Did one over the summer and just deleted my photos yesterday. I may have posted some on here, can't remember.
The organization getting rid of this was hoping that I could pay them for this, but I told them up front that there wasn't enough in it at the current prices. Good thing I did, because in the end, I didn't make much and spent a lot of time on it.
Before starting this job, I didn't own torches and had never used them. In Massachusetts, we are required to get a "Hot Works" permit from the FD to use any welding or Oxy-fueled cutting device, unless it is in a shop permitted for that. That cost me $25, plus a couple of weeks to get the permit due to the Fire Chief being away. In the mean time, I rented a cutoff saw for a day ($100 plus fuel and blades) and started working. Spent about $150 on my torches set up. Rented tanks for a month(only filled initially) for about $45. Sold some of it 1 hour away as prepared and unprepared plate and structural, sold some locally as #1 prepared (this was over 5', but they don't have a P&S category, so the manager worked with me). From the axles back, minus the C channels that run along the edge of the trailer, I had a friend that has a flatbed for cars, tow this to the local yard, Got unprepared, minus 400 pounds for 8 tires, for this. Paid him about $60 for the tow. In the end, I'd say I probably broke even and came out of it with a set or torches. If you've never used torches before, it is an art and will take you a while to get the hang of. Out of all the cuts I made, I think I only had one really good one and that was because I was able to use something as a guide to hold the torch steady.
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