Re: Best way to sell entire 6 x 18 enclosed welding trailer?
Hey Butch37, assuming you truly do want to help him sell this as opposed to keeping it in the family for you or anyone else, here's what might work.
I would take lots of clear, bright pictures of the contents of the trailer, and I'd get descriptions from him of what everything is. If you want, you can post that information in this thread and we can help you organize it and figure out maybe how best to advertise it. Some pieces may sell best individually and some will only sell when grouped together or thrown in with a larger lot. Brand, model, and condition of tools really make a difference when it comes to value. The trailer itself may be worth a lot or may be worth nothing at all. But we'll try to help you out as best we can.
Edited to add that if he's wanting to sell, in general it's best to sell sooner rather than later...engine-driven welders don't like to sit for long before they don't run as well as they once did, especially older carbureted models. Batteries die, gas goes bad, etc. Same for cordless power tool batteries. Consumables like welding rods can start rusting, vehicles / trailers get flat tires, rot/rust issues, inspections go out of date....you get the picture. I've known a couple business owners who couldn't work anymore, but also couldn't bear to sell, and once they finally did decide to sell (or their family did), the equipment's value was all but gone. It was sad to see.
Final Edit: Be absolutely sure that selling this is what's best. You mentioned something about learning to use this equipment seeming overwhelming, but if there's any part of you that truly wants to learn, and if your Dad doesn't absolutely have to have this money, then you have a link to his past here whose family value far outweighs it's financial value. Unless he's a very unusual part-timer, he likely has mid-grade tools and equipment which are now outdated enough that they aren't going to have a lot of residual value. But if you sell them and then realize 5 years from now that you really want to weld, replacing these tools with modern mid-grade equipment could easily cost 10x what you get for these in this sale. Just playing devil's advocate for a minute.
Your age and gender are not barriers to learning to weld, and neither is older equipment; but metal fabrication isn't everyone's thing and that's perfectly fine. I'm not trying to push you in any direction, just fleshing out both sides as I see it.
Last edited by tbone550; 05-12-2020 at 01:57 AM.
Applied Fabrications, LLC
Mobile Welding / Mechanical Repair in VA's Piedmont & Shenandoah Valley