silversaddle1 wrote:Since you are cheap, you will never make as much money on scrap as you could have.
If you are not willing to invest in your business, you will get very little in return out of it.
My wife and I stared out our scrap business with 1 hammer and 3 screwdrivers. First check we made we bought a sawzall.
That was 21 years ago, and now we scrap full time, and don't worry about money anymore.
ilyaz wrote:silversaddle1 wrote:Since you are cheap, you will never make as much money on scrap as you could have.
If you are not willing to invest in your business, you will get very little in return out of it.
My wife and I stared out our scrap business with 1 hammer and 3 screwdrivers. First check we made we bought a sawzall.
That was 21 years ago, and now we scrap full time, and don't worry about money anymore.
Well, I have a full time job and a family, so I am treating metal scrapping as "hobby with benefits", since I simply do not have time and space to expand.
When I said that I was cheap this meant that I would buy expensive tools only when I feel I absolutely have to. And even then I prefer to buy what I absolutely have to trying to get by as much as I can with already available resources. From this discussion I see that it's a good idea to start by investing in just one tool, most likely a sawzall. But definitely not more than that.
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