This reminds me, a local man built a bunker with hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of equipment and food in preparation for Y2K apocalypse. When it didn’t materialise, he eventually died and my dad bought some old steel things at estate auction. We cannot for the life of us figure out what these things were for.
Some sort of rack? Too short for hanging meat. Made of steel. About 5 of them. It’s really been bugging us.
If you want to make some kind of water purification system of that size, it would make sense to have some steel structures to hold the weight of the large containers.
Why did your Dad buy them, if he didn’t know what they were? They’re big and bulky, can’t stack, can’t store them, etc. If I brought those home, especially with no plan, not even knowing what they were, my wife would hang me on one.
Well he’s already divorced, collects all sorts of weird shit, and he has a giant scrapyard full of steel junk. Ancient bus from the interwar period. Pile of garage doors but no garage. I don’t pretend to know why.
Coming from my late father, that’s all perfectly good stock metal material, once the welded sections are cut apart into desired lengths anyways. Can be reused for whatever purposes, plus the material probably came way cheaper, if not perhaps free, compared to purchasing raw stock from the metal foundry…
Doesn’t sound like they are actually using it. How much stock metal do you need to store if your consumption of the stock metal is (near) zero? Don’t think that theory holds weight here.
They probably caught a hella fat deal on the material, but the deal might have come with the catch of ‘You gotta take it all for this cheap deal’ sort of thing from some construction site or something like that.
My late father ran across such deals sometimes. Hell, he picked up an entire Pizza Hut freezer panel assembly. And I don’t mean like a kitchen freezer, I mean like their main back freezer, enough material that he literally built a fucking storage shed out of it.
That isn’t storing stock metal, then, it’s just hoarding. It doesn’t matter the condition, or purpose, or any deals. It’s just accumulating -stuff-. It possibly being used for xyz is just superfluous
I guess “hoarding” is the answer I expected, not (they think) it can potentially be useful.
Meh, you don’t know true hoarders then. My dad was the type to pick up a washing machine that got hit by a truck off the side of the road, if it even looked like it had compatible valves, bolts, control knobs, switches, whatever.
Daddy collected lots of junk, but it wasn’t all exactly junk either. He’d pick something up one day, having no idea what the hell he would eventually use it for, but sure enough, 3~10 years later, we’d find a use for the stuff.
A lot of the scrap metal he found (pipes, pipe clamps, sheets of tin, canvas) went unused for years, just sitting on his property, until he got enough material to build his tool shop (different shop than the Pizza Hut freezer panel storage shed).
I dunno about what OP has there, but I do know that there’s two types of hoarders, those that intend to make use of their finds eventually, and those that are just straight up obsessed with collecting junk they’ll never use.
Daddy was the planning hoarder, and if he was still here, he’d say OP apparently inherited a hell of a load of useful material. And I’d say go ahead and saw all those weld joints out, stock the long pieces in the garage or wherever, and scrap the welded cuts at a scrapyard for a few extra dollars.
Either way, whether OP has any use in the material or not, you’ll get quite a bit more money for it at the scrapyard if the stuff is already cut up into sections that’ll fit into their big boy scrap bins.
Planning ahead for Mad Max situation, just find a working big rig and start welding those parts on wherever, slap on some fetish gear and you’re ready for war.
This reminds me, a local man built a bunker with hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of equipment and food in preparation for Y2K apocalypse. When it didn’t materialise, he eventually died and my dad bought some old steel things at estate auction. We cannot for the life of us figure out what these things were for.
Some sort of rack? Too short for hanging meat. Made of steel. About 5 of them. It’s really been bugging us.
Is the water container part of the setup?
If you want to make some kind of water purification system of that size, it would make sense to have some steel structures to hold the weight of the large containers.
Why did your Dad buy them, if he didn’t know what they were? They’re big and bulky, can’t stack, can’t store them, etc. If I brought those home, especially with no plan, not even knowing what they were, my wife would hang me on one.
Not OP nor user Agent641, but hell, if I ever learned anything from my late father, it’s this…
That, my friend, is perfectly good stock metal material, just takes a hacksaw to cut it apart. Reuse the metal however you see fit…
Well he’s already divorced, collects all sorts of weird shit, and he has a giant scrapyard full of steel junk. Ancient bus from the interwar period. Pile of garage doors but no garage. I don’t pretend to know why.
Coming from my late father, that’s all perfectly good stock metal material, once the welded sections are cut apart into desired lengths anyways. Can be reused for whatever purposes, plus the material probably came way cheaper, if not perhaps free, compared to purchasing raw stock from the metal foundry…
Doesn’t sound like they are actually using it. How much stock metal do you need to store if your consumption of the stock metal is (near) zero? Don’t think that theory holds weight here.
You never met a hoarder have you?
They probably caught a hella fat deal on the material, but the deal might have come with the catch of ‘You gotta take it all for this cheap deal’ sort of thing from some construction site or something like that.
My late father ran across such deals sometimes. Hell, he picked up an entire Pizza Hut freezer panel assembly. And I don’t mean like a kitchen freezer, I mean like their main back freezer, enough material that he literally built a fucking storage shed out of it.
That isn’t storing stock metal, then, it’s just hoarding. It doesn’t matter the condition, or purpose, or any deals. It’s just accumulating -stuff-. It possibly being used for xyz is just superfluous
I guess “hoarding” is the answer I expected, not (they think) it can potentially be useful.
Meh, you don’t know true hoarders then. My dad was the type to pick up a washing machine that got hit by a truck off the side of the road, if it even looked like it had compatible valves, bolts, control knobs, switches, whatever.
Daddy collected lots of junk, but it wasn’t all exactly junk either. He’d pick something up one day, having no idea what the hell he would eventually use it for, but sure enough, 3~10 years later, we’d find a use for the stuff.
A lot of the scrap metal he found (pipes, pipe clamps, sheets of tin, canvas) went unused for years, just sitting on his property, until he got enough material to build his tool shop (different shop than the Pizza Hut freezer panel storage shed).
I dunno about what OP has there, but I do know that there’s two types of hoarders, those that intend to make use of their finds eventually, and those that are just straight up obsessed with collecting junk they’ll never use.
Daddy was the planning hoarder, and if he was still here, he’d say OP apparently inherited a hell of a load of useful material. And I’d say go ahead and saw all those weld joints out, stock the long pieces in the garage or wherever, and scrap the welded cuts at a scrapyard for a few extra dollars.
Either way, whether OP has any use in the material or not, you’ll get quite a bit more money for it at the scrapyard if the stuff is already cut up into sections that’ll fit into their big boy scrap bins.
Planning ahead for Mad Max situation, just find a working big rig and start welding those parts on wherever, slap on some fetish gear and you’re ready for war.
They look like frames for either a shell of something or potentially as forms for concrete pouring (doubt that though).
So they probably go together to make the skeleton of some kind of shelter or vehicle.