I'm sure many have seen this but I thought I would throw it out there (since I'm not snatching it up) for anyone in this area. A friend shared it with me and I'm paying it forward. This is New Hamp area and a decent buy.
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Glenwood #6
- DePippo79
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- Baseburners & Antiques: Glenwood Oak 40, Stanley Argand No. 30, Glenwood Modern Oak 114, Stanley Argand No. 20 missing parts.
- Coal Size/Type: Anthracite. Stove and nut size.
- Other Heating: Oil hot water.
Wish I could do it. Thanks for taking the time to post it. I know exactly where it could have gone. Matt
- Photog200
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I thought he was referring to the ash pan not the base pan that needed repair?franco b wrote:Emery warned that a cracked base pan was a serious matter.
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"Bottom soot catch pan needs brazing."Photog200 wrote:I thought he was referring to the ash pan not the base pan that needed repair?franco b wrote:Emery warned that a cracked base pan was a serious matter.
I can't picture an ash pan and brazing so could go either way.
- Greyhound
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So, this sounds like a seed for a professional restoration job, anyone want to guess what that would cost?
- dcrane
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well... if the nickel has to be re-plated that's probably $1,000 right their... add $500 - $1000 for castings (grate pieces, base pan, etc), $400 for the stove, $400 for all the misc. things like furnace cement, paint/polish, mica, nuts/bolts, sand blasting might be a few hundred more if you don't have one. all that adds up to what could be around $2,000 (mind you... this only covers actual cash money out of your pocket)... if you added in 80 hours labor, gas money driving to get stove, to foundry, to plater, to hardware store and shipping monies for all the stuffs than the total might be $3,000 if you place a labor fee of $10.00 per hour.Greyhound wrote:So, this sounds like a seed for a professional restoration job, anyone want to guess what that would cost?