Drop-bottom bins have one thing solid bins don’t: a moving part. That changes what “condition” means a little, but the used-vs-new math is the same as any other industrial container.
The Cost Case for Used
Used industrial containers typically sell 30–60% below new. Drop-bottom bins follow the same pattern — the steel and fabrication are the main cost driver, so a used bin in good structural and mechanical condition delivers the same functional value for meaningfully less.
Every RDR Drop-Bottom Bin Is Reconditioned
Every drop-bottom bin RDR sells is reconditioned — repaired where needed and fully functional, not cosmetically like-new. Because these bins have a hinge and drop-floor mechanism, reconditioning here means confirming the moving parts work correctly, not just that the frame is solid. See What “Reconditioned” Means for Drop-Bottom Bins at RDR for the specifics.
What to Check Beyond the Frame
On a used drop-bottom bin, the hinge and latch mechanism matters as much as the walls and floor. A structurally sound bin with a worn or damaged hinge won’t function as intended — that’s a mechanical check unique to this bin type, on top of the usual dents, rust, and weld checks that apply to any used steel bin.
When New Makes More Sense
New makes more sense when you need a guaranteed-unused mechanism for a high-cycle application, or an exact custom configuration. For most production and material-handling use, a reconditioned used bin with a verified working mechanism covers the need.
Bottom Line
A reconditioned drop-bottom bin does the same job as new for less, provided the mechanism has been checked, not just the frame. Browse current Drop-Bottom Bins inventory to see what’s available now.
