Storage Auctions

The Storage Locker => New to Storage Auctions? => Topic started by: MarcusBaur on April 09, 2015, 02:12:52 AM

Title: How much money do you bring?
Post by: MarcusBaur on April 09, 2015, 02:12:52 AM
I see on TV those guys have huge wads of cash.   How much money do you guys take to auctions?  Can you go to an ATM or must you have all that cash?
Title: Re: How much money do you bring?
Post by: alloro on April 09, 2015, 09:39:03 AM
Most of the units around me go for $10- $200 with an occasional one hitting into $1,000+ if there's something good showing in it. I usually bring $200 x the number of units listed up for auction. The auctioneers around here say' "you must have the cash on you, no running to the ATM." Then there is Public Storage...they run their own actions and let you pay with a credit card. I think the auctioneers want cash to avoid the tax man.
Title: Re: How much money do you bring?
Post by: MarcusBaur on April 09, 2015, 09:56:06 PM
I will keep that in mind if I ever get around to doing this.  It seems those guys on TV have stacks of at least 10k or more in cash.
Title: Re: How much money do you bring?
Post by: Travis on April 10, 2015, 01:03:31 AM
I will keep that in mind if I ever get around to doing this.  It seems those guys on TV have stacks of at least 10k or more in cash.

Sure, there are people at auctions that have 10K, but most will have a few grand or less. Seriously though, you only need a few hundred to get your feet wet.
Title: Re: How much money do you bring?
Post by: alloro on April 10, 2015, 02:30:56 PM
Sure, there are people at auctions that have 10K, but most will have a few grand or less.

Kind of makes you wonder why no one has robbed an auction before.
Title: Re: How much money do you bring?
Post by: Travis on April 10, 2015, 02:38:48 PM
Kind of makes you wonder why no one has robbed an auction before.

Why would a robber go after a crowd of fifty people, some of which are armed, when they could just pick off the facility manager after everyone leaves? I wonder how many storage operators have been robbed after an auction?
Title: Re: How much money do you bring?
Post by: MarcusBaur on April 10, 2015, 10:20:15 PM
You all bring up some interesting points.  I think I’ll keep it around a few hundred dollars.  That sounds like a good place to start.  I really don’t know what I’m doing anyway.  I don’t want to spend too much and lose it all.
Title: Re: How much money do you bring?
Post by: Travis on April 11, 2015, 07:41:21 AM
You all bring up some interesting points.  I think I’ll keep it around a few hundred dollars.  That sounds like a good place to start.  I really don’t know what I’m doing anyway.  I don’t want to spend too much and lose it all.

Just take your time. Buy a unit, resell the contents, and if you're still interested buy a few more.
Title: Re: How much money do you bring?
Post by: alloro on April 11, 2015, 10:47:45 AM
Why would a robber go after a crowd of fifty people, some of which are armed, when they could just pick off the facility manager after everyone leaves?

Umm, because the manager isn't the one with wads of 1000s of dollars in cash rolled up in his pocket. A robber (or robbers) with a gun has the element of surprise. It's unlikely that anyone, armed or not, will have much of a chance against a gun already pointed in their direction. Plus you're thinking Texas style. Not all places in the country have every other person walking around armed.
Title: Re: How much money do you bring?
Post by: Travis on April 11, 2015, 12:44:38 PM
A robber is trying to get in and out as quickly as possible and with the least amount of resistance. After a large auction, a facility manager may have 5K, 10K, even more in some cases. Let's face it, they're targets.

Do you know how difficult it would be to watch 50 people? It would take a team of people to rob a crowd like that, and Texas or not, some people pack heat when they carry a large sum of cash. 

I just got my concealed carry permit, and if a would be robber looked away for a split second, his obituary would be next to the public notice for next month's auction.
Title: Re: How much money do you bring?
Post by: alloro on April 11, 2015, 01:19:46 PM
You obviously have little or no experience with these things. All they have to do is walk through the gate at the start of the auction, do their thing, then exit the gate into a waiting car. That way they have everyone's money and not just the money that was used to pay for winning auctions. No way are they going to let 20 grand in cash walk out the gate and settle for the 2-3 grand in the office. It would also be beyond irresponsible to fire on one of the robbers from a crowd because when they fire back they will fire into the crowd.
Title: Re: How much money do you bring?
Post by: Travis on April 11, 2015, 02:09:08 PM
You obviously have little or no experience with these things. All they have to do is walk through the gate at the start of the auction, do their thing, then exit the gate into a waiting car. That way they have everyone's money and not just the money that was used to pay for winning auctions. No way are they going to let 20 grand in cash walk out the gate and settle for the 2-3 grand in the office.

I disagree, does anyone else have an opinion on this?

It would also be beyond irresponsible to fire on one of the robbers from a crowd because when they fire back they will fire into the crowd.

I've been shooting since I was 5, he wouldn't fire back. You can't just wait around and hope the idiot won't kill someone. You neutralize the threat when you can.

If two or more were armed, I probably wouldn't draw my weapon. I'm a good shot, but this isn't the movies.
Title: Re: How much money do you bring?
Post by: alloro on April 11, 2015, 04:02:13 PM
Just to name a few...
http://nypost.com/2002/10/09/fleeing-crook-fires-into-crowd-wounding-8-year-old-aunt/
http://www.wxyz.com/news/region/detroit/armed-robber-fires-shot-inside-restaurant-steals-from-customers
http://www.champaigncountycrimestoppers.com/crimeoftheweek.aspx (5th one down)
Title: Re: How much money do you bring?
Post by: Travis on April 11, 2015, 06:50:06 PM
I'm sure I could find plenty of articles & videos where an armed citizen thwarted a robbery and/or saved peoples lives without any collateral damage.
Title: Re: How much money do you bring?
Post by: alloro on April 12, 2015, 09:22:23 AM
I'm sure I could find plenty of articles & videos

I'm sure you could, but the purpose of those links was to show that a panicked robber would fire into a crowd. Now if you were the one that drew on him and people died as a result, are you telling me that's better than letting him have the cash, getting a license plate and description, then calling the police to pick him up at a less risky location?
Title: Re: How much money do you bring?
Post by: TheStorageBunker on April 12, 2015, 10:24:32 AM
storage areas have every inch of their property covered by cameras. 

if I was ever approched the robber would have a very "shocking" experience.
Title: Re: How much money do you bring?
Post by: alloro on April 12, 2015, 12:49:18 PM
storage areas have every inch of their property covered by cameras. 

So do banks, yet they still get robbed.
Title: Re: How much money do you bring?
Post by: Cobia on April 20, 2015, 09:01:21 PM
So many facilities accept credit cards now there is no need for me to take a load of cash to auctions anymore and I actually seek out the auctions that accept cards and avoid cash only auctions.
Title: Re: How much money do you bring?
Post by: MikeMilez on May 07, 2015, 02:41:51 PM
I know for a fact that many auction goers carry a gun. Someone would be stupid to try to rob from that crowd! There's no way he could keep an eye on everyone. As soon as he pulled his gun out, he would have at least 10 aimed straight at him. Sure, he could get off a few shots, but a) he's not getting any money, and b) he won't make it out alive.
Title: Re: How much money do you bring?
Post by: jamelar on May 11, 2015, 04:59:20 PM
^^^ Something to consider. Let's say you bring a big wad of cash with you and you're smart enough not to flaunt it. A sweet locker opens and you bid it sky high, but someone else bids a bit higher. Now the crowd knows you're loaded, but didn't spend it. Watch you're rear view mirror on the way home or go strait to the bank and make a deposit.
Title: Re: How much money do you bring?
Post by: Alias300 on May 15, 2015, 01:08:52 PM
I've thought about the robbery thing too.   There was a short stint here where guys were holding up estate sales late afternoon.  Knew there was a couple grand between estate company and peoples wallets.

Starting thinking auctions might be unsafe.   20-40 actual bidders.   Each has $500-$1000, some much more.

But then I thought it would be rough.   Indoors and the hall is packed.  Outside and the crowd is spread out.   There isn't any control. 



I started looking closely at the crowd too.   Hadn't been a single auction that I haven't been able to see at LEAST one guy with concealed firearm.
Title: Re: How much money do you bring?
Post by: Travis on May 18, 2015, 07:59:15 AM
I started looking closely at the crowd too.   Hadn't been a single auction that I haven't been able to see at LEAST one guy with concealed firearm.

Most people aren't aware of how many others around them are armed. My 60 year old mother carries a .45. My 87 year old grandfather carries as well. According to a recent study, 11,113,013 or 4.8% of the U.S. population currently holds a concealed carry permit. 1.28 million permits have been issued in the state of Florida alone...and those are just the numbers for people who carry legally.