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URL to <$275 shredder that eats CC offer envelopes unopened?
jdsweet | Jan 26 2006
I've had a 6-page shredder for a while now; used mostly to deal with unwanted mail. My problem is that, while I find it pretty easy to identify junk mail without opening the envelope, my consumer-grade shredder demands that I open basically *all* mail and prep it by flattening out the tri-folded pages. Based on rough estimates, this open & unfold step accounts for ~70% of the time I spend on handling my mail at home. I'm prepared to open & prep those hideously annoying offers that actually contain a fake plastic credit card, but for the rest, here's the math: The outer envelope is 2 pages. Thus, the smallest mail I get has a thickness of 5 pages. The thickest mail I get in any volume is credit card offers, which breaks down as follows: 2 - outer envelope That is *right* at the upper limit of most cross-cutting shredders in the "prosumer" price range, which tend to top out at with an uncomfortable thin margin of 17 pages. Basically, I'm wondering if anyone can recommend a cross-cutting shredder that'll handle 21-25 page thickness for less than $300. 11 Comments
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One thing I'm realizing now...Submitted by jdsweet on January 27, 2006 - 9:59am.
One thing I'm realizing now that I'm seeing the first few replies that perhaps I should have considered before -- though it helps to have the confidence of answers from an audience such as this who are experts on all things personal-productivity... It seems that indeed the state-of-the-art of cross-cutters is right at that uncomfortable margin, whereas the strip-cut shredders have exactly the kind of spare capacity I'm looking for. I'm being too paranoid to insist on cross-cut shredding, I'm just looking to avoid stuff taken from the street. So if I just invest 30-seconds per recycling bag to sorta mix around all the strips, I'll add back in enough entropy to the collection of strips that it won't be worth anyone's while. So that partial solution still substantially solves the same security problem, yet, at about a bag per month, reclaims all but 30-seconds of the effort I'd been looking to eliminate. When someone *does* find a prosumer 24-sheet cross-cut shredder though, I am definitely still interested! » POSTED IN:
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