Junk Refund Radio Show, June 22, 2023

Find out how some people get some of the “junk” out of their lives by visiting this huge three-day convention in Salt Lake City every September! It’s an amazing event, being held September 21-23 in Salt Lake City this year. I will see you there!

Enjoy my interview with Dan Farr, CEO of FanX in Salt Lake City! A great friend and entrepreneur, who is all about making his convention (the largest in the state of Utah) a great experience for the fans. Thanks, Dan!

https://bbsradio.com/archive-description/audio/listen/271049

Junk Refund Radio Show, Episode 1: June 15, 2023

Enjoy our debut radio show, recorded from a customer’s driveway in Potomac, Maryland on Thursday, June 15, 2023! Here, we tell the story of 1-800-Junk-Refund and what we do for customers. Purchase our $79 radio show voucher (normally $229, good for a pickup truck of junk removal) from our RADIO SHOW page!

Listen live each Thursday at 3 PM EST on bbsradio.com! Enjoy!

https://bbsradio.com/podcast/junk-refund-show-june-15-2023

 

A Test of Integrity

The Situation

Today we went to the scrap metal yard, as we usually do.   The process there is simple:

  1. Enter the yard and pull up on the scale with your truckload of metal.
  2. Get weighed.
  3. Drive around the yard to the scrap metal pile and throw your metal off.
  4. Get back on the scale and get weighed again.
  5. Go to the cashier’s window and get paid.

The Test of Integrity

Today everything was normal here until we got to step #5.  That’s when they gave us $250 we shouldn’t have gotten.  When the lady behind the cashier’s window entered our “empty” weight, she entered it as “640” instead of “6440.”  With an initial weight of 6,660 pounds, it means she credited us with dropping off over 6,000 pounds of metal that we didn’t drop off.  We received $288 from the window when it should have been $34.

Scrap metal integrity ticket

My corrected scrap metal ticket, down $250 from what it was at first.

I could have driven off and no one would have known.  After all, it was there mistake, right?  But I knew, and I knew that God knew, and I had to make it right.  I contacted a supervisor before leaving the yard and showed him the mistake.  I gave him all the money back then received in return my $34.

The Joy I Felt

When I pulled out of the yard with the correct amount of cash in my hand, I knew I had passed the “test of integrity.”  It felt right.  I was happy.  What’s more, my credibility with the scrap metal people took an upward jump.

I was much happier knowing I had done the right thing than I would have been with the extra $250.  My integrity is worth more than that.  Today I was able to prove it.

 

From Arcade to Money Made!

I love to haul away vintage arcade machines.  They’re popular among collectors as long as they work.

More than that, I love to make money for our clients when we sell their good stuff and give them money back.  That’s popular among everybody, as long as they work.

The Popeye Arcade Machine Job

A nice lady in Great Falls, Virginia contacted us to haul away some of her stuff.  Among that stuff was a vintage Popeye Nintendo arcade machine.  She paid us $250 to haul away two pickup truck loads of stuff, using our Speedpass link on our website.  The normal price for this amount of hauling is $350…

So on the first visit we hauled away some junk, including some carpet, a chair, and some miscellaneous stuff.  We left the arcade machine to haul away on the next visit but we did take some photos of it so we could put it up for sale.

Thank You Facebook Marketplace!

I checked online and found this same machine selling for about $400.  One guy was asking $2,450, but no one went after it.  So I listed her machine on Facebook Marketplace for $795 after plugging the machine in and verifying that it worked.  Within 48 hours I had sold it for my asking price.

Cash Back for the Customer on the Arcade Machine

Women with cash back from arcade sale

She got $280 back within 48 hours after only spending $250 on her junk removal job!

Whenever we sell something that we’re hauling away for a customer, they get 35 percent of the sales price as long as we sell it for more than $20.  Our client’s share on this one sale was $280!  She was thrilled to get the money plus we still have other items to sell!

Welcome to the next generation of junk removal–cash back when we sell your good stuff!  (We must be eating our spinach…)

 

CHILE BIKE SILLY

Meet my new friend from Chile.  He came here two months ago with his family, but not on a bike.  He has four kids, ages six to 14.  He needs a bicycle for his wife.

A Bike for His Wife

Call it a bike or bicycle, this guy from Chile is happy!

A bike for his wife!

His wife needs a new bicycle.  He saw ours on Craigslist.  He buys it!

He is looking for another one for his 14-year-old.  Also, they want a set of outdoor furniture for their deck.

Furthermore, the customer who had us haul away the bicycle gets 35% of the sales price, or $28.  Hence, everybody wins!

This is a good example of how we work.  Instead of throwing the bicycle into a landfill, we sell it to someone who could use it.  So, it’s a win for the junk removal client, it’s also a win for the buyer, and it’s a win for our company.

We enjoy seeing the smiles on the faces of the people who had this hauled away.  We also enjoy seeing the smiles on the faces of the people who buy our items.  Finally, we enjoy seeing the smiles on the faces of the people who get a refund back.

The retail price of this bicycle is around $300.  His wife gets it for $80.  So, that’s one happy wife!

Other stories like this are here:

CASH BACK JUNK REMOVAL!

SCRAP METAL RECYCLE

Recycling is important to us at 1-800-Junk-Refund, particularly when it comes to scrap metal.  We love to use the boys at Montgomery Scrap on Southlawn Lane in Rockville to recycle our stuff.

Recycle These Scrap Metal Items:

  1. First of all, appliances like refrigerators, freezers, washers, dryers, dishwashers and microwave ovens.

    Montgomery Scrap handles all our metal recycle needs.

    We love the folks at Montgomery Scrap. Here they unload a metal milling machine to be recycled. That’s just one example of how we recycle! Wire such as extension cords, stereo wires, television wires, computer wires and the like.

  2. Then metals like copper, aluminum, brass, and stainless steel.
  3. Also batteries from cars and other vehicles.
  4. Even old bicycles, exercise equipment, weight sets, lamps, gutters, nuts and bolts.
  5. Metal from cars, like brake shoes, rotors, radiators, wheel rims, and motors.
  6. Even cars themselves are recycled!
  7. Of course, regular metal items like garbage cans, barbecues, grates, weight sets, tools, electric tools, and finally light fixtures.
  8. Also, air conditioners, water heaters, humidifiers, and portable heaters get recycled.
  9. Most of all, call us with any questions you might have.  We give free estimates!

Those of you who live on a farm and may have old farming equipment should call us.  We use heavy equipment to haul off large hay balers, fence sections, tractors, plows, levelers, lawn mowers, and the like.

Call us if you have old cars (particularly the ones that someone thinks they are going to restore but never seem to get around to it) that are just taking up room in your driveway or backyard.  When in doubt, just call us to find out!

Please call us when you have any questions.  Our minimum charge to pick up is $95 with a pick-up truck full running $229 and the equivalent of four pick-up trucks running $595.  Just mention this post and get 10% off!

Why Montgomery Scrap?

Check out the website of Montgomery Scrap here:

http://www.scrapmsc.com/

HOME

 

 

PAY $150, GET $250 BACK!

Cash Refund for a Tennis Pro!

Cash refund for a tennis player?  Sure!

Meet Richard, a pro tennis player who recently sold his home in the Kentlands, then moved to New England.  He had us come and haul away 3 pieces of exercise equipment which we were happy to do.  Accordingly, he paid us $150 for hauling them away.

We then took them to our store and sold all 3 for about $500.  As a result, Richard got $250 back!

Ironically, we ended up hauling two of the items right back to the Kentlands area and placed them in the homes of other Kentlands residents!

Finally, Richard poses outside our retail store with his refund check.  Congratulations, Richard!  Game, set and match!

Cash refund from the sale of exercise equipment!

Richard pays $150, gets $250 cash refund back!

CASH BACK JUNK REMOVAL!

It’s amazing how fast some of these refunds happen, too!  In this case we drove only about 5 miles to get to his home.  Then, he showed us some exercise equipment he hadn’t used in a long time.  He was moving to New England, and he didn’t want to haul the equipment along for the trip.  Who could blame him?

So, we gave him a price to haul it off, which we believe was below what it would have cost him to go elsewhere.  Accordingly, he went with our offer and had us haul away the stuff.  We took it over to our store (we use storage units not instead…) and sold it within about a week.

Richard got a percentage of the sale, which was about 50 percent at the time.  (We now give 35 percent!)  After all was said and done, he made $100 more on the sale of the equipment than he paid to have it hauled away!  That’s a cash refund from the sale of his junk!

Would you like to be next?  We do free estimates too!

FREE ESTIMATE

JUNK REMOVAL PRICES

MEET MY NEW FRIEND

Meet My New Friend

Meet my new friend!  Maybe it was her Pittsburgh Steelers sweatshirt, or just the cool electric car she rides around in every day, but I liked Carol Portis at Leisure World the moment I saw her.  She was kind enough to take over the responsibility to have her friend’s apartment cleaned out.

She heard about us and had us do the job.  It’s the Carol Portis’ of the world that make having good friends so special.My new friend

One of the many things I enjoy about the work that I do is meeting the people I meet.  We tend to get involved in their lives when something significant is happening, be it a job transfer, a move, a college student coming home to move in, a divorce, or whatever it may be.

People like Carol make it easier for others.  She stepped in and made life easier for her friend, when in fact, life may not be that easy on a day-to-day basis for Carol.

I applaud her for the unselfish way she helped out her friend.  As a result, the apartment got cleaned out and her friend’s life was made easier.

Way to go, Carol!  You’re awesome!

HOME

WILBUR GETS HIS GUITAR!

Wilbur Performs With His New Guitar Outside Our Store

Wilbur Gets His Guitar!

We picked up this guitar today on a junk removal job.    Later, a guy named Wilbur pulled up to our store just as we were closing.

He saw us take this  instrument off the truck and immediately asked about it.   It is somewhat of a kid’s size instrument with a built-in speaker.  So, we turned the it on, but the speaker wasn’t working.

Wilbur just kept playing.  After a minute, it fired up and sounded great.

Wilbur bought it for $10 and immediately went into the parking lot and delivered a live concert.  Congrats!

Sometimes it’s the simple things in life that bring the most enjoyment.  It’s amazing what only $10 can buy these days.  Even adults can find a great deal of enjoyment with a simple “toy.”

And it doesn’t matter if it’s new either.  This purchase was a great one for Wilbur but he didn’t have to spend hundreds of dollars on it.  Yet, the joy he got out of it was magical to see.  We were thrilled for him and we were glad this wonderful instrument found a new home!

That’s the way to go through life!  Enjoy the your new instrument!

WASHINGTON POST ARTICLE

Opera Music Part of Junk Hauler’s Treasure Trove

By John Kelly – The Washington Post

Washington Post record collection article

A record collection gets sold for $12,000!

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

The Discovery

The junk hauler figured they had to be worth something, these 15,000 black discs that filled an entire room in a Silver Spring house.

“It’s by far the largest collection in the seven years I’ve been cleaning out people’s houses,” Alan Cook told me as three of his employees lugged box after box out to a truck parked on the cul-de-sac.

They were 78-rpm discs mostly, and mostly opera. Locked in their dusty grooves were the voices of long-dead singers, from American soprano Bessie Abott (singing “Où va la jeune Hindone”) to Italian tenor Alessandro Ziliani (singing “Donna Non Vidi Mai”).

Alan has a deal with the people who hire him: His company, 1-800 Junk Refund, sells everything of value and splits the proceeds 50-50. But old classical records clog thrift shops and library book sales everywhere. When Alan put an ad on Craigslist he got only a few nibbles.

The Deal

Then a record dealer from Frederick came to visit. He offered $4,000, then upped it to $6,000. Alan wondered if the records might be worth even more. He accepted the $6,000 offer, but wrote an agreement that if he was offered more than $10,000, the man would lose the collection — but get $2,000.

And that’s when a dealer from Long Island called and asked Alan to describe the records. “Money’s not a problem,” the man said.

His interest piqued, the dealer flew down a few days later, inspected the collection and offered $12,000.
Alan called the $6,000 man. “We got a better offer,” he said, “but you just made 2,000 bucks.”

It would take Alan and his crew — Kennedy, Gilberto and Darryl (aka “Happy“) — another day to move all the records to a storage unit. Then there were the binders full of hand-lettered indexes to the collection, the opera books, the auction catalogues, the opera-related magazines and newspaper clippings.

“This guy loved opera,” said the junk hauler.

“That’s a good question,” said the Long Island record dealer, Larry Holdridge. “I don’t know. The singing. The music. Every voice is an individual instrument. It’s much more personal, I think, than listening to violinists or pianists, who in terms of style have individual qualities, but with singing, each voice is so different.”

This collection, Larry said, was not particularly stellar but he thought there may be some gems, a few choice recordings of the sort that get collectors excited.

And he should know: Larry sold many of them to the opera lover. “He was a customer for about 20 or 30 years, I’d say. Mostly Italian opera, rather than German or French. He wasn’t interested in collecting rare records, just things he liked to hear.”

* * *

A Daughter’s Perspective

“As kids we’d be out in the cul-de-sac riding our bikes and you could hear it, you could hear the opera, even though the windows were closed. You’d come to the house and you’d feel the walls shaking. It was just so loud. He just loved it. He would sit with either a glass of cognac or a glass of wine — he had special wine glasses, very, very thin — and he would drink his wine and listen to opera.”

That’s the man’s daughter. The last year hasn’t been easy on the family, and she asked that I not include their names.

“Sadly, he’s not well,” she said of her 83-year-old father. “He’s got Alzheimer’s.”

The man came to adore the music of Verdi, Puccini, Caruso through his father, who was an opera singer in Italy.

“I was a child of the ’70s and I couldn’t stand it,” the daughter said. “Quite honestly, to this day, I really hate opera. I was totally Beatles, Rolling Stones, all that classic rock. I remember playing for him the Who’s ‘Tommy,’ a rock opera, just trying to get him to say ‘Okay, I can see this.’ But no, never. We just had totally divergent taste in music.”

Her mother died four years ago, “although he keeps asking for her.” In the fall, she and her sisters helped him move to an assisted-living facility. It’s a good place, she said.

But what about his beloved records, I asked. How can he live without his opera?

“He has all his CDs,” she said. “Maybe 2,000.”

I hope he’s listening now, the cares of this world disappearing as the joys of the next one are painted in the air by a sublime voice.

CASH BACK JUNK REMOVAL!

A note from 1-800-Junk-Refund:  We want to thank John Kelly from The Washington Post for writing this excellent article.  We appreciated his efforts to come to the job site and report on what was happening.

JUNK REFUND’S STORY

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