Amana valuation?

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firedome

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Binghamton NY & Lake Champlain VT
OK finally got a look at our aunt's old RadarRange. Model RR-4D, circa 1973 very nice condition and works fine... it's really a bit too big for our counter space but she's in need of funds and we'd like to offer her a fair price to help her out, but have no idea what that would be... any informed opinions? Photos follow, appreciate any input.

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I've seen prices all over the place for old Radaranges. I paid $5 for my Touchmatic three years ago, and it is in very good cosmetic and mechanical condition. It was purchased off a Craigslist ad.

Sometimes on eBay, you'll see them listed in the $50 to $150 range.

Your aunt's Radarange appears to be very nice.
 
Roger,

A fair price is hard to determine as asking prices are all over the map and usually, we don't know the selling prices! My RR-2 was advertised for $50 and I paid $30... The very next day after I got it, I saw it was also advertised by the same seller with a few spelling errors at $5! So I thought I paid a decent price at $30 but I could have bought it at $5!

But then I had to order a glass tray as it was missing on mine and it did cost a bit more than the MW itself because of the shipping to Canada...

If you decide not to keep it, I'd be interested in buying it from you! I'd say $50 is a fair price to offer your aunt, and I might offer you a bit more if it doesn't fit at your camp!

Phil[this post was last edited: 3/7/2013-18:08]

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All I Can Say Is....

I would gladly give $100 for one of these in good shape that I did not have to have shipped.

"Good shape" is defined as no damage to the inner plastic panel of the door, and no serious cosmetic damage to the exterior, in addition to being in working condition. I would not consider a missing tray to be a deal-breaker.
 
Depends

I get asked this question several times a week through my website, usually by folks that think they're sitting on a gold mine. After tracking prices for several years I would estimate no more than $50 for an example that needs cosmetic work or is missing its tray. Clean examples in mint shape can fetch $100 on a good day. Of course, if you watch Craigslist and are willing to gamble, $25 is usual.

Shipping is the real deal-breaker. It wasn't that long ago there was an RR-1 on eBay with a starting price of something like 10 bucks and no reserve. At auction close...zero bids. -Cory
 
Thanks for the input folks...

very helpful... I'm going to give her $100, seems fair and she can use the funds as SS is hard to live on, she was a housewife all her life and husband (passed on) never made much.

It's a dubious fit in our kitchens, mostly the depth, at 18" it doesn't leave much counter in front of it. I wish Amana had made one about 2/3 scale but with this kind of quality.
 
Roger:

My avatar at the moment (I change it occasionally) is the house from Roseanne, which is a real house located at 619 South Runnymeade Avenue in Evansville, Indiana; the town of "Lanford" mentioned in the show was fictional. The Roseanne producers built a duplicate of the front of the house on a Hollywood soundstage for scenes played on the front porch, but the shots where you see the entire house are this Evansville location.

It's for sale at the moment, I understand - asking is $129K.

However, Waterloo does have houses like this. Our residential architecture runs the gamut, from tract houses to bungalows to architect-designed Prairie Style houses to midcentury to McMansions. [this post was last edited: 3/9/2013-17:04]
 
Iowa ...

from what we saw had much housing styles from the late 1800 onto the 'mid 50s and on.
Am familiar with Iowa City most, a town we could live in, many interesting and travelled folks, many with U of I, where Dear Daughter had a late 1930s house that was built by a rather eccentric developer named Moffit who built some almost fairy-tale like houses from the 1920s to '50s with real flair and charm, very unusual houses. You can Google Moffit Iowa City for pics. Nothing like that around here! We really liked Iowa, and sort of wish she'd stayed there vis-a-vis Denver at times.
 
Hope I'm Not....

....Hijacking this thread too much, but I thought I'd fill Roger in on Waterloo:

Waterloo has traditionally existed as a transportation hub for agricultural products grown in the region (primarily corn - c'mon, this is Iowa), as a manufacturing center for agricultural equipment (John Deere is headquartered here) and as a meat-packing center.

The first two raisons d'etre are still very much in evidence, but the third has largely died out since the 1983 demise of the Rath Packing Company, makers of Rath pork products, and once one of the town's two largest employers (the other being John Deere). Rath fell victim to its pig-headed management, who would neither modernize a seriously antiquated plant nor work effectively with a union.

Today, kitchen cabinet manufacturing is a big employer (Bertch and Omega are Waterloo businesses), and agriculture is still king. We've got miles of corn fields all around the town, and a few in town, including some behind our major mall, Crossroads. I'll bet you've never seen a Dillard's with corn growing out back! Eldercare is also a huge industry here, with retirement communities serving the entire spectrum of needs (including "memory care" for dementia and Alzheimer's sufferers) and price points.

Our twin city, Cedar Falls, is home to UNI, the University of Northern Iowa, and like the more famous Twin Cities in Minnesota, is pretty much one contiguous urban area with Waterloo.

If you like small cities, this is The Place. We've got everything larger cities have, except the density and the hectic pace.
 
IWe do like smaller cites...

and was very impressed with Iowa City-Cedar Rapids area, during our stays there. But I've never been anyplace that compared with Burlington Vermont,it has it all, almost always on "Best of" lists of all sorts, 120 mile long lake, mountains 20 mi away both E & W, great culture... if only it were warmer!
 
Roger:

"if only it were warmer!"

If Iowa were warmer, it would be California or one of the Southern tier states, with the sprawl and crowding to go along with it.

As it is, we have a state population of just three million, which is great.
 
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