I’m
an avid garage sale shopper. Most of my furniture was bought used, and I’ve
saved more than 50 percent off the cost of some pieces. But a few things I
would never buy used – especially if they put my health or safety at
risk.
I don’t think getting sick or injured is
worth saving a few bucks on something – and Money Talks News founder Stacy
Johnson doesn’t either. He mentions ten things you should never buy used.
Check it out...
The cribs’ drop sides can malfunction, detach or otherwise
fail, causing part of the drop side to fall out of position, creating a space
into which an infant or toddler can roll and become wedged or entrapped, which
can lead to strangulation or suffocation. A child can also fall out of the
crib. Drop-side incidents can also occur due to incorrect assembly and with
age-related wear and tear.
So how do you know if that crib you’re eyeing on Craigslist hasn’t been recalled? You could check the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission’s list of crib recalls, but you don’t know if the crib was sent back for repairs or not. You’d just have to take the seller’s word for it. It’s better to play it safe and buy a new crib.
2. Car seats
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration says car
seats can be safely reused after minor crashes – if the air bags didn’t deploy,
no one was injured, and the car drove away. But it recommends car seats be
replaced after moderate crashes.
So how do you tell the difference between a car seat in a
minor crash, one in a moderate crash, or one that wasn’t in a crash at all? You
probably can’t. The damage could be internal and not visible. Don’t risk it.
Buy a new one.
3. Helmets
In a crash, the thick foam inside a helmet absorbs shock and
protects your head. After a crash, the helmet may look fine, but it often has
breaks or tears inside the foam. The American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons
recommends replacing a helmet after any crash – even a minor one. Otherwise,
the helmet might not protect you in the next crash.
4. Laptops
If you take great care of a laptop, it can last through years
of heavy use – but you can’t know how someone else treats their stuff. Maybe
they dropped it or spilled coffee on it. The laptop could work great at first,
but break down after you take it home.
I just paid $119.99 to replace the hard drive in my laptop –
and it was working great until it wasn’t. Had I sold the laptop to someone
else, they wouldn’t have known about the failing hard drive.
5. Video cameras
The same goes for video cameras. You may not see any visible
damage, but it could have been dropped, exposed to water, or otherwise
mistreated. Video cameras are costly to repair, so it isn’t worth buying one
used.
6. Mattresses
A used mattress can come with a lot of extras you don’t want
– dead skin cells, bacteria, hair, and every other gross thing you could
imagine. It might also have bed bugs. The bugs are such a growing problem that
Terminix has released a Top 15 Cities for Bed Bug Infestation list.
Bed bugs live off human blood, leave itchy bite marks, and
can cause skin infections. And they multiply. According to Orkin:
Bring a bed bug-infested mattress into your house, and
you’ll pay a hefty fee to an exterminator.
7. Shoes
I believe you need a good mattress and a good pair of shoes
– since you’re usually in one or the other. The problem is, those used shoes
may have been great for the original owner, but they’ve conformed to his or her
feet. They might not be great for you. Used shoes that don’t fit just right can
lead to feet or leg pain and back problems.
8. Makeup
I see makeup at almost every garage sale I go to, but I’d
never buy any. Cosmetic brushes and wands come into contact with skin and can’t
be cleaned very well. That barely used tube of lipstick? It might be hosting
illness-causing bacteria. Considering drug stores and beauty shops regularly
run makeup sales, risking your health isn’t worth the savings.
9. Plasma and HDTVs
Old tube-style TVs held up a lot better than modern
flat-screens. While MSNBC says TVs cost an average of $500 to repair, the
repair costs run much higher for plasma screens and for more complicated
issues.
10. Hats
The inside of that hat could be brimming with someone else’s
dead skin, hair, or worse – lice. Head lice feed on blood and cause itchy and
painful reactions in the scalp. The nearly invisible bugs also travel quickly
onto other people and your stuff.
Getting rid of lice requires two treatments of pesticides on
everyone in the household. Then you’ll have to clean your bedding, linens,
clothes, mattresses, and any other soft fabric in the house. The treatment can
take hours or days of hard work – all because you bought a cheap hat.
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