Fastest trade yet. Last Sunday I got a Facebook message as a response to the ad for the power drill I’d posted.
“Trade for iPad?”
Very interested. Tell me more.
“iPad mini 2. 16GB. Perfect condition. Not a scratch or dent, always in case.”
He sent some pictures and it looked sharp.
“I had someone picking it up today for $225,” he told me, “but I need a drill so this would be perfect!”
I had listed the drill for $150. This is exactly the way this project is designed to work.
He was free nearby in 2 hours. We met (surprise!) in a nearby strip mall.
We were both masked up and we kept our distance. I set the drill on the trunk of my car and brought the iPad over to the hood. I turned it on to find it had been factory reset and was booting up perfectly. He connected the drill’s battery and gave it a little zvvv-zvvv and we were happy. He’s building an at-home gym in his basement and is getting very tired of screwing things in by hand. This will help.
No muss, no fuss. We were probably in each other’s presence for a total of 3 1/2 minutes. It was easily the most efficient trade I’ve done yet, I don’t expect to beat it, and hey now I have a fresh, clean iPad to trade.
Historic movie theater seats trading line: Original item value:$110 Number of trades to date: 3 Latest trade:DeWalt 20v Brushless power drill ($150) for iPad Mini 2 ($225) Total line value dollar increase:$115 Total line value percent increase: 105%
This is really two stories: selling the bicycle, and buying the guitar. “But Collin,” you’re saying, “I thought this was a trading project.” And indeed you’d be right, faithful reader. But I do reserve the right to bend the rules from time to time, and when an item languishes for too long without getting any good trade offers, I’m fine with selling it and purchasing something for that price that’s more tradeable.
I do have a steadfast rule: I won’t buy something for one price and sell it for more. I’m not here to flip things. I will sometimes buy something and trade it upward, but I won’t make a cash profit on an item. That’s something I’ll keep to.
The bicycle was sitting. I was getting offers but they were all for cash. Every time someone asked me what I was looking for in a trade, I’d tell them (“Oh I’m pretty open — musical instruments, electronics, home appliances, kitchen appliances, antiques, other bicycles… anything in good condition that I could trade onward”) and I just wouldn’t hear back. After a couple months of this bike taking up a good amount of space in my new apartment, I was ready to move on. That’s when John (not his real name) wrote me. His girlfriend’s bike had just been stolen, the first day she’d had it!, from inside her workplace’s parking garage. They were looking around for a replacement and wanted to try mine out.
For jumpin’ stumps..
They came by and she rode it around my street. They made some adjustments to the seat, explored the various gear settings, rode up and down the hill I’m on, and circled a nearby dead-end. It’s still surreal to be standing around and talking with people, whether strangers or friends, in masks. But there we were. And after maybe 15 or 20 minutes of really testing it out, they agreed to the cash ask.
And to be real, that money was burning a hole in my pocket. I want these trades to happen as fast as they can, though I also want them to be smart and strategic. Since the guitars and amps seem to move so well, I started immediately looking there for something I could pick up and trade. I was talking to a guy with a seriously metal-ass guitar, and to another with an amp head he was having trouble selling, but that I might be able to trade. Guitar guy was out in Concord, and it didn’t even come with a case, so I was less enthused, and the length of time that the amp had been posted without selling gave me some pause, too.
And lo, one weekday morning, this beauty showed up on Craigslist. A lunch break find.
This is an almost-new 2019 Gretsch G2657T Streamliner Center Block Jr. Double-Cut with Bigsby in candy apple red. The story is that the owner took up guitar in January, bought this as his first guitar (!!!), played it for a week or so, then bought a stratocaster (?!!!), decided he liked that WAY better, and let this one just sit. So he listed it for sale, practically untouched and brand new.
I didn’t even ask him for a video. I just wanted the guitar, and I just wanted it to remain as untouched as possible. We made plans and I made the drive down to glamorous Milpitas to meet him in a Starbucks parking lot. He was coming from San Mateo, so it was sort of in the middle. Anyway he showed up in a late-model Miata with the top down, so I guess that explains why a $550 guitar was his first.
We were masked up, did our wipe-down, keep-distance, Venmo ritual, and went our separate ways. I grabbed breakfast for the road and made my way home. (Stopped to pick up some new succculents on the way!)
The next day Walker was their gracious self and made me another dope video. This is a gorgeous guitar and Walker does a really impressive job pulling some beautiful sounds out of it. They seem to love playing these finds, and it absolutely makes it easier for me to trade them, so this feels win-win, too.
Best one yet.
Just posted it today and the offers are rolling. I’m having fun with this.
Digital movie projector line: Original item value: $250 Number of trades to date: 2 Latest trade: 1994 Specialized Stumpjumper Chromo Steel Mountain Bike ($450) for $cash for 2019 Gretsch Streamliner ($550) Total line value dollar increase:$300 Total line value percent increase: 120%
This was one of the tougher trades I’ve made so far, because oh wow were there some great offers. People wanted this amp in exchange for their high-end keyboards, gorgeous telecasters, Mesa Boogie amps, Gibson classics, Bassman amps, stratocasters, baritone acoustic guitars, entire drum sets, mixing equipment, studio recording time, and more. One guy offered a drone, or a bicycle, or a hitchmount cargo carrier (?), or some headphones. It was a very popular item, and I was the belle of the ball.
Ugh. Gorgeous.
Tim (not his real name) kinda stood out. He offered me this super interesting guitar. A Fender American Standard Stratocaster with a 2012 body, a 2018 neck, 2018 Fender pickups, and an aftermarket tremolo bridge from Wilkinson/Gotoh. I loved the look, and from the images he showed me, it was in great shape. After some research on Reverb I was pretty sure this guitar was worth at least a little more than my amp, and Tim was super communicative. He really wanted it.
I mean, really wanted it. I asked him if he would send me a video so I could hear the guitar’s tones, and so he did, but the only time he could record was when his 7-month-old baby had just been put down to sleep. So Tim sent me a recording of the most gentle version of “Crazy Train” I’ve ever heard.
It was so endearing, and while I was also seriously considering a beautiful telecaster I had on offer, the values of the two guitars seemed very similar, and Tim was so enthusiastic. He won out.
And what a guitar.
Last Saturday we met up at a strip mall (same place I test rode the Honda!) and did our social distancing dance. We each wiped down our respective items, carefully switched spots, and examined. The body and neck of this guitar is pristine. Very well cared for and in excellent shape. The pickguard does have some wear, but it’s a guitar that’s been around for 8 years. That’s expected.
I immediately headed over to Walker’s to drop it off so they could make another video for me to use (Walker’s so great), again with all distance observed. They tinkered and toyed and shredded while I washed all the accumulated pollen off of my car and picked up breakfast for us. When I returned, I had a video, they had a pretzel bun, things were good.
Smash that HD button and listen to that guitar *sing*…
I just posted this guitar last night and I’m already getting offers. Metal guitars, hackintoshes, general inquiries… Hoping this one moves fast!
1984 Mercier Le Velo line: Original item value: $200 Number of trades to date: 4 Latest trade: Limited Edition Fender Custom ’68 Deluxe Reverb amp ($1050) for Upgraded 2012 Fender American Standard Stratocaster ($1250) Total line value dollar increase: $1050 Total line value percent increase: 525%