Results 11 to 13 of 13
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11-26-2011, 10:41 PM #11
I still feel it when I loose an auction.
That said, I only bid on stuff I really want, and when I do, I put in my maximum amount right away.
That way, should I loose it, the conclusion is simple, some other person wanted it more than I.
JimmyHad said it well, there will always be other objects of interest to focus onBjoernar
Um, all of them, any of them that have been in front of me over all these years....
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11-26-2011, 11:11 PM #12
I'm finding fewer and few items on eBay that you can even guess at what their quality will be few you win the bid and receive them. Seller when asked about condition will ~75% of the time say 'oh I just looked closer at that and yes there was a very fine crack' . Or what ever. I alway ask now before I bid about condition . It's making the eBay less interesting by the month.
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11-26-2011, 11:46 PM #13
- Join Date
- Feb 2011
- Location
- Austin, Texas
- Posts
- 280
Thanked: 39It's not the bidding that I find ridiculous. Like others have said, if you really want it, just be sure you bid high enough. This means be ready to bid the cost of a new Dovo, Revisor, etc.
What I hate is that more and more sellers are posting razors, some of which could be restored to great condition, but starting the bid at well over $100 for a plain design rusty Torrey or something like that. Or $200 for an okay W&B that needs lots of work. There are lots of these guys acting like the crusty broken razor they found is a lottery ticket.
The sad thing is that a potentially good razor will never get used / restored, and a dumb seller will receive $0 for an item that he keeps posting, just because he's too greedy.
A seller should always keep in mind that new, quality razors start at about $80, ready to shave, and from a reputable dealer. If they honestly think that their beat up Robeson with a quarter inch chip out of the end of the blade is honestly worth more than a brand new razor, they need to look up the value, and learn some effective business practices. You wouldn't pay $20 for a moldy loaf of bread, why would you pay $100 for a broken razor.
And don't get me started on the "buy it now" guys. I don't even look at those anymore. $200 for a Shumate, plain design and not restored. It's absolute stupidity. And there are so many of them.
Anyway, it's their loss. They're stuck with a razor they don't want or that they're too lazy to learn how to use, and they'll never have even one cent of the $25 that the razor is really worth. I'll wait for a better deal or save up for a new Revisor.