100 odd LPs

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CopperBolt

Original Poster:

921 posts

82 months

Tuesday 13th June 2023
quotequote all
Hi all

(not sure if this is best sub forum but seems best one to start)

Ive got about 100 vinyl LP's in my loft. In sleeves in cardboard box. They've been there for years. Most of them bought late 70's and through early 80's. Generally pretty mainstream stuff from Genesis to Roxy music, Elvis, Peter Gabriel, Yello, Curiosity killed the cat, Stevie Wonder, UB40. All sorts basically.

Are they likely to still be playable after years in a loft? (No longer have a turntable so cant check and wouldnt fancy playing through 100 LPs checking either really.)

Are they likely to be of any resale value assuming they are still playable?

I probably ought to try and get rid before moving house again and moving them all from one loft to another for the third or fourth time.

Thanks for any input


bigpriest

2,081 posts

145 months

Tuesday 13th June 2023
quotequote all
Playable? Yes, moisture doesn't really affect vinyl grooves. Sleeves and inners might be a bit whiffy depending on atmosphere in the loft! Were they looked after and played on decent equipment to start with? Unless a local record (sorry Vinyl) shop wants them I suspect it's landfill time.

Fitz666

678 posts

157 months

Tuesday 13th June 2023
quotequote all
If they have been stored vertically then they should be fine, if store flat there is a good chance the vinyl might well be damaged.

jimmytheone

1,726 posts

233 months

Tuesday 13th June 2023
quotequote all
bigpriest said:
Playable? Yes, moisture doesn't really affect vinyl grooves. Sleeves and inners might be a bit whiffy depending on atmosphere in the loft! Were they looked after and played on decent equipment to start with? Unless a local record (sorry Vinyl) shop wants them I suspect it's landfill time.
Landfill?!! The outrage!

If they're playable but you dont want them, you should sell them for a few quid - i'm not saying they'll be worth a fortune, especially if the outers are missing/damaged but you should be able to get a few quid each. Even charity shops LPs are not the bargain they once were.

Look up a few on ebay or MusicMagpie, that should give you an indication of value

dundarach

5,694 posts

243 months

Tuesday 13th June 2023
quotequote all
They'll be fine.

Worth much, who knows what you have.

But let's assume you've a couple worth something and the rest normal stuff, say £200, if you're very fortunate, likely worthless.

Worth buggering about with, nope!

I'd collect them up and take them to the charity shop \ post of Facebook free to collect from the top of your drive.




bigpriest

2,081 posts

145 months

Tuesday 13th June 2023
quotequote all
jimmytheone said:
bigpriest said:
Playable? Yes, moisture doesn't really affect vinyl grooves. Sleeves and inners might be a bit whiffy depending on atmosphere in the loft! Were they looked after and played on decent equipment to start with? Unless a local record (sorry Vinyl) shop wants them I suspect it's landfill time.
Landfill?!! The outrage!

If they're playable but you dont want them, you should sell them for a few quid - i'm not saying they'll be worth a fortune, especially if the outers are missing/damaged but you should be able to get a few quid each. Even charity shops LPs are not the bargain they once were.

Look up a few on ebay or MusicMagpie, that should give you an indication of value
Local recycling facility - sounds better smile

Disclaimer:
I did this with a collection of around 100 records - took a random sample of 20 and looked them up on Discogs and they were worth about £0.49 each! eBay similar plus decent packaging costs a bit. The main reason was remembering the absolute rubbish record players they were played on when bought. Murphy, Saisho, Amstrad, Matsui. Needles made out of pig iron left their mark.

CopperBolt

Original Poster:

921 posts

82 months

Tuesday 13th June 2023
quotequote all
Thanks all

I *think* they're stored standing up.
The sleeves and inners I think are in reasonable nick still.
Time to get them down and start distributing to charity shops I guess.
Maybe try and shift a few "sets" on gumtree or something. Although some of the Genesis album covers I fancy in a frame on a wall. Particularly Trick of the tail.

Ive even got some VHS tapes up there still I think


Bin 'em!


ChevronB19

7,878 posts

178 months

Tuesday 13th June 2023
quotequote all
Put the numbers you find on the spine into Discogs and it will give you values from POS to mint, but at least give you an idea. Would only take a couple of hours and far better than to go to the bin.

Even as a last resort, download the list of collection from the site and email it to dealers.

I still feel a bit guilty when I got about 1k worth of albums from a builder who found them in the loft of the house he was renovating, I got them for £60.

jimmytheone

1,726 posts

233 months

Tuesday 13th June 2023
quotequote all
bigpriest said:
Local recycling facility - sounds better smile

Disclaimer:
I did this with a collection of around 100 records - took a random sample of 20 and looked them up on Discogs and they were worth about £0.49 each! eBay similar plus decent packaging costs a bit. The main reason was remembering the absolute rubbish record players they were played on when bought. Murphy, Saisho, Amstrad, Matsui. Needles made out of pig iron left their mark.
I got told off by the staff for calling it the tip - "its a recycling centre mate".

i guess the problem is, no matter who you sell them to there's the ballache of packing and shipping so maybe only viable if its a bulk deal / buyer collects.



alfa phil

2,262 posts

222 months

Sunday 18th June 2023
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Record shops popping up everywhere most have a poster in the window or inside saying we buy your record collection they would probably pick them up from you , give you a few bob and you can rest assured some one down the line will be enjoying listening to them in the future.

Douglas Quaid

2,597 posts

100 months

Sunday 18th June 2023
quotequote all
ChevronB19 said:
Put the numbers you find on the spine into Discogs and it will give you values from POS to mint, but at least give you an idea. Would only take a couple of hours and far better than to go to the bin.

Even as a last resort, download the list of collection from the site and email it to dealers.

I still feel a bit guilty when I got about 1k worth of albums from a builder who found them in the loft of the house he was renovating, I got them for £60.
This is definitely worth doing.