Thank you for your comment. Actually, the axle broke off and then I did replace it but for quite a while the new lid worked really well consider subscribing. Thanks Joe.
In my town, every household gets 1 trash can and 1 recycling bin. If they break for any reason, including being run over by a garbage truck, you have to shell out $125 for each replacement (and you can only use the bins supplied through the town, not ones that you buy elsewhere, even if they are the same style and size). I imagine that this is the case in a lot of places. Repairing bins instead of replacing them is not only good for the environment, but it can save the owner a lot of money.
Brilliant! Very neat repair. Looks strong enough to take a few more years of abuse from the garbage pickeruppers.
Thank you so much for your comment. Yes I think it’ll understand the abuses for a few years to come.
Funny I was looking to fix a recycling can lid that has plastic rivets and came across this video
I fixed my can similarly
Hey buddy, that’s great to know. Congratulations yes, it’s good to be handy. You can fix these things. Consider subscribing. Thanks Joe.
Nice! Thanks!
Just get a new bin from the council
Thank you for your comment. Actually, the axle broke off and then I did replace it but for quite a while the new lid worked really well consider subscribing. Thanks Joe.
@@JosephHunstad I love a bit of redneck ghetto engineering 😄
In my town, every household gets 1 trash can and 1 recycling bin. If they break for any reason, including being run over by a garbage truck, you have to shell out $125 for each replacement (and you can only use the bins supplied through the town, not ones that you buy elsewhere, even if they are the same style and size). I imagine that this is the case in a lot of places. Repairing bins instead of replacing them is not only good for the environment, but it can save the owner a lot of money.