CHUMLEE: Hey, how you doing? All right. What exactly do you have here? It's a antique gas iron. You put gas in here
and it forces it down. You light it, and
then it heats up. Well, let me grab a loaf
of bread and the cheese. Let's bust out some sandwiches. You've never made a grilled
cheese with an iron? No, I haven't. Dude, that's my hotel special. SCOTT: I'm bringing in
a self-heating gas iron. It was kind of a gap
between a sad iron that you used on a stove
and the electric iron that we use today. I'm hoping to get
$100 for the iron today because I
want to buy a couple of gifts for my daughters. CHUMLEE: This iron's
pretty cool, you know. It doesn't look like
much, but it actually changed the way we iron. So what would happen
is this would heat up, and it would hold a
constant temperature, and you'd be able to iron
clothes nonstop until you had to fill this back up with gas,
compared to the old method of setting the
iron on the stove, giving it a few minutes to
heat up, ironing what you can until it cools down,
setting it back on the stove for a couple of minutes. And, you know, it may
take 10 or 15 minutes to iron a shirt that way. Even though this
doesn't look like it, this was pretty revolutionary. SCOTT: All right. CHUMLEE: It's pretty
cool to see an iron from the turn of the century. I guess even back
then people wanted to have wrinkle-free swag. Luckily for me
though, sweatpants don't need to be ironed. So what did you
want to do with it? I want to sell it. OK, and how much are
you looking to get for it? $100 It's cool, but I mean,
it's just a gas iron. You know, it looks cool, and
that's really all it is is it looks cool. You know, someone's
going to buy this to decorate in their house. SCOTT: Well, it's good for
a doorstop too, though. If I spend $100 on a
doorstop, I want diamonds on it. I'll give you $30 for it, man. $30? How about $80? Oh, I just-- yeah, I don't see
$80 in it, man. $35 is the most I can do. $35? Oh man. Oh. How about $36? We can go $34. Jeez. OK, $35. We've got a deal. All right. Grab your iron and
come up here with me. We'll write up the paperwork. All right. Well, with the $35
I can't quite buy what I'd like for my daughters,
but now I can get my daughters a couple of dolls, anyway. Check out this iron I bought. The dude said it's
a gasoline iron. RICK: Gasoline iron? Does it got a motor in it? I don't know what he--
how he said it works. COREY: Did he have
magic beans too? RICK: It's probably kerosene. Gasoline would be bad. It's explosive. I mean, imagine being
trapped on a desert island. If you were deserted,
that would come in handy. You can iron your clothes and
make a grilled-cheese sandwich with it. RICK: That's what you would
bring to a desert island? I'd get a small boat
with, like, a cable hookup and watch TV out there all day. No one would bother me. I'd bring a GPS and
a satellite phone. What would you bring? I would bring a
multitool and duct tape. I could survive with that. And what would you
do with this duct tape? Would you make duct-tape shoes? Well, he'd probably
use it to block the sun from burning his head. COREY: Duct-tape hats. I dove into the water
with some duct tape and I caught me a fish. RICK: Never mind. Never mind.