I turn scrapyard chaos into clean digital systems. Metal into money. Disorder into discipline. Digitizing scrapyards across Europe
I turn scrapyard chaos into clean digital systems. Metal into money. Disorder into discipline. Digitizing scrapyards across Europe

Subscribe to Viktor Torshin

Subscribe to Viktor Torshin
Share Dialog
Share Dialog


<100 subscribers
<100 subscribers
My name is Viktor — and chances are, you never even knew this world existed.
When you're scrolling through car parts online, have you ever thought: "How did this rusty piece of metal end up in front of me?" Let me pull back the curtain.

Over the last 3 years, my team and I have digitized 34 scrapyards across different cities and countries. More than 450,000 parts are now visible and available online. Out of pure chaos — dust, oil, and metal — came structure, vision, and goals.

And no — this world isn’t only about Excel sheets. It’s not about clean offices and strawberry smoothies. Here, nerves turn to steel, and grit is the currency.

I changed how scrapyard owners think — their goals, their values. I created 3 new professions, built entire processes from scratch, and turned dirty backlots into structured businesses.
I know this raw industry inside out. Started back in 2012 with nothing but a screwdriver — tearing down cars just to get by. Now I build systems that bring order to madness. Scrapyards become streamlined, digital operations that actually make money.
This isn’t about offices. It’s about underground logic and cold precision. It’s about the architecture of chaos.
And yes — I’m ready to scale this big.
My goal? To make it so any person, anywhere, anytime, can find exactly what broke in their car. Behind that is my experience, my tools, and my method. I want to reshape the industry — make parts more accessible, create jobs, and launch new scrapyards that run like machines.
I'm using Mirror to tell this story in the open. To connect with those who see value in real work, in order, and in systems that work.
If this resonates with you — support it.👉 Hit Collect to grab the NFT version of this post👉 Or send a Tip to help push this vision forward
Thanks for reading. The best is yet to come.
My name is Viktor — and chances are, you never even knew this world existed.
When you're scrolling through car parts online, have you ever thought: "How did this rusty piece of metal end up in front of me?" Let me pull back the curtain.

Over the last 3 years, my team and I have digitized 34 scrapyards across different cities and countries. More than 450,000 parts are now visible and available online. Out of pure chaos — dust, oil, and metal — came structure, vision, and goals.

And no — this world isn’t only about Excel sheets. It’s not about clean offices and strawberry smoothies. Here, nerves turn to steel, and grit is the currency.

I changed how scrapyard owners think — their goals, their values. I created 3 new professions, built entire processes from scratch, and turned dirty backlots into structured businesses.
I know this raw industry inside out. Started back in 2012 with nothing but a screwdriver — tearing down cars just to get by. Now I build systems that bring order to madness. Scrapyards become streamlined, digital operations that actually make money.
This isn’t about offices. It’s about underground logic and cold precision. It’s about the architecture of chaos.
And yes — I’m ready to scale this big.
My goal? To make it so any person, anywhere, anytime, can find exactly what broke in their car. Behind that is my experience, my tools, and my method. I want to reshape the industry — make parts more accessible, create jobs, and launch new scrapyards that run like machines.
I'm using Mirror to tell this story in the open. To connect with those who see value in real work, in order, and in systems that work.
If this resonates with you — support it.👉 Hit Collect to grab the NFT version of this post👉 Or send a Tip to help push this vision forward
Thanks for reading. The best is yet to come.
No activity yet