Governments are that way. For example, I'd purchase a retired car from the Wyoming state motor pool in a heartbeat, but I wouldn't touch one from the state of Montana. This is a similar case- especially in larger agencies where the IT staff is more likely to pull parts to keep as spares. You'll get them eventually- when they're obsolete. Some agencies are the exact opposite, sending complete, ready to refurbish machines out.
The thing about refurbishing is that it's a world of it's own. I've sold laptops for $500 before, but you have to know what
exactly you're looking at. You also have to make sure that the Operating System is properly licensed- a lot of the computers for sale online don't have legal, genuine software. That makes it harder for those of us that do refurbish as a business, but that's just how it is. Never buy a lot from a place you haven't dealt with before on the grounds that everything will work- you'll usually be wrong.
There was a member on here a while back who posted results from an auction he attended. The computer refurbishers actually bought some items at prices that would be indicative of a loss, so there's not a lot of room there. Older desktops can't be sold online, because shipping and the cost of licensing Windows (Legally) would exceed what the computer could be sold for. Older desktops are primarily sold in retail environments, and those vary a lot.
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Now that I've derailed your thread (You can thank me later!), there are two buyers of screens on this forum. I've used one of them- IIRC, he would cover shipping if you had over $600 of monitors. The rate at that time was $6.00 per screen, so you can calculate backwards to see what bid would cover the cost of time and transportation (And, almost 17" or larger LCD monitor can be resold for more than scrap value). Most of my lot was test failures
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