Don't waste your time cutting frames. The way to differentiate your good bikes is the use of high quality shop stickers, with your logo.  Your snickered bikes are done, safety checked, and have your name attached. These are the ones that future customers and donors will notice and evaluate as your quality creation.

Cutting old frames is useless work, and ruins any downstream use of long tubing,,,

Bill Wright Burton

On Apr 16, 2014, at 1:30 PM, "David Eyer Davis" <davey@bicyclecollective.org> wrote:

I guess I should complete that qualifier: With categorically unsafe stuff we make damn sure it can't be used as a bike component again. 


On Wed, Apr 16, 2014 at 2:28 PM, David Eyer Davis <davey@bicyclecollective.org> wrote:
at the SLCBC, scrap that isn't dangerous (i.e. damaged) can be taken by the antisocial, the odd, and the otherwise disinclined to enter our shop. What they do with it is up to them. We have the benefit of having sales receipts, which defrays liability should someone pull a 'I got this from the bike collective and it's broken!' song and dance. 

Davey


On Wed, Apr 16, 2014 at 1:44 PM, Andrew Shooner <ashooner@gmail.com> wrote:
Our shop recently changed our procedure regarding scrap bikes: any donated bikes that we conclude we will scrap rather than rehab & redistribute are now disabled by cutting the frame of the bike.

Recently, some donated bike that had been put in our scrap pile appeared on Craigslist. We had two concerns: first, that donors would be unhappy that their donations were being sold by another party, and second that we could develop a reputation as a source of scrap bikes to be picked and sold elsewhere (and usually those bikes were beyond safe repair).

I'd like to hear other perspectives. Is controlling the use of donated bikes (to maintain the integrity of a donation as well as the safety of bikes coming through the shop) worth disabling a bike that might otherwise be reused downstream?

Andy
Broke Spoke Community Bike Shop
Lexington, KY



____________________________________

The ThinkTank mailing List
<a href="http://lists.bikecollectives.org/options.cgi/thethinktank-bikecollectives.org/jonathan%40slcbikecollective.org?unsub=1&unsubconfirm=1">Unsubscribe from this list</a>





--

David Eyer Davis
Executive Director
Bicycle Collective

The mission of the Bicycle Collective is to promote cycling as an effective and sustainable form of transportation and as a cornerstone of a cleaner, healthier, and safer society. The Collective provides refurbished bicycles and educational programs to the community, focusing on children and lower income households.




--

David Eyer Davis
Executive Director
Bicycle Collective
c: 801-230-6308
www.bicyclecollective.org

The mission of the Bicycle Collective is to promote cycling as an effective and sustainable form of transportation and as a cornerstone of a cleaner, healthier, and safer society. The Collective provides refurbished bicycles and educational programs to the community, focusing on children and lower income households.

____________________________________

The ThinkTank mailing List
<a href="http://lists.bikecollectives.org/options.cgi/thethinktank-bikecollectives.org/librarybike%40hotmail.com?unsub=1&unsubconfirm=1">Unsubscribe from this list</a>