Thread Number: 76053
/ Tag: Vintage Automatic Washers
Curbside Finds |
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Post# 999063 , Reply# 1   7/2/2018 at 11:37 (2,118 days old) by RP2813 (Sannazay)   |   | |
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Post# 999085 , Reply# 2   7/2/2018 at 16:29 (2,117 days old) by scoots (Chattanooga TN)   |   | |
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I got interested in vintage washers in the 1980s. I was getting unhappy with the current crop of kitchen appliances, and discovered that a buddy of mine had been acquiring period-correct kitchen appliances for his 1940s home and doing ground-up restorations on them. He got me thinking about my mid-century place in Palm Springs and once I started looking, it was easy to find what I needed on the curbside, behind appliance stores, and second hand stores. You almost tripped over the stuff.
The desirable stuff started getting sparse about 2000 and now (2018) the good stuff is getting rare. You still do see it, but it'w now a once a year thing. One of the worst things to happen was "American Pickers". When I do see something I'm interested in, I frequently have to deal with an owner who thinks because it's from the 1950's, it's worth a bundle. Mad Men you know... If it looks like there's no hope for an agreement I give them a card with my name and number. I also mention that yeah, it has more chrome and porcelain than anybody's business, but it also has impossible to find 50 year old rubber and electrical parts and it's not worth what's being asked. |
Post# 999125 , Reply# 3   7/3/2018 at 01:14 (2,117 days old) by askolover (South of Nash Vegas, TN)   |   | |
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What Scoots said ^
I've recently become interested in vintage sewing machines...not really the 100 year old Singers but the Japanese clones from post WW2. There's one on ebay right now...the seller says "I know it's old so it must be worth something" and has it listed for $500! I bought mine for $19 plus a little shipping. Same machine. The really old Singers are another story...people think that since they are 100 yrs or older they must be worth $1000....but really they made millions of them so they are not rare and not all that valuable. I got my old National for free. |
Post# 999137 , Reply# 4   7/3/2018 at 05:21 (2,117 days old) by combo52 (50 Year Repair Tech Beltsville,Md)   |   | |
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The only SSS that is really worth anything is the Feather-Weight model which is aluminum and is in a black carrying case, these if in good working condition are usually worth from $100-400.
John L. This post was last edited 07/03/2018 at 06:40 |
Post# 999140 , Reply# 5   7/3/2018 at 06:12 (2,117 days old) by goatfarmer (South Bend, home of Champions)   |   | |
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years ago, a town about a half hour away used to do "spring cleanup.", where people would put large items curbside, and the city would pick them up. This is before the price of scrap metal went wild.
Scored quite a few things, like a Whirlpool Imperial set in avocado, a 56 Whirlpool dryer that a member needed to finish a set, a gold Whirlpool set, and a lot of other things. |
Post# 999202 , Reply# 6   7/3/2018 at 14:08 (2,117 days old) by RP2813 (Sannazay)   |   | |
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The adjacent town to us has the spring clean up each year. I'd cruise the piles but never found any machines. The best scores were a mid-'30s Wedgewood trash & gas stove (a beast to get onto the back of the pickup), two giant round porcelain enamel Coca-Cola discs (that had been painted over with different advertising), and a well-weathered Flexy Racer, which was a childhood go-to pastime when the neighbors had two of them. I still have the Flexy and the discs, but the stove was given away in 1986. |
Post# 999211 , Reply# 7   7/3/2018 at 16:20 (2,116 days old) by goatfarmer (South Bend, home of Champions)   |   | |
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