Discussion Topic |
|
This thread has been locked |
karabin museum
Trad climber
phoenix, az
|
|
Jay Leno has an amazing collection of old signs, cars, and steam engines. I love it! I plan on visiting him someday. Those old signs can fetch a big buck for sure. Check out the prices of some of the old cone top beer cans on Ebay, wow!!!
Marty
|
|
philo
Trad climber
Somewhere halfway over the rainbow
|
|
A $10,000 (Anton) Salathe Piton.
Perfect for hanging Chumlee's lunch bag from.
|
|
survival
Big Wall climber
A Token of My Extreme
|
|
Some rich fuk paid close to a million for one of Garcia's Doug Irwin guitars. Sits in a glass case and never gets played. What a crime...
The coolest would be to get that pin for a reasonable price and use it on a new route, take pix, and tell us about it!! Use it on many routes, and photo-document them all!!!
|
|
Q- Ball
Mountain climber
where the wind always blows
|
|
Why do folks knock on others for spending their money on whatever they care too? It is their money right?
|
|
philo
Trad climber
Somewhere halfway over the rainbow
|
|
Q-Ball, ever see a person die of starvation literally at your feet? I have. Sometimes life's priorities proceed life's indulgences.
|
|
philo
Trad climber
Somewhere halfway over the rainbow
|
|
Whoa there Bob. I was living in an Arab country at the time and what happens is inshalla. You are NOT allowed to help even to give emergency first aid. Not until the proper authorities arrive. My first experience with this restriction was actually being collared and nearly wrestled to the ground as I was rushing in to administer emergency first aid to a women who had been run over by a bus while riding a MoPed. It was surreal her hips were crushed & squished into the pavement almost flat. Her legs were still kicking and her arms were still thrashing but she was doomed as no one was allowed to assist her. Most everyone on the street just stood there helplessly watching her scream in agony. Unable to help I had to run away. So why does that make me a "self important twit"?
|
|
couchmaster
climber
pdx
|
|
Bob = Matt = AC Crowley. Seems to pee on every thread he posts too. I'm happier to see this stuff valued so highly, it makes it less likely that it will get tossed into the trash by the wife when dude has a sudden heart attack and dies. This Salathe pin isn't worth 10,000 bucks, but it's worth something of significance no doubt.
|
|
couchmaster
climber
pdx
|
|
Jul 10, 2011 - 10:45am PT
|
Looks like the details are getting better. Full text from Poster mook424 ( Feedback Score Of 100% Positive feedback, item location: Yosemite, CA, United States:
This is an authentic and very rare Salathé piton, the holy grail of climbing hardware collectibles. This sale is only for the very serious collector of climbing history. This piton was hand made by John Salathé and has his trademark Diamond P logo clearly stamped into the piton’s steel. This piton may well have been used on the first ascent of Sentinel Rock.
"(John) Salathé saw the need for tougher pitons- thin, reusable ones that could be forced farther into bottomed cracks and pounded into contorted cracks without buckling. He wanted a piton that would dominate the granite, not the other way around…Salathé simply used bars of 40/60 carbon and vanadium alloy steel, which he could have obtained easily and cheaply…The resulting hand-forged and heat-treated pitons, beautifully fashioned into the standard horizontal shape, were far tougher than the European pitons of the day. Most of these handsome objects bore an imprint, a tiny “P” inside a diamond, the logo of his Peninsula Wrought Iron Works."- Steve Roper Camp 4
The CW stamped under the diamond P is quite likely the initials of Chuck Wilts who may have been a onetime owner of this particular piton. Salathé sold some of his pitons, but climbers thought the fifty cent price was too high
|
|
MTucker
Ice climber
Arizona
|
|
Jul 11, 2011 - 11:14pm PT
|
Come and get it!!
|
|
SGropp
Mountain climber
Eastsound, Wa
|
|
Jul 12, 2011 - 12:01pm PT
|
If that pin goes for ten grand, authentic or not, expect to see some counterfeits entering the market.
A couple of bucks worth of alloy steel, maybe a $100 for a custom stamp, a day or less at the forge working out the right sequence for the hot work and a few dollars for the chemicals to give it that aged patina and there you are, a perfect ''artifake''.
|
|
philo
Trad climber
Somewhere halfway over the rainbow
|
|
Jul 17, 2011 - 06:29pm PT
|
Probably not Locker. But they could probably work up a Bea Arthur for you.
|
|
Carmel Climber
Mountain climber
Carmel California
|
|
Dec 12, 2012 - 04:34pm PT
|
Just checked E-Bay. Anton Salathe? $12,000? No picture? $100 shipping? This guy's got to be kidding?
|
|
sharperblue
Mountain climber
oakland, california
|
|
Dec 12, 2012 - 05:13pm PT
|
my brother is quite an accomplished blacksmith; he uses modern car axles all the time as his starter material (as well as bridge bolts...hopefully not salvaged 'on site'); absolutely loves the alloy in them
seriously though; 12k is just as ridiculous as 1k or 100 bucks; it's just a piece of junk metal. anyone who would drop that kind of cash for a pin is suffering from a serious lack of imagination
|
|
donini
Trad climber
Ouray, Colorado
|
|
Dec 12, 2012 - 05:55pm PT
|
My best offer is a buck fifty. Never have understood the draw of climbing collectables.
|
|
|
SuperTopo on the Web
|