We have a very large (30 inch diagonal) perfectly working CRT monitor that we’re no longer using. Do such things have any resale value these days? Would Goodwill even take it, or are they flooded with them?
If nothing else, how to dispose of it without getting ooky chemicals bad places?
thanks
I’m not sure about California laws, but I know that in Colorado, as of July 1st, land fills will no longer accept electronics and used TVs and stuff have to go to recyclers. I understand the reasoning, but it is quite a burden on the consumers (finding a recycler, transporting said electronic thing, paying the recycler, etc.) I expect such things to still find their way into dumpsters, or, just dumped by the side of the road. The Law of Unintended Consequences strikes again.
post it on Craigslist or one of the reuse mailing lists. people still like them for the good display.
if you can’t get someone to reuse then check stores that sell tv sets. many will have a recycling program for customer goodwill or because required by law.
Take it to a recycling center if there’s any way to track it back to you. People throw away used monitors, and they can be tracked by the serial number back to the original owner, who will be held responsible.
You might be able to recycle it without having to pay.
I took an old 386 computer and monitor to an electronics recycling shop in Fresno a few years ago. One of the items (computer or monitor, I forget which) I had to pay a few bucks to get rid of, the other they took for free. They told me the State subsidizes them to take that.
You’re in Santa Clara, epicenter of the Electronics Industry for this quadrant of the galaxy! Surely there must be recycling centers on every street corner! Just ask at any local barber shop.
A couple years ago I cleared out several and put them on the curb for bulk pickup. By the time I walked the third outside, someone had already scavenged one and two, and three disappeared quickly, too. So apparently people that scavenge trash from the side of the road still want them.
If it’s an actual computer monitor, it may have some value. There’s still some gaming purists out there who believe CRTs are best for hardcore FPS action. A 30" monitor could hold some worth to that type of person. I’d at least try a Craigslist ad before dumping it on the curb.
My brother is one of those gamers. He recently bought a big CRT from Craiglist (not sure how much he paid, but probably not a lot). He says that it’s better for FPS games because there’s less display lag than with newer monitors.
While I fully support proper recycling of obsolete electronics (whether or not there’s any way the item can be tracked), this is bullshit paranoia. Unlike guns, there is no central database of CRT serial numbers that identifies who owns which monitor. Manufacturers may possibly know which serial numbers went to which retailer, but I doubt any retailer keeps track of which serial number went to which customer - and even if they did so ten years ago (or whenever the monitor was purchased), it’s highly unlikely that they would bother maintaining such records past the monitor’s warranty period.
This mainly applies to computers sold to businesses under contract with the manufacturers. I don’t of any particular case where a CRT has been tracked back to the owner, but businesses who purchase under contract are very particular now about getting back their CRTs from employees and making sure that are properly recycled.