Whoa, did you know it was like that beforehand and still took it?fixer-upper
I got hit by a tree in a storm. The guy had lots of other damage and I would guess insurance made him whole.Whoa, did you know it was like that beforehand and still took it?
I think I would have to be PAID to take that one!I'm waiting on these folks to go to "free," but they are still working their way down from $100. Just dropped it to $50 and then $40 this week. Curious how the base managed to survive so well while the rest of it is totally demolished. And what are those grates?
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That's how I got my first Weber. My wife would never have allowed us to spend that kind of money, so we always had junky gas grills. After a hurricane in Florida, an old redhead with a mildly dented hood got pushed out to the road by someone a few blocks from us. I told my wife we were stopping and loading that thing up in our van. She was mortified, but that old grill began my hobby of restoring Webers. I had hardly any tools - or knowledge - at the time. You should have seen me hand sanding and wire brushing rust off the original cast iron grates! I had to order some parts (back then x000 parts were still available) and I repainted the gray slats. I did finish eventually and finally discovered how nice it is to grill on a Weber instead of throwaway grillI got hit by a tree in a storm. The guy had lots of other damage and I would guess insurance made him whole.
The grill was in good shape before the accident. I grabbed some parts and scrapped the rest.
The irony was the floor panel was not rotted and in good shape