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-   -   OT What do you do with a disfunctional TV (https://www.boatbanter.com/cruising/28391-ot-what-do-you-do-disfunctional-tv.html)

Garland Gray II February 23rd 05 01:40 AM

OT What do you do with a disfunctional TV
 
This NG is a wealth of knowledge, so maybe someone has a suggestion.

Bad tube.

The pack rat in me hates to just pitch it in a dumpster as one shop advised.
Surely anything that heavy with metals has some recycle value. I'd go to
some trouble to get it to some one who could use it.

Any ideas?



Gogarty February 23rd 05 02:30 PM

In article 4aRSd.14304$%U2.5245@lakeread01, says...


This NG is a wealth of knowledge, so maybe someone has a suggestion.

Bad tube.

The pack rat in me hates to just pitch it in a dumpster as one shop advised.
Surely anything that heavy with metals has some recycle value. I'd go to
some trouble to get it to some one who could use it.

Any ideas?


Dump it. In an age where one sees complete computers sitting on the sidewalk
keeping an old and probably very obsolete TV around just because it's there
doesn't make much sense.


Steve February 23rd 05 03:49 PM


"Garland Gray II" wrote in message
news:4aRSd.14304$%U2.5245@lakeread01...



The pack rat in me hates to just pitch it in a dumpster as one shop
advised.
Surely anything that heavy with metals has some recycle value. I'd go to
some trouble to get it to some one who could use it.


Sad Fact:

If you can't find a dumpster to (sneak) it into (most curb-side trash pickup
won't take it), be prepared to pay about $5 at a "Take it Back" processing
facility.

According to what I've recently heard on the local news, it cost more to
process a TV or monitor, than they can get out of the heavy metals.

If I try to take my old TV to a local land fill, and they notice it in my
load (they screen what goes into the site) they will charge a similar fee.

If your like me (cheap), try to take it back to an appliance store
(hopefully where you purchased your new TV) and ask them to dispose of it.
There may come a day where they are required to take it back, similar to
batteries or tires.

My experiences for what it's worth.

Steve
s/v Good Intentions



Glenn Ashmore February 23rd 05 07:07 PM

I just relieved my junk room of a dead 28" TV this weekend. I have ripped
several apart in the past and the salvagable parts are just not worth the
effort.

Just take it out to the curb about 2 days before trash pickup. It will
magicaly dissapear within 24 hours. Works well for old microwaves,
monochrome computer displays and even sofas on occasion. :-)

OTOH, old printers have lots of good stepper motors, gears, shafts and other
interesting parts to clutter up the junk box.

--
Glenn Ashmore

I'm building a 45' cutter in strip/composite. Watch my progress (or lack
there of) at: http://www.rutuonline.com
Shameless Commercial Division: http://www.spade-anchor-us.com

"Garland Gray II" wrote in message
news:4aRSd.14304$%U2.5245@lakeread01...
This NG is a wealth of knowledge, so maybe someone has a suggestion.

Bad tube.

The pack rat in me hates to just pitch it in a dumpster as one shop

advised.
Surely anything that heavy with metals has some recycle value. I'd go to
some trouble to get it to some one who could use it.

Any ideas?





Lew Hodgett February 23rd 05 09:19 PM

Glenn Ashmore wrote:
I just relieved my junk room of a dead 28" TV this weekend. I have ripped
several apart in the past and the salvagable parts are just not worth the
effort.

Just take it out to the curb about 2 days before trash pickup. It will
magicaly dissapear within 24 hours. Works well for old microwaves,
monochrome computer displays and even sofas on occasion. :-)


Unless you are in SoCal.

TVs and computer monitors are no longer being accepted at land fills and
must be recycled.

Don't ask me how they are recycled.

Lew

Glenn Ashmore February 23rd 05 09:53 PM


"Lew Hodgett" wrote in message
ink.net...
Glenn Ashmore wrote:
I just relieved my junk room of a dead 28" TV this weekend. I have

ripped
several apart in the past and the salvagable parts are just not worth

the
effort.

Just take it out to the curb about 2 days before trash pickup. It will
magicaly dissapear within 24 hours. Works well for old microwaves,
monochrome computer displays and even sofas on occasion. :-)


Unless you are in SoCal.

TVs and computer monitors are no longer being accepted at land fills and
must be recycled.

Don't ask me how they are recycled.


I didn't say the city trash truck picks them up. They are gone long before
the scheduled pickup. I think there must be some Morlocks living in the
sewer system. :-)

--
Glenn Ashmore

I'm building a 45' cutter in strip/composite. Watch my progress (or lack
there of) at: http://www.rutuonline.com
Shameless Commercial Division: http://www.spade-anchor-us.com



Don White February 23rd 05 10:58 PM

There's talk in Nova Scotia of implementing a fee at time of purchase to
take care of disposal at the end. Electronics will be banned from our
landfills also.



chuck February 24th 05 12:45 AM

Wasn't this recycling/disposal issue for appliances
"resolved" 20 years ago in Germany and other EU countries?




Don White wrote:
There's talk in Nova Scotia of implementing a fee at time of purchase to
take care of disposal at the end. Electronics will be banned from our
landfills also.



Garland Gray II February 24th 05 11:00 PM

Thanks for the responses.
I was afraid there was no good solution, and it appears that is the case.



Wayne.B February 25th 05 02:00 AM

On Thu, 24 Feb 2005 18:00:17 -0500, "Garland Gray II"
wrote:

Thanks for the responses.
I was afraid there was no good solution, and it appears that is the case.


=============================

That may not be true. :-)

Picking up on Glenn's thought, there's an old joke with people who
live in Manhattan (NYC of course). If you REALLY want to get rid of
something, wrap it up in nice paper, put it in a Tiffany's shopping
bag, and leave it on the back seat of your unattended car, preferably
unlocked to avoid glass damage.

It works.

In lieu of that, just put in on the curb for a few days and see what
happens. There ARE people looking for these things.



Garland Gray II February 25th 05 03:00 AM

Perhaps, but I'd hate to end up moving it twice.
But it does remind me of when a battery was stolen out of a piece of our
logging equipment parked in the woods. Saved us the trouble of removing the
battery as it was weak and to be replaced anyway. Batteries in other
equipment were good, they just picked the wrong one.
I would have loved to see their faces when they tried to use it.

"Wayne.B" wrote in message
...
On Thu, 24 Feb 2005 18:00:17 -0500, "Garland Gray II"
wrote:

Thanks for the responses.
I was afraid there was no good solution, and it appears that is the case.


=============================

That may not be true. :-)

Picking up on Glenn's thought, there's an old joke with people who
live in Manhattan (NYC of course). If you REALLY want to get rid of
something, wrap it up in nice paper, put it in a Tiffany's shopping
bag, and leave it on the back seat of your unattended car, preferably
unlocked to avoid glass damage.

It works.

In lieu of that, just put in on the curb for a few days and see what
happens. There ARE people looking for these things.





Steve February 25th 05 03:05 PM


"Steve" wrote in message
...

"Garland Gray II" wrote in message
news:4aRSd.14304$%U2.5245@lakeread01...


Sad Fact:

If you can't find a dumpster to (sneak) it into (most curb-side trash
pickup won't take it), be prepared to pay about $5 at a "Take it Back"
processing facility.

According to what I've recently heard on the local news, it cost more to
process a TV or monitor, than they can get out of the heavy metals.

If I try to take my old TV to a local land fill, and they notice it in my
load (they screen what goes into the site) they will charge a similar fee.

If your like me (cheap), try to take it back to an appliance store
(hopefully where you purchased your new TV) and ask them to dispose of it.
There may come a day where they are required to take it back, similar to
batteries or tires.

My experiences for what it's worth.

Steve
s/v Good Intentions


Follow up on the local Take-it-Back (Shoreline
WA.)

Handling Fees (drop off):
Cell phones $10 ea.
TVs $15-$20
Printers $10
Computers $10
Copier/Fax $10-$80
PDAs/Pagers $10

Steve






Gogarty March 7th 05 09:31 PM

In article 30tTd.23119$%U2.11635@lakeread01, says...


Thanks for the responses.
I was afraid there was no good solution, and it appears that is the case.

To the sidewalk! Let other people furnish their premises with your
castoffs.

Apropos of which, walking along the sidewalk yesterday morning, I stumbled
across a big box full of books with a sign: "Free Books." It was an
eclectic collection indeed and all were in excellent shape. Just to be a
trifle OT, the one on top was "The Weather Book" with foreword by Nigel
Calder. It is now part of my library.


Jere Lull March 8th 05 06:41 AM

In article ,
Wayne.B wrote:

Picking up on Glenn's thought, there's an old joke with people who
live in Manhattan (NYC of course). If you REALLY want to get rid of
something, wrap it up in nice paper, put it in a Tiffany's shopping
bag, and leave it on the back seat of your unattended car, preferably
unlocked to avoid glass damage.

It works.

In lieu of that, just put in on the curb for a few days and see what
happens. There ARE people looking for these things.


In my starving student days (early 70s), my roommate was one of those
people. He very comfortably outfitted our apartment with beautifully
rich wall-to-wall, convertable couch, a couple chairs, tables, lamps,
kitchen ware.... He was amazing, as was the quality of the stuff tossed
out for slight imperfections. Our stuff moved down the food chain in
much the same way.

--
Jere Lull
Xan-a-Deux ('73 Tanzer 28 #4 out of Tolchester, MD)
Xan's Pages: http://members.dca.net/jerelull/X-Main.html
Our BVI FAQs (290+ pics) http://homepage.mac.com/jerelull/BVI/


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