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It's been a long and cold winter. Four months have passed since I last posted some treasure hunting finds, but I am pleased to announce that the wait is over. The record snowfall that buried most of the country in February has mostly all melted now thanks to a couple of weeks with temps in the 60's and 70's. And that melted snow has shown at least one treasure hiding under it. The warmer temperatures will be getting people into the "spring cleaning" mood, and soon they will be parting with junk they haven't seen in decades. Soon, the garage sales will start to pop up on weekends following the days of unseasonably warm weather and soon enough, flea markets will start opening their gates and the garage sales will be open almost every day of the week. Fortunately, for me, I've already found a couple treasures this year, without having gone to a single garage sale! Finding my first treasure of the year is a tale of mystery, hard work, more mystery, and a lot of cleaning. It started out with a call from my dad, he asked if I would "want a game console", naturally I said yes and then asked what it was. He said it was "Konami Jail Break" and I realized it wasn't a console but an arcade cabinet, so I asked how much it was and he said that it was in the trash. I thought he was lying since he is a notorious liar about things like this and just wanted to get me out that way to work on his rental house which just happened to be in the same neighborhood. But I figured if he was going to lie about it, he would have said it was Pac-Man or something he actually had heard of. So I left immediately for his location, and when I pulled up, there was actually a full size arcade cabinet sitting on the curb. I didn't even bother to inspect it, and loaded it into the truck as quickly as we could. A few minutes later I was home with this: I immediately started looking it over (and posting about it on the forums here). From my very limited knowledge of arcade cabinets, nothing was missing so I plugged it in. Much to my dismay, nothing happened. I check for loose connections and redid a couple connections that looked sketchy, but then noticed a switch on the back of the machine that was in the recess the back cover fits into and I realized that it was there to turn the machine off if the back was open. So I taped it down and tried turning it on again, still nothing, not a single light or beep. So I continued looking for more loose connections and testing wires for continuity when I spotted another switch on the coin door. It was the same type of switch that was on the back so I pressed it in, and heard the noise of CRT screen starting up right next to my head, which scared the daylights out of me because I wasn't expecting it and immediately let go of the switch. I soon realized what the noise was an pressed it in again and heard the machine start up and start playing. I twas truly music to my ears. I figured out the switch wasn't activating right because its bracket was bent to face down and it was moved from its original location, so it couldn't come into contact with the door. So I rebent the bracket and moved it back so the coin door would activate it. Now that it was on, I tried for my first play and pressed the service switch for a free game and got to the "press start" screen, but the machine doesn't have a "start" button just two white and two red buttons, so I pressed each of them and nothing happened. So I pulled off the panel holding the buttons and joystick and found the very simple mechanical-like switches and realized the metal contact for one of the buttons was bent out of shape so that it was in constant contact. A quick rebend on that and all the buttons were working again. And suddenly the game was fully functional and I was playing away. I could have left it like this, pressing the service switch for a free game, but I wanted more, I wanted to use coins. But most of the coin mechanism was missing, there are two coin slots and both had different pieces missing, so I consolidated it all to one slot and was only missing a piece of track that carries the coin to the switch, so my dad made a replacement out of some aluminum siding while I worked on the electronics of the coin mechanism. The previous owner had tried to bypass the coin activated switch with the service switch to allow free play by pressing that switch, but they didn't do it right so the coin switch didn't work right and the service switch wasn't working properly either. They had wires that went to nothing and other wires that went in loops connected only to themselves. So after a bit of de-soldering and soldering, I had the switches connected like they should have been; so the coin switch works and the service switch works. With the piece my dad made, the coin went where it was supposed to and the game could be played the right way. The coin box is missing so he got an old plastic margarine tub to put inside to catch the quarters, but I told him that just wouldn't work and got a metal can, to give it that satisfying "ting" sound of dropping in a quarter. Now that it was working, it was time for some cleaning, major cleaning. I scrubbed the whole thing down with soap and water, taking of decades of dirt and grime. And then removed the rusted speaker cover, brushed it down to bare metal and repainted it. Finally, I touched up the paint on the cabinet that had been scratched or discolored and repainted most of the rusty coin door. And soon I had this:
But wait, there's more! I also had a nice little trade with Den68 (awesome trader BTW). I traded him an NES set-up for the following NES games.
All are games that I needed, so it helped me get to over 400 unique NES games! And all it cost me was an NES that was taking up space and $7.35 for shipping.
Collection stats summary: Number of total games: 2,346 Number of unique games: 1,937 Number of duplicates: 409
This installment of Treasure Hunt Chronicles Number of total games added: 7 Number of unique games added: 18 Number of duplicate games sold: 11 Amount spent: $0.00 Amount spent on shipping for trades: $7.35 Amount received from selling: $332.00
Totals for the year Number of total games acquired: 7 Number of unique games acquired: 18 Number of duplicates sold: 11 Amount spent: $0.00 Amount spent on shipping for trades: $7.35 Amount received from selling: $332.00 Profit: +$301.61
That's all for now, hopefully I'll be back soon. The weather has been cooperating the last couple weeks, but still no garage sales yet. I imagine by April there should be a fair number of them popping up if this weather holds. I'd like some feedback on the new "collection stats" section at the end. Is it better/easier to read than the old paragraph format?
Recent Entries In Which I Describe Pizza Tower at an Exhaustingly Long Length (7/31/2024) Remasters, Remakes, Rereleases, and Remembering the Past (3/30/2024) The Top 5 Survival Horror Games for the Sega Dreamcast (2/20/2024) Trombone Champ Is a Good Game (12/30/2023) Thoughts on the Nintendo Switch OLED Model (11/21/2023)
Nice write-up! It looks like you did a good job with that arcade cabinet.
I like the new collection stats set-up too. It is easier to read.
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NES_Rules said: "I'd like some feedback on the new "collection stats" section at the end. Is it better/easier to read than the old paragraph format?"
I like this format better too. Nice pick ups. I'm interested in what you sold to already have a 300+$ surplus
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Thanks for the feedback on the new format, I never did like the old way, I should have changed it a long time ago.
@blcklblskt: Thanks, I'm quite proud of it, especially since this was the first time I had ever even seen the inside of one! I want to do it more, but I'll probably never get so lucky and get one that doesn't have any real problems for free.
@Izret101: I sold 14 things on eBay in January and February, most were Genesis systems with a few games, a couple N64's with games, and a few Genesis game lots. Plus a couple sales to members here at RFG.
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You gotta love the trash pick treasures. Especially one as awesome as that.
The NES and a few more of my dupes went to a friend who's building a new PC for me.
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The cabinet looks quite a bit better once you painted the rusty parts. Great Job!!
I'll third that the stats are a lot nicer now too.
Has there been no garage sales there yet though? I've already been to 3 up here on different weekends and I havnt even checked the paper for listings yet, just happened upon them.
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@NES_Rules: Great article and the stats are looking much better than before.
To make them perfect, could you make it so all the numbers are below each other, like in a spreadsheet? That might even work in a simple HTML table.
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Thats awesome!
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@Crabmaster2000: There have been a few, but its only been one or maybe two per weekend, and I just don't feel its worth it to get up early for one sale. So I haven't gone to any yet. There should be enough within the next few weeks to make it worth going out.
@Sirgin: I'm not sure what you mean, but I'm far from knowing HTML well enough to make a table. I have a hard enough time with the little bit of formatting I use now.
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Very nice article. That is an awesome pick-up and refurb job. I kind of did the same with an old Big Event Golf arcade unit (my favorite back in the day).
I like the new format of the stats. It would be kind of cool to have it in a separate table of it's own at the end. Column headers could be 'This Week', 'This Year' and 'Collection Total' with the rows being the various stats you are tracking.
Another table that would be nice to see is a recap of how many sales you actually visited in between THC postings, along with YTD results to include a stat showing 'Successful Hunts' (i.e. Sales visited vs. Scores).
If any of the idea(s) grab your attention, I can assist by putting together a template if you would like.
I have always loved this series and checking out the spoils of war from your thrifting\hunting. Keep up the great work Mike!
EDIT - I guess I should have read the pervious comments more carefully - Sirgin already suggested the table idea. I can help out on this Mike - let me know).
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'Successful Hunts' (i.e. Sales visited vs. Scores). I like this idea too.
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Great write up its been a long winter with out them lol. The new stats layout is great!! Gotta love trash finds thats how I got my entire Sears Video Arcade (Atari 2600) collection, but I have to admit a whole working cabinet blows it out of the water, great job on the clean up as well.
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@Marriott_Guy: & @Izret101: I would love to do the sales visited vs scores, but I tried it once before, and it is really really hard to remember to count each sale. I believe it was last year I tried doing it and it was fine when I only hit a few sales in a day, but after the 10th or so sale in one day, it became too easy to forget the counting.
@Marriott_Guy: I could go for a table setup for stats. I would really appreciate it if you could set up the HTML for it. I'll whip something up in my collection spreadsheet to give you an idea of how I'd want it set up.
@cant-grow-up: This wasn't my first trash pick, but the arcade was definitely the best one. There is a lot of good stuff in the trash to be found for sure, it just takes a keen eye.
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Sweet. I salute your finds (I don't have a drink, only a chili dog...) Props on the new look for your stats, much easier on the eyes, it is. I found a jukebox once on the curb, so I understand the special feeling involved with your arcade find. Just be careful, once you make a find of this caliber in the tip you'll find your head turning almost involuntarily at every house with large curb-offerings. I thought I saw a Jaguar once in a pile of toys and almost rear-ended a car which had stopped in front of me. For safety sakes now, I only look at very large things now, and then only briefly.
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@NES_Rules:Sounds good Mike. Shoot me an email with what\how you would like the table formatted.
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@bombatomba: I ALWAYS take a good long look through large piles of trash on the curb. I've been picking since I was a kid. And if the pile looks good, I'm not adverse to pulling in the driveway and digging through it. The best ones are those that are accompanied by a fresh "For Rent" sign in the front yard because the people just got evicted and all their stuff is now on the curb.
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This is NES_Rules's Blog. View Profile | RSS |
Welcome to my blog. I started off my blogging career in 2008 with my weekly Treasure Hunt Chronicles which was a huge success. So it's become a staple of RF Generation during the garage sale and flea market season. So be sure to check back each Monday to check out my newest treasures.
I'll also have other blog entries popping up occasionally, so make sure you keep it tuned to Channel 3! |
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