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Best find from a sk...
 

[Closed] Best find from a skip.

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My only memorable find is a battered old yucca. I rescued it, gave it some horticultural TLC and it is now doing brilliantly.


 
Posted : 25/07/2013 11:30 am
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Loads of VCRs, amps, DVD players etc (from the skip at the AV company my dad used to work for). Some of the stuff was brand new and simply surplus to requirements (and in fact I am currently listening to music through a Sony FA3ES amp that we rescued some years ago).


 
Posted : 25/07/2013 11:33 am
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A van load of 7-inch Victorian floorboards... top find, now installed, stripped and varnished in our gaff.


 
Posted : 25/07/2013 11:33 am
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A whole office worth of massively expensive, massively comfortable desk chairs lobbed out when another company in the building went out of business.


 
Posted : 25/07/2013 11:35 am
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Foreign hard core jazz mag when I was a kid in the days before internet. It was liking finding gold then and a look at it could be traded for anything.


 
Posted : 25/07/2013 11:37 am
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Hmm. My yucca seems a bit lame in comparison.


 
Posted : 25/07/2013 11:37 am
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What counts as a skip? I get lots of cast-off lab equipment from the universities - I'm currently using a Haake water bath heater for my frame soak tank. I googled it to find the manual, and it cost about £800!

From an actual skip, best find is an 8ft control panel from a brewery:

[img] [/img]

Just need about 1500 LEDs and a control system , and it'll be pretty cool 😉


 
Posted : 25/07/2013 11:39 am
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Just need about 1500 LEDs and a control system , and it'll be pretty cool

Please tell me it'll be attached to a home brew setup?


 
Posted : 25/07/2013 11:41 am
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Fridge freezer that must have been worth a couple in its day. Very solidly built. Its cream coloured though so am guessing thats why they lobbed it. Now in my garage.

Also got a load of doors and door handles from down the road when someone was ripping out the original art deco stuff to 'modernise'. Took some work but came up a treat in our extension. Doors are £200 each and handles £25. Got four of them! Only had to buy one more door (but lots of handles for the rest of our house to match)


 
Posted : 25/07/2013 11:42 am
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Please tell me it'll be attached to a home brew setup?

That would be brilliant - but my current homebrew setup is a bucket, so probably not that interesting 😉

I was thinking something music responsive...


 
Posted : 25/07/2013 11:44 am
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A suitcase full of what look like gold bars I think the previous owner threw them out because they have a swastika pressed into them. Very heavy though and made great plant lifters for the patio.


 
Posted : 25/07/2013 11:48 am
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not quite a skip, but at a local agricultural & machinery auction in the "garage clearout" piles, I flipped open the lid of what looked like a camera case to find two [url= http://www.kane.co.uk/online-catalogue/flue-gas-analysers/kane425-203 ]Kane 400 Flue Gas Analysers[/url].
[img] [/img]
I've been wanting one for ages but at £500 each for the current model new it's a bit much.

I got both for £8 at the auction as no-one else there had a clue what they were.

Im sending them off for calibrating for about £80 each and then sell one on ebay for a couple of hundred £ to pay for the calibrations and I get a free Analyser! Woohoo!


 
Posted : 25/07/2013 11:49 am
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Loads of top quality food~ Lamb Shank, Lobster, even some bottles of wine.

The life of a freegan is a surprisingly well nourished one.

Non food wise, I got an AT-AT and a Spectrum +2 for nostalgic decor.

Edit: I'm tempted to pimp my AT-AT something like this:

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 25/07/2013 11:50 am
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And the AT-AT wins. 😀


 
Posted : 25/07/2013 11:59 am
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Someone on Retrobike found an Thermoplastic LTS (Not the STS) and a set of Judy DH's

My best skip find was finding out I could dump loads of crap in it.


 
Posted : 25/07/2013 12:01 pm
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camo16 - Member
And the AT-AT wins.

yes


 
Posted : 25/07/2013 12:04 pm
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Victorian doors, worth £100 odd at the salvage yard!


 
Posted : 25/07/2013 12:06 pm
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Pair of folding Teak garden chairs. A1 nick, right on top of the waste wood skip, didn't even have to climb in to retrieve them. Thanks for those Cheshire West and Chester council!

When we were younger, my dad often used to come home with an old pram frame that the wheels and axles were pressed into service on our home made go-cart.


 
Posted : 25/07/2013 12:07 pm
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A fully working A0+ drawing board with parallel motion and adjustable legs. Took some lifting to get out but works beautifully


 
Posted : 25/07/2013 12:07 pm
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we have an architects plan chest, we had an Xray lightbox (but that got stolen), A load of top quality underlay which now sits in various rooms in our house (one company goes under, new company want laminate floors...) my personal favourite was the chairs from our old uni library. I remember when these were brand new and were quite comfy. 5 years later there was hundreds of them behind the sports centre, piled up next to the skips. liberated 6 of them. a few years later still, our house flooded and the insurance people deemed our purple tub chairs as being worth £160 each.


 
Posted : 25/07/2013 12:08 pm
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A dismembered hooker. I'll post some photos when I get home.


 
Posted : 25/07/2013 12:08 pm
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Two quite high spec computer base stations. Both worked fine, had XP installed which I got into easily. Both had accounting information from a wholesale trading company on them.

I wiped them both, installed Linux, used one for years as a server at home and gave the other to a friend.


 
Posted : 25/07/2013 12:11 pm
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(The bike, not the 'shooms)... still my favorite bike. 😀
[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 25/07/2013 12:12 pm
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Kid's bike trailer, sadly a bit mangled, but after a bit of modification (i.e. hitting with a hammer) it was fixed enough to act as a trailer for taking water and other stuff up to the allotment.


 
Posted : 25/07/2013 12:12 pm
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7 piece Mapex Drum kit.

I found it, the skip monkey wouldn't let me take it (but put it in his boot for storage)

hey ho.


 
Posted : 25/07/2013 12:16 pm
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I was at a local HWS and asking the bloke if they kept bikes aside (they didn't) when an old bloke came up to the same worker and asked where he should dump his 2 perfect condition Roberts radios. I said something along the lines of "right here" as I held out my hands. 😯


 
Posted : 25/07/2013 12:18 pm
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3 LWB landrover loads of joinery offcuts which kept our 1st stove going for 2 winters.


 
Posted : 25/07/2013 12:19 pm
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A suzuki ts185.

It's currently in bits in my dad's garage.


 
Posted : 25/07/2013 12:20 pm
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[IMG] [/IMG]

I didn't get on with it though... Cleaned it up and sold it for £80


 
Posted : 25/07/2013 12:24 pm
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i had a makita electric chainsaw out of a skip last week. baffled as to why that was thrown away, its even sharp!

years back had a fancy mitre saw that seemed a bit good to be true so i asked the builders - they had thrown it because the laser guide had stopped working 😯

also about 75% of my food and alcohol comes from the supermarket bins.....just not so much while the weather is this hot


 
Posted : 25/07/2013 12:27 pm
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also about 75% of my food and alcohol comes from the supermarket bins.....just not so much while the weather is this hot

Where are these supermarket 'bins' of which you speak?

You just go round the back and help yourself?


 
Posted : 25/07/2013 12:28 pm
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yes camo, co-op is good, but dont get caught, do it after they close. if you get caught too often they will start locking the bins up and for all you know there maybe people wholly reliant on this food source so dont **** it up for others would be my advice


 
Posted : 25/07/2013 12:32 pm
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...yeah, I nearly got arrested for doing just that. It's theft apparently. Was a bit pissed though, but polite, so the police officers, calling out 'We Got 'im!' in the middle of the night, let me go.. 😕


 
Posted : 25/07/2013 12:33 pm
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Good to know, jonah. I've no intention of ****ing it up for others, just curious is all. 😉


 
Posted : 25/07/2013 12:34 pm
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i got caught by a manager once, he chased me and everything- its hard to run with a binbag full of out-of-date malteasers in your hand. although they are lighter than ordinary chocalate 😀


 
Posted : 25/07/2013 12:36 pm
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i know mate, its the same advice i give everyone who is interested though


 
Posted : 25/07/2013 12:37 pm
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I used to work in a supermarket when I was a student. Once a bloke "found" a bale of compressed cardboard in a skip and decided to liberate it. However, whilst trying to get it in the back of his van it fell on him. Oh how we laughed. The police and the fire brigade laughed too.

Back to the OP... There appears to be a perfectly good bike in a skip on Sunningdale Drive in Prestich if anyome wants it. Bit of TLC and some kid could have a lot of fun on it.


 
Posted : 25/07/2013 12:42 pm
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Found a motherboard with an Intel i7 processor. Rescued it, added a video card and RAM...and it works.


 
Posted : 25/07/2013 12:45 pm
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Mototolla carphone about 15 years ago. Worked fine, sold to boss and it funded 25% of an Astra GTE 🙂


 
Posted : 25/07/2013 12:45 pm
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I've found myself in one on at least one occasion.

I did once find an entire 35mm B&W porn film in one. It ended up festooned across my ceiling like perverted christmas decorations.


 
Posted : 25/07/2013 1:01 pm
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A couple of Le Creuset pans, which we are still using years later.
Also, donkey's years ago, some Arthur Ransome hardback childrens' books. I walked 100 yards to the nearest bookshop & got a fiver for them. Probably about £25 in today's money.


 
Posted : 25/07/2013 1:10 pm
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By the way, since we're all law abiding citizens on here 😉 I'm guessing we all asked the property owner's permission before liberating our booty?

I didn't the first time (about 10 Victorian floorboards), but was quickly informed by a friend it was the legal thing to do - so when we revisited the skip we asked the guy and basically took everything that he had left...


 
Posted : 25/07/2013 1:15 pm
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By the way, since we're all law abiding citizens on here I'm guessing we all asked the property owner's permission before liberating our booty?

A mate got a caution for 'theft' after taking stuff from a skip, his missus wasn't impressed when the Police turned up at his house asking who owned the vehicle on his drive, so good advice.


 
Posted : 25/07/2013 1:18 pm
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I used to work next to Homebase.
And in most cases if someone had something and it went wrong then they would just throw it in the skip.
I had brand new drills,lights,christmas trees and lights,phones,garden table and chairs,parasol,garden bench,kingsize sleigh bed and so on.
Good findings!


 
Posted : 25/07/2013 1:19 pm
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Some pallets.
.
2 friends and me were walking home one night, spotted a load of pallets in a skip and thought they would be great for the bonfire.
One friend and I each took two, the other friend has his knackered commuter bike with him (had a front brake but no rear) so he only took one.
Got to the top of the hill (Kendrick Road in Reading for those who know it) He climbed aboard his bike and shot off down the hill, propelled at great speed by the extra weight of his pallet. He was however, holding it in his right, front brake, hand. Other friend and I laughed for a while and then realised he was heading for the A4, three lanes of busy main road which goes across the bottom of the hill, and he wasn't going to stop. We gave chase shouting at him to drop the pallet. He was too drunk or too deaf to hear us. He was clearly going to die.
Just as he approached the A4 we heard the beep beep of the pedestrian lights to his right, the traffic stopped, he shot across the road, through the petrol station on the other side, missed all the pumps and the cars there and disappeared from our sight out of the other entrance to it.
We lived on that road, apparently he just coasted to a stop outside our house using his feet as brakes.


 
Posted : 25/07/2013 1:22 pm
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