[Hplusroadmap] Equipment acquisition for homebrewers
Jim Hardy
hardy at gahaga.com
Sun Jun 29 20:11:18 CDT 2008
Bryan,
I have told you my story already. You won't find squat on eBay and Craig's
list. You might as well pay retail for the newest, improved version.
I have a network of people in the area who have access to the people in
cast off gear for $1000 or so a "lot" . A "lot my include a flow cytometer,
protein synthesizer, microscope, incubator, lyophilizer etc. I am also
trying to figure out how to bid on lots of gear coming out of Ft Detrick &
the NIH. They have warehouses (literally, warehouses) full of cast off
equipment. Most will be donated to Universities (which is why I dismiss
trying to procure anything useful from Universities because most of it is
already 20 years old before anyone has a shot at it). The common thread on
most of these bargains is that you need to be able to haul the crap away in
short order (we have a 24 ft box truck for this purpose) and then a place to
triage the good from the bad which will require a warehouse of at least 2500
sq ft (which we also have, have meaning we paid good money to obtain).
Jim H
-----Original Message-----
From: hplusroadmap-bounces at heybryan.org
[mailto:hplusroadmap-bounces at heybryan.org] On Behalf Of Bryan Bishop
Sent: Sunday, June 29, 2008 10:05 AM
To: hplusroadmap at heybryan.org
Subject: [Hplusroadmap] Equipment acquisition for homebrewers
Hey all,
I'm wondering about methodologies for acquiring interesting, unique,
useful, or 'maybe it will one day be useful' equipment (junk).
Obviously going through the normal routines of Radio Shack and
electronic shops isn't really going to get you much these days.
Digikey, Mouser, etc., can do some electronic componentry, but I'm
thinking more in terms of shop/lab equipment, and for cheap.
So here's the question. How do you, particularly, go about acquiring
hardware that you work with ? The materials? The tools? I know that
many of you have very, very interesting toys that you play with, and my
collection is iffy at the moment. I've seen various suggestions around
the web to just keep trolling ebay, craigslist and the newspaper, but
this results only in so much. There's also been that occasional
suggestion to go dumpster diving.
I'm interested in constructing a few general programs that facilitate
the acquisition of this sort of equipment. For instance, I could spend
my time clicking around on ebay and craigslist waiting for something
interesting to pop up and catch my attention, or I could even more
easily write a program that monitors for certain items (even though I
don't entirely know what I am looking for) and various prices,
locations, whatever. This would be fine if I knew the locations to
monitor. I just don't know how people with very massive accumulations
of 'junk' actually get that way without paying a fortune for each and
every item. Is there some sort of secret club for cool equipment? I'm
doubting it -- but there certainly should be, yes.
So the program that I am writing would go search the databases on a
periodic basis, and then return results that may or may not be
interesting. The routines for this are pretty simple to construct, but
I'm not entirely sure of where to start searching. Where could I get a
full list of shops and suppliers and so on for any city in the world,
for instance? And what about websites and such listings? Does anybody
have that sort of information besides a printed (text-only) phone book?
I'd like to avoid print publications, but if I have to I'll look into
some.
I'd like to hear any stories that you might have. Electronics,
metalworking, biotech equipment, anything. It looks like the main issue
is that you have to actually need a component for some project, and
this eventually results in finding something locally available, but at
the same time I'm sure there are other ways to creatively enhance your
set of tools and stuffs, yes?
I'm sending this off to a handful of different mailing lists, so there's
a reason why the context may seem a little odd for anybody listening.
- Bryan
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