Are You Looking for Industrial Equipment That You Can’t Seem to Find?

Have you searched everywhere and have been unable to find the types of industrial machinery you are looking for? We can help – even if you can’t find a listing of the equipment on our website, we will be able to find it for you. Our staff is experienced at locating machines that others cannot seem to find. Let us help you.

Our system will save you countless hours of frustrated searching and will provide you with a service that is open every day around the clock without specified business hours or time zones that are out of sync with yours. We have access to sellers around the world who want to sell you their equipment and are anxious to hear from you.

There is nothing worse than having the cash to buy something, but not being able to find a particular model or brand that you absolutely have to have to run your business. With cash on hand, you are in a good position because today there are many more sellers than there are buyers so we will put you in touch with the sellers you need to finalize a transaction. The best news is that you do not have to pay anything unless or until you find the seller with the machinery that you want.

If you need the equipment, but are a little short of cash, particularly if the machinery is over $100,000 you are fortunate because we can assist with cash as well as finding you your seller! As long as the purchase is more than $100,000 and you are a United States resident, we are able to finance your purchase. AND…we do not require complex application forms and we do not do any credit checks. So whether your credit is bad, or it is good, you will be able to finance that machinery that you need once you have found it!

Our system only requires that you register with us free of charge telling us exactly the types of machinery or equipment you are looking for and cannot seem to find. Once we have located the seller, then you as the buyer negotiates directly with the seller regarding the purchase of the particular machine or equipment that you want to buy. There is never any charge until the seller has been found and the purchased has been negotiated. If there are multiple sellers, it doesn’t matter as you would negotiate each transaction separately. If you require assistance with the financing, then you contact us about the financing over $100,000.

With so many sellers looking for people to purchase their equipment, you should be able to finalize your transaction(s) quickly and easily with our system. Reaching people everywhere via the internet, you might never have to leave your Office to find the industrial equipment you are looking for. Why wait? Now is the time to get started on the search and with our help it will not take you long to find what you are looking for!

For more information please visit our web site at www.businessbuyersregistry.com

Arnold R. McIntosh
http://www.articlesbase.com/ask-an-expert-articles/are-you-looking-for-industrial-equipment-that-you-cant-seem-to-find-751810.html

18 Responses to “Are You Looking for Industrial Equipment That You Can’t Seem to Find?”

  • steve50:

    What are all the ex TV repair engineers doing now that its cheaper to buy new than have stuff repaired?
    I was once a tv engineer but over the years as rental declined i found I had to adapt to other types of electronics to survive
    automotive test equipment, warehouse control systems,computers and now industrial electronics
    How many other trades have to keep changing to survive
    looking back I should have been an electrician as they seem to be in a better position work wise nowadays but in my day electronics was the best trade to get into.
    What are you doing now?
    Do you still repair tv’s
    Do you think your knowledge and expertise has gone to waste.
    How much junk from the old days do you still keep to your wifes annoyance?
    I have even found skilled techs driving fork trucks for a living as it pays better money now than repairing electronics.

  • dahorndogd013:

    making babies, and more babies
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  • Schnappa:

    TV Sales.
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  • michinoku2001:

    There’s good money in avionics.
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  • Frankie P:

    Seems like not so long ago, you had those tube-techs, who could fix your big tube TV. That required all the knowledge of how to do it without the capacitor punching a hole in your life-line. Now, got an audio problem?… must be the audio board. Got too many bad pixels?… replace the display.

    Even though many average users have no idea where to start, parts are cheap. labor is getting cheap. When techs charge for repairs at replacement prices, someting will go down.
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  • gary c:

    My friend was a TV repair man. At lot of his colleagues had been made redundant over the years. He was finally made redundant just before last Xmas. Got a new job straightaway to do with electronics and loves it. Also now earning more.
    It just shows sometimes what you think of initially as bad news turns out to be exactly the opposite.
    LOL.
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  • Hibee:

    Re-train as plumber or builder.
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  • Emma B:

    it is true that the old trades are dying out. my father did the same. but he read between the lines and became an electrician. mind you now he is a builder, corgi registered plumbing and heating engineer, roofer, plasterer, painter and decorator, and ground worker, and a mechanical engineer.

    keeping your options open is always the best thing. He changed his job for where the money was and now has every skill and qualification you can imagine, because he needed to put food on the table.

    But now he has used it to his advantage and is the guy that manages these building sites where all these types of tradesmen work. And because he has been there…done that…got the T-shirt. He knows when they arent doing the job properly.

    So people like me dad are helping to make sure that the facilities being built are safe for you and me.

    The other big problem today is the IT generation have become so lazy. that its easier to get an office job that requires as much skill as eating chips, rather than earn and honest days hard graft.

    My boyfriend is an engineer and i couldnt be prouder of him. Only problem is… the companies dont pay like they used to. and they should because skilled labourers are much harder to come by now, and are in more demand than ever!

    xx
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  • obzi:

    Most have moved onto home installations.

    As tv audio equipment becomes more and more complex such and HD, massive wide screens, pro-logic sorround, etc there is more and more need for proffesional installation.

    The days with many of these products of plugging in and 2 minutes later your finished is long gone, have you felt the weight of some of these huge t.v.’s?

    The engineers are perfect for this job with the technical background to solve small problems there and then, and an insight how the mass of spaghetti cables actually transfers the signal rather than just what fits in where.

    And it’s an awful lot easier than spending days looking for intermittant faults.
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  • shirley m:

    I live in Lincolnshire and all the tv engineers are busy,youve still got to wait for a house call
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  • realist 2006:

    Hi Rusty, your post touched a chord with me , from your term " engineer " I take it that you are in the UK ! I started out in the UK about 1952 as a TV engineer !! I worked for DER mainly for 10 years then was recruited by a TV service org in New Zealand in 1970 and I became a TV technician, same job but sounded posher and paid better ! 10 years later we moved to Australia , was still a TV tech but had my own business , work continued to be brisk throughout 70tys and the 80 tys and I retired in 1992 officially but continued TV and VCR repairs right up to 2005 but just for rellys and friends so much for retiring and I still feel like a TV tech ! I have hung on to some equipment and parts which my wife calls junk but I am unable to part with !!!I do think that my vast store of knowledge is by and large wasted but with the advent of Yahoo Answers I am able to pass some of the knowledge on and so far I have 72 best answers , what it means I don`t know but I know that I am still contributing after all these years !! Cheers Pete
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    45 Years fixing tellys !!!!!

  • prakdrive:

    I was an engineer and it’s true what you say. It’s cheaper to fit whole new units than to repair broken ones, particularly in telecoms. I switched to doing minor repairs, which are still carried out, and then to warehousing, i.e looking after and receiving and despatching the new units to replace the old ones!
    And yes, I’ve got reach and counterbalance licences and drive a fork lift too.
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  • kevin B:

    T/V Engineer was at one time a prtisashjob when i first worked as one in 1953, when i first began. fortunately i managed to work in a declining industry till i retired. I have skilled colleagues who are out of work, looking for any form of work(not related to electronics) but being over the age of 55 are finding it very hard. however i realize all skilled trades are changing, and one cannot exspetpt to follow any calling all your working life those days are long gone. Thinking about it i think looking back that training to be a plumber would be a far better thing to do defiantly finactionly wise.
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  • davmanx:

    Oh my! you guys are scratching my old wound. Arrrrgh.
    You were all so right.
    After persistent grumblings from my wife,
    I finally threw out all the old TVs, VCRs, HiFis, Washing machines,etc, that was cramping up 2 of my rooms.
    But I still hung on to all my parts in case my own appliances kong on me to my wife’s silent bitter stare.
    I’m now back in construction line, management, but whenever things broke down I just couldn’t help bringing out my tools. LOL
    People always ask the same question again and again, wow, what is your previous profession?
    I told them I was a stupid jackass of all trades
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  • Alison R:

    My husband used to fix TVs, but he retrained in IT and now fixes computers instead. The same must be said for a lot of repairmen/women – in today’s throwaway society, you just buy new things.
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  • countryguy:

    Good question…

    I use to repair televisions.

    Now I make websites and sell advertising.
    I don’t build sites for others, don’t need to.

    There’s no regular income in electronics.
    One just feels people and employers don’t
    appreciate one’s skills.

    Countryguy
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  • Stephen C:

    Still in the trade – ex Royal Navy radio / radar tech, moved into production / manufacturing on the repair side for 2 Companies (still with one). Being within a customer service related centre makes for a varied ‘diet’! CRT TV, Plasma / LCD, DVD players / recorders – some with HDD & some without – VCR (some still out there), digital printers, digital VCR, photo-editing equipment, digi stills camera / camcorder, PSP’s, Netwalkman’s … and so the list goes on … sadly though, most of today’s repairs result from board replacement rather than proper fault-finding, partly due to B.G.A. technology and lack of necessary diagnostic / test equipment, partly down to cost (return of profit), with Eastern European & Far Eastern manufacturing being so cheap, it simply isn’t worth the time to open your toolbox or turn on the ’scope!

    By the way … if you guys saw the tens of thousands of £££’s worth of stock we throw away DAILY … you’d cry!

    Good luck to you all.
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  • Alberto R:

    Well they are doing nothing, but the companies are mass producing now, and is just easier to producce the whole thing and ship it than to producce repair parts. That’s what I think
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