Car Salvage Value

CAR SALVAGE VALUE – how do you find the value of your home – scrap metal car value.

Car Salvage Value

    salvage value

  • Residual value is one of the constituents of a leasing calculus or operation. It describes the future value of a good in terms of percentage of depreciation of its initial value.
  • Depreciation refers to two very different but related concepts: a) decline in value of assets, and b) allocation of the cost of tangible assets to periods in which the assets are used. The former affects values of businesses and entities. The latter affects net income.
  • The amount that can probably be obtained from a damaged item or for the components of the item.

    car

  • a wheeled vehicle adapted to the rails of railroad; “three cars had jumped the rails”
  • A road vehicle, typically with four wheels, powered by an internal combustion engine and able to carry a small number of people
  • A railroad car of a specified kind
  • a motor vehicle with four wheels; usually propelled by an internal combustion engine; “he needs a car to get to work”
  • the compartment that is suspended from an airship and that carries personnel and the cargo and the power plant
  • A vehicle that runs on rails, esp. a railroad car

car salvage value

car salvage value – AmScope 200pc

AmScope 200pc Student Basic Science Prepared Microscope Slides with Wooden Case
AmScope 200pc Student Basic Science Prepared Microscope Slides with Wooden Case
This is a on a 200-piece very nice microscope prepared slide set of various plants, insects and animal tissues. The slides are coverslipped and preserved in cedar wood oil. They are premium, accurately stained and machine cleaned slides that will give a sharp image. All slides are carefully labeled for easy reference and are arranged in a fine crafted varnished wooden case with brass hardware. This slide set is a rare mix of 200 prepared slides from which students can find a lot of fun. This slide set is excellent for educational use and is perfect for all levels of student study including home school program. It is brand new from the manufacturer instead of seconds or salvage. There is no risk of contamination from previous use. Its retail value is $450.

On the Road, #1.

On the Road, #1.
This is part of my project to see if I can salvage a few worthwhile photos from the ones that many of us take out a car window. I’m hoping the motion blur can add to the value of some photos instead of detracting from them. Normally, our eyes focus on one part of our visual field after another, and the brain ignores the blurring in the periphery. (You can un-focus your eyes, seeing the whole field equally, as some people do in meditation, but it takes a conscious effort). The blurring becomes more noticeable in a photo. I hope the blurring can add to the sense of being on a road trip. These three were in Washington State East of the Cascades on a bright August day. I discovered a Flickr group dedicated to this type of photo: Photography in Motion.
The photo was taken with a Panasonic G1 Micro Four Thirds camera and a 14-45 lens, developed in Lightroom.

Breast Cancer Awareness

Breast Cancer Awareness
we painted the LeSabre pink and will be selling $5 sledge hammer whacks this weekend. All proceedes including the salvage value of the car will go to a cancer charity.

car salvage value

Men Against Time: Salvage Archaeology in the United States
In Brooklyn and Boston, in Wyoming and New Mexico, wherever highways, dams, buildings, and pipelines are under construction, archeologists are racing to salvage prehistoric, Indian, and colonial artifacts before they are obliterated forever by the inexorable advance of civilization. A crew drilling a gas well in Wyoming strikes a snag; archeologists summoned to the scene discover a complete mammoth skeleton and a stone knife used by an Ice Age man. Building construction in Boston turns up a fence used by Indians more than 4,000 years ago to trap fish in the Charles River. In Arizona a salvage team excavates thirteen major sites in the path of a new pipeline, keeping just ahead of the bulldozers that are clearing the right of way at a rate of ten miles a day. In his discussions of digs at construction sites all over the United States, Mr. Silverberg reviews the latest archeological methods and provides an intriguing look at American history and prehistory as seen through the unearthed relics of the past.