Tuesday, October 30, 2018

Wonderful 20th Century Innovation

Praised by grateful senior citizens everywhere.

                           Otis, CO











There must be at least one gem in the bunch. Bring your trailer.

"Yes sir, if you are handy with tools and don't mind a little elbow grease, we can fix you up with a fine ride for very little money. Let's write it up!"

11 comments:

Old NFO said...

Um... Yes on the first one, BIG NO on the rest of them...

Well Seasoned Fool said...

There are four or five usable vehicles there. The rest are crusher material.

LL said...

My sense is that the question more aptly put is how much money you need to throw into the ugly ducklings to make them "usable".

Well Seasoned Fool said...

More than the desperately poor people of Akron County can afford.

LL said...

When I was attending high school, I lived in a desperately poor area. Then I moved, and Uncle Sam paid for the move. All I had to do was indenture myself and learn how to swim and kill people for a living. So I learned a trade.

Well Seasoned Fool said...

Making the most of your opportunity. After growing up fixing fence, stacking hay, and poaching, the Army made me an engineer who made barb wire barriers, stacked sandbags, and carried a rifle. Should have joined the Navy.

Ed Bonderenka said...

I learned a trade, traveled the world, stayed mostly in hotels, or the occasional tent.
You can guess which branch. :)

Coffeypot said...

One might find a decent radio in there. Maybe a decent set of unmatched tires.

Well Seasoned Fool said...

Looked hard at the Air Force. Wasn't impressed with the recruiters - patronizing.

Coffeypot
Many of those tires haven't moved in years. Doubt you could find many without rot.

jon spencer said...

If you can drag a car onto a trailer, it is worth about $300 +- a bit, at a scrap yard.
Depending on many things, it can be much more if you are able to part is out.
But that is counting your labor at $0 per hour.

Well Seasoned Fool said...

My mechanic skills leave a lot to be desired but you can't beat my hourly rate.