooner; we chatted quite some time! I emailed
everyone else that the item had been sold.
Ok, so that was pretty painless. Let's go for ad number two (Friday
night). An hour or two after the ad appears, my inbox shows "new mail".
Cool! The fellow included a phone number, but he didn't answer when
I called. This morning I call again, and he answers on the first ring
and says he'll be by this afternoon. He calls for directions mid
afternoon and arrives shortly thereafter in his big contractor pickup.
Hell of a nice guy too. Why can't my all my neighbors be this nice?
Some are, but then we've got some screwballs that should be
hospitalized. Anyway, turns out I may be able to use him for a home
improvement project next year and he gave me the name of a reliable
sharpening service, so the few dollars I made on the sale is
overshadowed by the value of meeting him.
I need to go through the attic soon to see what else I can advertise on
Craigslist. oh, yeah, I've been hoarding about 15 cans of R12 since
1988. I know that stuff is quite pricey nowadays and should fetch well
over $150.
Dave
In article <[email protected]>, Ralph E
Lindberg <[email protected]> wrote:
> In the USA, there are also restrictions on the buyer (but interesting
> not the seller). The EPA says the buyer has to have EPA 609
> certification, but I can't say I've every heard of a regulation on the
> seller.
Unless you're manufacturing the stuff, you have to buy it even just to
sell it, n'est ce pas?
--
Life. Nature's way of keeping meat fresh. -- Dr. Who
I have some stuff up on e-may now (Delta 6" jointer and some DC connection
accessories). I just learned about Craig List a couple of weeks ago and
didn't think of them when I went to try and sell this stuff. Check out
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=6017081178
and
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=4422040472
-b
"David" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Over the course of the past year, I've taken a few curious peeks at
> Craigslist.com. A few days ago a neighbor mentioned it took just a few
> days to get a response to an ad he placed, so I thought what the hell,
> I've never done the Ebay thing (guess I'm old fashioned...well maybe
> NOT...I DO have an iPod), but I wanted to sell a tool I just relegated to
> the corner by purchasing a new and improved model. Besides which, that'll
> soften the blow when the credit card bill comes in.
>
> On Thursday I went to Craigslist, read their help section, composed the
> ad, got stuck for a bit on adding a picture until I saw a link at the
> bottom of the page, and "published" my ad. Damn if I didn't get the first
> response in 20 minutes!! All together I got 8 emails and several phone
> numbers. The first guy that I contacted said he'd take it and Friday mid
> morning he came by to exchange some green for a tool. Nice guy. My
> trusty saw had found a good new home. I hope his wife wasn't expecting
> him home sooner; we chatted quite some time! I emailed everyone else that
> the item had been sold.
>
> Ok, so that was pretty painless. Let's go for ad number two (Friday
> night). An hour or two after the ad appears, my inbox shows "new mail".
> Cool! The fellow included a phone number, but he didn't answer when I
> called. This morning I call again, and he answers on the first ring and
> says he'll be by this afternoon. He calls for directions mid afternoon
> and arrives shortly thereafter in his big contractor pickup. Hell of a
> nice guy too. Why can't my all my neighbors be this nice? Some are, but
> then we've got some screwballs that should be hospitalized. Anyway, turns
> out I may be able to use him for a home improvement project next year and
> he gave me the name of a reliable sharpening service, so the few dollars I
> made on the sale is overshadowed by the value of meeting him.
>
> I need to go through the attic soon to see what else I can advertise on
> Craigslist. oh, yeah, I've been hoarding about 15 cans of R12 since 1988.
> I know that stuff is quite pricey nowadays and should fetch well over
> $150.
>
> Dave
"David" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Over the course of the past year, I've taken a few curious peeks at
> Craigslist.com. A few days ago a neighbor mentioned it took just a few
> days to get a response to an ad he placed, so I thought what the hell,
> I've never done the Ebay thing (guess I'm old fashioned...well maybe
> NOT...I DO have an iPod), but I wanted to sell a tool I just relegated
> to the corner by purchasing a new and improved model. Besides which,
> that'll soften the blow when the credit card bill comes in.
>
> On Thursday I went to Craigslist, read their help section, composed the
> ad, got stuck for a bit on adding a picture until I saw a link at the
> bottom of the page, and "published" my ad. Damn if I didn't get the
> first response in 20 minutes!! All together I got 8 emails and several
> phone numbers. The first guy that I contacted said he'd take it and
> Friday mid morning he came by to exchange some green for a tool. Nice
> guy. My trusty saw had found a good new home. I hope his wife wasn't
> expecting him home sooner; we chatted quite some time! I emailed
> everyone else that the item had been sold.
>
> Ok, so that was pretty painless. Let's go for ad number two (Friday
> night). An hour or two after the ad appears, my inbox shows "new mail".
> Cool! The fellow included a phone number, but he didn't answer when
> I called. This morning I call again, and he answers on the first ring
> and says he'll be by this afternoon. He calls for directions mid
> afternoon and arrives shortly thereafter in his big contractor pickup.
> Hell of a nice guy too. Why can't my all my neighbors be this nice?
> Some are, but then we've got some screwballs that should be
> hospitalized. Anyway, turns out I may be able to use him for a home
> improvement project next year and he gave me the name of a reliable
> sharpening service, so the few dollars I made on the sale is
> overshadowed by the value of meeting him.
>
> I need to go through the attic soon to see what else I can advertise on
> Craigslist. oh, yeah, I've been hoarding about 15 cans of R12 since
> 1988. I know that stuff is quite pricey nowadays and should fetch well
> over $150.
>
> Dave
I recently upgraded to a larger lathe, the cost of which I had to justify to
SWMBO by telling her I would sell the Jet Mini Lathe. Since the mini lathe
is still quite heavy (~80 lbs), I wanted to take a shot at selling it on
CraigsList to a local buyer rather than get it ready for shipment. I sold
it for the same price I would have netted from eBay (and by the way, the
same price I bought it for on sale from Amazon). I always wonder what type
is going to pull up in this kind of transaction. Turns out the guy is your
normal dentist who wants to make shavings in his condo.
todd
"David" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Over the course of the past year, I've taken a few curious peeks at
> Craigslist.com. A few days ago a neighbor mentioned it took just a few
> days to get a response to an ad he placed, so I thought what the hell,
> I've never done the Ebay thing (guess I'm old fashioned...well maybe
> NOT...I DO have an iPod), but I wanted to sell a tool I just relegated to
> the corner by purchasing a new and improved model. Besides which, that'll
> soften the blow when the credit card bill comes in.
>
> On Thursday I went to Craigslist, read their help section, composed the
> ad, got stuck for a bit on adding a picture until I saw a link at the
> bottom of the page, and "published" my ad. Damn if I didn't get the first
> response in 20 minutes!! All together I got 8 emails and several phone
> numbers. The first guy that I contacted said he'd take it and Friday mid
> morning he came by to exchange some green for a tool. Nice guy. My
> trusty saw had found a good new home. I hope his wife wasn't expecting
> him home sooner; we chatted quite some time! I emailed everyone else that
> the item had been sold.
>
> Ok, so that was pretty painless. Let's go for ad number two (Friday
> night). An hour or two after the ad appears, my inbox shows "new mail".
> Cool! The fellow included a phone number, but he didn't answer when I
> called. This morning I call again, and he answers on the first ring and
> says he'll be by this afternoon. He calls for directions mid afternoon
> and arrives shortly thereafter in his big contractor pickup. Hell of a
> nice guy too. Why can't my all my neighbors be this nice? Some are, but
> then we've got some screwballs that should be hospitalized. Anyway, turns
> out I may be able to use him for a home improvement project next year and
> he gave me the name of a reliable sharpening service, so the few dollars I
> made on the sale is overshadowed by the value of meeting him.
>
> I need to go through the attic soon to see what else I can advertise on
> Craigslist. oh, yeah, I've been hoarding about 15 cans of R12 since 1988.
> I know that stuff is quite pricey nowadays and should fetch well over
> $150.
>
Craigslist is great for things difficult to ship, or for things you just
want to get rid of for a token price.
I don't know anything about R12, but if it is easy to ship you will get
three times as much on eBay as Craigslist.
Toller wrote:
> "David" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>
>>Over the course of the past year, I've taken a few curious peeks at
>>Craigslist.com. A few days ago a neighbor mentioned it took just a few
>>days to get a response to an ad he placed, so I thought what the hell,
>>I've never done the Ebay thing (guess I'm old fashioned...well maybe
>>NOT...I DO have an iPod), but I wanted to sell a tool I just relegated to
>>the corner by purchasing a new and improved model. Besides which, that'll
>>soften the blow when the credit card bill comes in.
>>
>>On Thursday I went to Craigslist, read their help section, composed the
>>ad, got stuck for a bit on adding a picture until I saw a link at the
>>bottom of the page, and "published" my ad. Damn if I didn't get the first
>>response in 20 minutes!! All together I got 8 emails and several phone
>>numbers. The first guy that I contacted said he'd take it and Friday mid
>>morning he came by to exchange some green for a tool. Nice guy. My
>>trusty saw had found a good new home. I hope his wife wasn't expecting
>>him home sooner; we chatted quite some time! I emailed everyone else that
>>the item had been sold.
>>
>>Ok, so that was pretty painless. Let's go for ad number two (Friday
>>night). An hour or two after the ad appears, my inbox shows "new mail".
>>Cool! The fellow included a phone number, but he didn't answer when I
>>called. This morning I call again, and he answers on the first ring and
>>says he'll be by this afternoon. He calls for directions mid afternoon
>>and arrives shortly thereafter in his big contractor pickup. Hell of a
>>nice guy too. Why can't my all my neighbors be this nice? Some are, but
>>then we've got some screwballs that should be hospitalized. Anyway, turns
>>out I may be able to use him for a home improvement project next year and
>>he gave me the name of a reliable sharpening service, so the few dollars I
>>made on the sale is overshadowed by the value of meeting him.
>>
>>I need to go through the attic soon to see what else I can advertise on
>>Craigslist. oh, yeah, I've been hoarding about 15 cans of R12 since 1988.
>>I know that stuff is quite pricey nowadays and should fetch well over
>>$150.
>>
>
> Craigslist is great for things difficult to ship, or for things you just
> want to get rid of for a token price.
> I don't know anything about R12, but if it is easy to ship you will get
> three times as much on eBay as Craigslist.
>
>
I think there are restrictions on shipping Freon, if I'm not mistaken.
I would not have wanted to box up the CMS for shipment that I sold
yestgerday. Craigslist was relatively painless and quick. :)
Dave
On Sat, 26 Nov 2005 16:47:59 -0800, David <[email protected]> wrote:
>On Thursday I went to Craigslist, read their help section, composed the
>ad, got stuck for a bit on adding a picture until I saw a link at the
>bottom of the page, and "published" my ad. Damn if I didn't get the
>first response in 20 minutes!!
You live in the SF Bay area. It's a regional thing. Craigslist is
lame in my area.
In article <271120051544490767%dave@N_O_T_T_H_I_S.balderstone.ca>,
Dave Balderstone <dave@N_O_T_T_H_I_S.balderstone.ca> wrote:
> In article <[email protected]>, Ralph E
> Lindberg <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > In the USA, there are also restrictions on the buyer (but interesting
> > not the seller). The EPA says the buyer has to have EPA 609
> > certification, but I can't say I've every heard of a regulation on the
> > seller.
>
> Unless you're manufacturing the stuff, you have to buy it even just to
> sell it, n'est ce pas?
Not if you bought it -before- the regulations
--
--------------------------------------------------------
Personal e-mail is the n7bsn but at amsat.org
This posting address is a spam-trap and seldom read
RV and Camping FAQ can be found at
http://www.ralphandellen.us/rv
In article <[email protected]>,
David <[email protected]> wrote:
..
> I think there are restrictions on shipping Freon, if I'm not mistaken.
> I would not have wanted to box up the CMS for shipment that I sold
> yestgerday. ...
In the USA, there are also restrictions on the buyer (but interesting
not the seller). The EPA says the buyer has to have EPA 609
certification, but I can't say I've every heard of a regulation on the
seller.
--
--------------------------------------------------------
Personal e-mail is the n7bsn but at amsat.org
This posting address is a spam-trap and seldom read
RV and Camping FAQ can be found at
http://www.ralphandellen.us/rv