What to do with old stuff?

Author
Discussion

Fetchez la vache

Original Poster:

5,719 posts

226 months

Friday 14th March
quotequote all
Having a clearout and I now have piles of original pc games - other than selling them individually on ebay (which frankly i can't be bothered with) what do people do with them, other than taking them to the tip.

I've also about 1000 CD's which the same can be said as above too.

...and laptops, that I must be able to give somewhere to be refurbed. Jeez, I've even an old Oric-1 48k in it's original box ... and so much in between. I really shouldn't hoard hehe

...& mobile phones... big boxes of them.

Douglas Quaid

2,546 posts

97 months

Friday 14th March
quotequote all
You could take them to a charity shop. They’ll resell them and hopefully the money will be put to good use. Far better than just throwing them in the tip.

Fetchez la vache

Original Poster:

5,719 posts

226 months

Friday 14th March
quotequote all
Douglas Quaid said:
You could take them to a charity shop. They’ll resell them and hopefully the money will be put to good use. Far better than just throwing them in the tip.
Well, yes I agree. That will be the first port of call for anything non-electronic, but I know anything electronic they don't take, wheras the tip has a skip for the sole purpose of electronic stuff - I know as I've been told to get out of the skip on about 5 occasions as I don't like stuff to go to waste if it can be fixed...

GiantEnemyCrab

7,779 posts

215 months

Friday 14th March
quotequote all
MusicMagpie and equivalents any use?

Might end up with £30 or so smile

Jo-say8k

152 posts

28 months

Friday 14th March
quotequote all
It depends where in the country you are? wink

VeeReihenmotor6

2,462 posts

187 months

Friday 14th March
quotequote all
I'm equally interested in an easy solution for laptops and phones, paricularly one where the are recycled to good use so that I can see value in giving them away for free.

Hanslow

824 posts

257 months

Friday 14th March
quotequote all
The Oric-1 has some value, north of £100 anyway. Other than selling/charity, try one of the national computer museums to see if they want to take any of it off your hands if you have one near enough or see if they'll collect a giant box of bits from you if you have more besides.

House clearance places might just take a mass of stuff off your hands if you just want shot of it and don't care what happens to it.

boyse7en

7,412 posts

177 months

Friday 14th March
quotequote all
I found a local church charity wanted old computers. They cleaned them up and sent them to schools in Africa. Not sure an Oric would be much use to them though, but bet it has some value on eBay.

If you really can't be bothered, take a photo of it all in a pile and put it on your local Facebook free stuff group - someone will take the lot to either use or flog at car boot sales. Keeps it out of landfill

P2KKA

185 posts

72 months

Friday 14th March
quotequote all
Are we talking "big box" PC games? Before they all went to DVD size cases? Lots of collectors about.

lost in espace

6,351 posts

219 months

Friday 14th March
quotequote all
https://www.rmcretro.com/ might want them, they get lots of donations!

Drive Blind

5,321 posts

189 months

Friday 14th March
quotequote all
Douglas Quaid said:
You could take them to a charity shop. They’ll resell them and hopefully the money will be put to good use. Far better than just throwing them in the tip.
charity shops near me had signs up saying they didnt want any more cds or books.

i had a uncle pass away a few years back leaving 500+ LPs, and giving them away for free was a hassle.
I can fully understand why most stuff like this will end up in a skip.

InitialDave

12,876 posts

131 months

Friday 14th March
quotequote all
If you're genuinely not bothered about getting any money, put them on ebay as a job lot for a fiver or so starting bid and let nature take its course. They either go to someone who wants them (even if only to resell), or you take them down the tip (which you were going to do anyway).

I'd be surprised in no one wants them. To the point of somewhat grim fascination, actually. What have you got, 900 copies of Black Lace's Party Party?

Derek Smith

46,850 posts

260 months

Saturday 15th March
quotequote all
I've got an untold number of grandchildren. I've got ride-on toys, all in remarkably good condition, other big toys, a camping cot, prams, and other stuff. I can't find a charity shop to take them. It looks like the tip for it all.

A charity shop near me used to take electronic gear, particularly bits from a computer, connectors and such, but that's recently closed.

rodericb

7,615 posts

138 months

Saturday 15th March
quotequote all
The trouble with old technology is that it can be totally unusable (otherwise, why aren't YOU using it?) and donating it just moves the problem of disposal onto someone else - and likely a charity who can't afford to proxy as a technology disposal centre.

megaphone

11,135 posts

263 months

Saturday 15th March
quotequote all
CDs are making a bit of a comeback, I still buy them from charity shops and online. But the ones I buy are quite 'specialist'.

I took a load of unwanted CDs to my local charity shop and they took them, most were the general 'best of' or classical stuff I had inherited from a house clearance.

My local charity shops take electrical stuff, as long as it's complete and working.

48k

14,702 posts

160 months

Saturday 15th March
quotequote all
Fetchez la vache said:
an old Oric-1 48k
ears

jimmytheone

1,634 posts

230 months

Saturday 15th March
quotequote all
megaphone said:
CDs are making a bit of a comeback, I still buy them from charity shops and online. But the ones I buy are quite 'specialist'.

I took a load of unwanted CDs to my local charity shop and they took them, most were the general 'best of' or classical stuff I had inherited from a house clearance.

My local charity shops take electrical stuff, as long as it's complete and working.
British Heart Foundation take electricals, and will collect
https://www.bhf.org.uk/shop/donating-goods/book-fu...


swanseaboydan

1,935 posts

175 months

Saturday 15th March
quotequote all
I gave about 300 cd s to a charity shop and they got 20 quid each for some of the rarer ones - Beatles etc - as cd’s - I was amazed!
They phoned to thank me , it was nice

BrownEaredDog

834 posts

113 months

Saturday 15th March
quotequote all
lost in espace said:
https://www.rmcretro.com/ might want them, they get lots of donations!
I was thinking exactly this smile I'm sure that LGR in the US would love to have some of the older stuff too, especially after he lost so much when his house was wrecked in the hurricanes last year.

MesoForm

9,375 posts

287 months

Saturday 15th March
quotequote all
Old PC CDs and DVDs can be a real pain to run and with places like GOG you can just download most of them for a few £.
I sold a job lot of something like 30 discs with no reserve on eBay, I think they went for £4.50 or something like that, old WoW, Total War, SWTOR discs but people just don’t want them.

Old hardware went for a surprising amount - GTX 970 went for £36, etc.