Yeah, I think the best strategy here is probably to run ads in your local Craigslist as well as local Community Center Message Boards (if they have a place for ads.) Offer to buy the old computers for $5-10 a piece (or whatever you think is a reasonable price), and mention that you also offer "secure data destruction services" done for free on the donated PCs.
RubDub2k wrote on 2025-03-03, 06:57:
So, for those of you out there that might also be in a similar situation of the computers being simultaneously actual trash while also being "priceless antiques", have you found any success in trying to get one of these systems for a reasonable price? It just frustrates me watching these systems be destroyed for no good reason 🙁
When I used to live back in the US (a little over a year ago, on East Coast), I would take regular bike rides around the various neighborhoods around me the day/night before their "trash collection day". Also did that with my car too if I was coming back from work or shopping. My luck with retro PCs hasn't been that great, but it hasn't been bad either - about 2 PCs per year, give or take (and maybe less in the last 5). Craigslist has actually been much better. Of course, worth noting is that I lived in a relatively population-dense area (many cities & towns close to one another, forming a large continuous suburban area).
Anyways... back to the trash picking stuff.
I eventually started picking up other stuff I'd find that might seem useful: speakers, TVs, dead car batteries, METAL AND WIRE OF ANY KIND... i.e. like a total scrapper (and later I noticed I wasn't the only one doing this in my neighborhoods.) Anyways, long story short, when I had to move, I went to recycle some of the metal and car batteries I had accumulated. While I was there putting my batteries on the scale, I saw a Hispanic guy open the gate of his pickup truck and haul metal items on the scale next to mine. Then I saw a PC in there - badly beaten up, with top and sides all destroyed. But I could see the motherboard, RAM, CPU, cooler, PSU, and optical drive were still in it and the mobo had what looked like an LGA socket of some sort. So I got his attention, pulled $5 out of my wallet and asked if I can buy it. After all, the optical drive would be worth that much if it worked. He looked at it and said "of course!" To him, it was just metal scrap, and he probably wasn't going to get much... maybe cents on the dollar given the weight. So I gave him the $5 and he gave me the PC. I asked if there were any other PC parts, but he replied he didn't find any last night. He said, however, that he does find PCs every once in a while and asked if we wanted to exchange phone numbers so he can call or text me when he does and see if I want to buy anything before he gives it for scrap. So I very excitingly gave him my number. Unfortunately, the story ends with the fact that I did this cleanup literally just about a week before I had to terminate my phone number/account (due to moving abroad). So I don't know if he ever tried to call me back or not. But either way, I thought it was worth it for that one week, just to see what would happen.
So I think this is another way to get such PCs - just go to various metal recycling places and look for scrappers that might be willing to sell you what they have and make more than they would from the scrap metal.
Apart from these strategies / things to try, there really isn't much else... at least where I used to live.
Well, I did meet a guy through Craigslist who had a friend that worked at an e-recycler place, and I managed to get two CRT monitors from him. But that was an exception, because he said the recycling place looses money when they have to recycle CRTs (and they are obligated to collect them and dispose of them as per county rules), so they are always OK if someone is willing to take some from them... but only through that person that worked in the recycling place, as, like others posted here, there was a policy that nothing could get sold out of that recycling place.
Unfortunately, this too happened just weeks before I had to move out... so I didn't get more chances to talk to the guy and maybe get more CRTs. The two I picked up I left at a friend's house, along with a box of my own personal stuff. I'll probably "get rid of these" (sell them or find someone interested) down the road when I go visit them. Same with that PC I picked from the Hispanic guy at the recycler place. But I had to save these.
So anyways... there are ways, but it does depend a lot on where you live and how close you are to a larger populated area.
Also, I forgot to mention, but as I was donating some stuff to a local thrift store, I noticed one day they also had a Pentium3/4 era beige PC with a GeForce FX series video card in it... going for $20, untested. Unfortunately, this was literally 2 days before moving out of the country, so I decided not to buy it and give this opportunity to someone else. So no idea what happened to that. But worth mentioning here is that some thrift stores may also have such things once in a while (not Goodwill, though - I think they have a problem where they collect all PCs and laptops and sell those off to a recycler or something similar, because I've never seen one make it through onto the sales floor.) FWIW, the thrift store where I saw that PC was a small independent one. I've also found pawn shops to have such stuff once in a while. And very occasionally, even Habitat for Humanity. So go to those places, become a known and well-intentioned regular, and then see if you can establish some contacts with the staff there.
H3nrik V! wrote on 2025-03-03, 13:46:
Funny fact, in my public (tax-funded) recycling station - everything is subject to be sold in their recycling store, unless specifically marked (by spraying your stuff with a spray paint located near the dumpsters).
Wow, no wonder North European countries like yours are doing so well - you actually have laws / policies that make sense.
I really wish more places around the world (particularly in "developed" / "1st world" countries) would adopt laws and policies like that.