
It was bad; the smell was so strong my eyebrows fell off! Okay sue me. My quest for profit supersedes even the foul stench of stank! My first thought was, that this unit belonged to a man.
It was huge, it was dark and stanky! Really really, really, really, stanky! I got it in College Park or as some other folks refer to it as “ Colli Paark” . Normally there ain’t shit over there, on this day there really was.
Who knew?
Fortunately for me, it was the beginning of fall. Otherwise, this unit would have been hard as hell to clean out. When the door first opened, I got that little feeling in the pit of my stomach. It was the feeling of huge potential, more so than the smell running out the unit and bitch smacking all of us in the face.
Sometimes even now, I get butterflies, just at the thought of a killer unit. It was strange, shit scattered all over the place. Like I said before, it was a little stanky! Some people actually started backing up away from the door.
Granted, the unit looked like hell from the outside. But when you’re a professional buyer, you have to look at the unit totally. Mentally mapping out the unit, evaluating the good, and judging the bad is required to be a professional buyer and of course smelling the stanky odor rolling out of the dark recesses of junk.
In this state of disarray, I saw a lot of valuable items. From my time in the military and training to be a lab tech, we use a lot of manual scientific equipment. Being the nerd that I am, I often researched other scientific equipment which gave me the base knowledge to know what I was looking at, in this storage unit.
You could see all types of scientific equipment from the door; I knew what some of those items were. I saw a radiograph, the spectrograph and an xray machine. Who in the hell has all of that stuff? Clearly, some off the wall dude.
The curiosity factor is what made me buy the unit. It looked like a complete catastrophe, yet I just had that feeling. Some of my friends were looking at me like I was crazy when I started bidding on the unit.
I did not really see it was going for much, thus, I could make a lot of money off this unit. If you see my YouTube video “Stanky Units Make Money” then you know what I’m talking about.
However, new people will fuck up some good shit! I opened up the bid of $50.00, the unit appeared to be a 10 by 20 (it really was 10 by 30) and I was willing to go to $250. Little do not know this new person would pop my bubble. When he placed an opening bid of freakin $200!
Just to get over with, I just went ahead and bid my $250 mister new person said” too rich for my blood” and walked away. I let a sigh and put a lock on my brand new stanky unit.
This was one of those units that you just could wait to clean out. I knew it walls going to take a lot of work. So I placed this unit at the end of the load list. The storage property people were so happy to get rid of this unit, that they gave me a month to clean it out.
Believe me I took full advantage of that month! And my day of reckoning was coming soon. We had cleaned out 15 storage auction units that week. My guys were tired and I was cranky.
If I did not clean this unit out, I was going to have to pay a month of storage for the unit. I really did not want to do that. It is best, to get the units cleaned out as fast as possible. So I strengthened my resolve, cleaned out the truck, and headed to College Park with the crew..
Just be sure, we did not have to spend as much time going back and forth we took two trucks. I am sooooo glad we did! The unit was not as bad as I thought it was. But there was a lot more stuff than what I originally suspected.
Units can be deceptive in what you think is in there, versus what you haul out. In this case it was a good thing, we were moving quality stuff out of a unit, I felt perhaps I had paid to much for it, this mental note quickly changed after ten minutes of loading.
After we got past the first 10 feet, the unit really became very very very interesting. The first half was filled with Scientific Equipment. Old radio vacuum tubes, these would like hotcakes on Ebay.
This is where the part about learning new stuff comes into play. What may look like a box of old dusty bulbs, but turned out to be very rare radio tubes. We cleared $850 just on the old radio equipment on Ebay.
The deeper we dug, the better the unit became, this guy was a true collector. We found antique toy collections, antique railroad trains, trucks, a little model towns. A great bidder in Germany bid $2500.00 for one of those little towns, when it wasn’t so little; it shipped in a huge box for $650.00! This was with using a discount of a friend at FEDEX!
He was more than happy when he got it!
The previous owner of this storage unit was an engineer at Lockheed. For all I know he truly could have been a rocket scientist! He was another Georgia Tech alumni, I have gotten quite a few of those guys units. Often when they pass on, it’s the kids that end up losing the unit.
If you saw the movie “Ironman II” there was this one part in the movie, work Tony was looking in the old movie of his dad. This dude had that type of persona, slim with a crew cut and there were a lot of those awful 1950s 1960s suits in the unit. Maybe I should have kept them, there back in style now.
For the most part he seems straight, if I had to guess and I am. The reason that this unit came up to auction, was the kids inherited his house and moved all his personal stuff into a storage unit.
There were few a letters but they’re pretty benign, nothing to write home about pun intended. Just a few bits and pieces about his life, just adding up all of the equipment notes and books that work in the unit, it’s clear he was a very smart man.
Abundantly obvious was his passion for tinkering, all of this stuff was just as hobby. He retired from Lockheed years ago and some of the notes were fairly recent. Perhaps he was building a rocket in the basement. He was a very interesting dude indeed.
Old scientific equipment goes very well in collector circles. There are people who love old stuff. Our scientist had tons of that type of stuff. Old calculators, old textbooks, and things that make you think of a 1950s scientist.
The books were so old that many did not even have ISBN numbers. These types of books are always fun to enter into the Amazon sales system. Many of those books we were the first person to list online. Over the course of the year they did $1500 in sales.
Another benefit of being a storage auction person is you develop a huge network of resources. People that you can just call up and say hey I have this item; do you want to buy it? On many occasions, I had items sold before they were even loaded on the truck.
That is the case with the scientific equipment, a guy had come in my store inquiring about old equipment that scientists used. I had nothing for him that day but he left his business card. This was months earlier, I call him up and told them what I had. He said I’ll take it, I gave him a price of $1200 for everything. He said if it is what you say it is no problem.
He came to the store, saw the inventory and slowly peeled off twelve $100 bills. I helped him load everything and he was gone within 20 minutes.
Sometimes it is just that easy. This was a great unit in many regards. It was interesting and full. I like strange units, seem things I’ve never seen before and getting that put my little chubby fingers all over the stuff.
This is one of the great things about buying units at auction, you get to go through stuff, check out the history. Well, at least going through other people’s lives is fun to me. One of the niftiest things in this unit was a large globe.
As I held the globe in my hands, slowly turning it, I realized some of those countries did not exist anymore. It’s pretty deep when you think about. Being a student of history, it is amazing how often we repeat the same mistakes.
I think the best personal item out of the unit, was a collection of fountain pens. I’m a big fountain pen buff. There’s just something about the written word, the tools and paper of the written word that speaks to me.
I kept those pens for many years, is pretty cool that you can have an item and use it, derive pleasure from it, and sell it and make a nice chunk of change. I sold those pens individually online; altogether they brought in $600. Not bad for something collecting dust sitting on my desk.
The furniture in the unit was just OK. Nothing really spectacular, the nicest thing in the unit was an old writing desk. Which sat in a corner of the warehouse for few years, one day when I was bored I decided to strip the table.
It originally was this pukey looking oak color, I decided to do it in a very deep mahogany stain. This was my first attempt at staining furniture, the project turned out very well. I put it on Craigslist for $650. After a few days I got a call if you take $500 off and get it right now. OK! She came with a truck and some blankets and was gone and 5 minutes.
When you get your inventory from storage units, the possibilities of making money are endless. That little project, start my furniture rehab career. After that I started looking for used furniture to redo in storage units. I got so many cheap it wasn’t funny.
Other than a writing desk and some side tables I ended up tossing the rest of the furniture it was not even worth giving away. What I’d do it all over again? Oh yes baby yes! Made a lot of money on that spanking unit.
Later on, I discovered the source of the smell. Two chemicals one being a household cleaner and the other some industrial solvent mixed together which threw off that wicked smell. Once we get rid of the box containing those two dueling agents, we were good to go.





