![]() |
|
ebay boats not selling
In article , Bruce71
@gmail.com says... I am Tosk wrote: In , Bruce71 @gmail.com says... Harry wrote: Tim wrote: Usually the winter time is when to find the bargains, and I always like looking at ebay for boats, and I see some delicious craft that should move and they're not even geting a bid. OR they have reserves and starting bids so jacked up no one is interested. Looks like some people are wanting to get out of them for what they either have left on the loan, or they feel because it is apraised at $15,000, it ought to sell for $15,000. What ever happened to the $10.00 opening bids with a fair reserve? Regardless, it looks like people are stuck with what they have. It's possible that some sellers would rather keep their boat or whatever than to sell it to some opportunistic shark. I haven't shopped ebay in a long time. Last time I looked, it seemed full of sellers who used their other accounts or the accounts of their friends to sell merchandise. How would you know that? Bruce He said "it seems"... I assume that means it is his opinion.. Either way, it happens. Several years ago right here we had a guy who was spamming us with his "boat stickers". I started watching his bidding site on ebay and found that every item seemed to sell to similar sellers for almost the exact same price. I went to his profile and found about 5 different "feedback" phrases repeated over and over again in a pattern.. I called it to the attention of EBay and they pulled him down. It was pretty obvious he was bidding his own stuff up to keep the prices fixed and when he didn't get his bid he simply bought it himself and put in his own feedback.. Either way, I assume they (ebay) saw it they way I did as they pulled him down a day or so later, and he dissappeared... He would have paid the final value % to eBay. How can that be profitable? Bruce I would imagine he sold a pretty good amount of stickers, he spammed a lot of groups and his prices were eventually about the same as everybody else s. Iirc, the prices were from 10-30 bucks or so for most of his stuff so the percentages were probably absorbed by the legit sales he had beefed up with his own bids. I openly accused him here and at E-Bay, he never defended himself, he just dissappeared... Like I said, if you had seen the spam and the feedback, you would probably come to the same conclusion I did. Scotty |
ebay boats not selling
I am Tosk wrote:
In article , Bruce71 @gmail.com says... I am Tosk wrote: In , Bruce71 @gmail.com says... Harry wrote: Tim wrote: Usually the winter time is when to find the bargains, and I always like looking at ebay for boats, and I see some delicious craft that should move and they're not even geting a bid. OR they have reserves and starting bids so jacked up no one is interested. Looks like some people are wanting to get out of them for what they either have left on the loan, or they feel because it is apraised at $15,000, it ought to sell for $15,000. What ever happened to the $10.00 opening bids with a fair reserve? Regardless, it looks like people are stuck with what they have. It's possible that some sellers would rather keep their boat or whatever than to sell it to some opportunistic shark. I haven't shopped ebay in a long time. Last time I looked, it seemed full of sellers who used their other accounts or the accounts of their friends to sell merchandise. How would you know that? Bruce He said "it seems"... I assume that means it is his opinion.. Either way, it happens. Several years ago right here we had a guy who was spamming us with his "boat stickers". I started watching his bidding site on ebay and found that every item seemed to sell to similar sellers for almost the exact same price. I went to his profile and found about 5 different "feedback" phrases repeated over and over again in a pattern.. I called it to the attention of EBay and they pulled him down. It was pretty obvious he was bidding his own stuff up to keep the prices fixed and when he didn't get his bid he simply bought it himself and put in his own feedback.. Either way, I assume they (ebay) saw it they way I did as they pulled him down a day or so later, and he dissappeared... He would have paid the final value % to eBay. How can that be profitable? Bruce I would imagine he sold a pretty good amount of stickers, he spammed a lot of groups and his prices were eventually about the same as everybody else s. Iirc, the prices were from 10-30 bucks or so for most of his stuff so the percentages were probably absorbed by the legit sales he had beefed up with his own bids. I openly accused him here and at E-Bay, he never defended himself, he just dissappeared... Like I said, if you had seen the spam and the feedback, you would probably come to the same conclusion I did. Scotty I did pretty well on another auction site. After 13 years, the crystal broke on my trust black luminox diver's watch. A proper repair was going to run more than $75, so I shopped around for a new luminox, but a different style. A number were up for "auction" on ebay, and several were there for "buy now." Those prices were at the minimum $100 more than I ended up paying at a legitimate auction site. I did watch one auction on ebay...with the new "secret bidder" process it is hard to tell what is happening, but it sure looked as if the seller was bidding up his own prices. |
ebay boats not selling
In article , naled24511
@mypacks.net says... I am Tosk wrote: In article , Bruce71 @gmail.com says... I am Tosk wrote: In , Bruce71 @gmail.com says... Harry wrote: Tim wrote: Usually the winter time is when to find the bargains, and I always like looking at ebay for boats, and I see some delicious craft that should move and they're not even geting a bid. OR they have reserves and starting bids so jacked up no one is interested. Looks like some people are wanting to get out of them for what they either have left on the loan, or they feel because it is apraised at $15,000, it ought to sell for $15,000. What ever happened to the $10.00 opening bids with a fair reserve? Regardless, it looks like people are stuck with what they have. It's possible that some sellers would rather keep their boat or whatever than to sell it to some opportunistic shark. I haven't shopped ebay in a long time. Last time I looked, it seemed full of sellers who used their other accounts or the accounts of their friends to sell merchandise. How would you know that? Bruce He said "it seems"... I assume that means it is his opinion.. Either way, it happens. Several years ago right here we had a guy who was spamming us with his "boat stickers". I started watching his bidding site on ebay and found that every item seemed to sell to similar sellers for almost the exact same price. I went to his profile and found about 5 different "feedback" phrases repeated over and over again in a pattern.. I called it to the attention of EBay and they pulled him down. It was pretty obvious he was bidding his own stuff up to keep the prices fixed and when he didn't get his bid he simply bought it himself and put in his own feedback.. Either way, I assume they (ebay) saw it they way I did as they pulled him down a day or so later, and he dissappeared... He would have paid the final value % to eBay. How can that be profitable? Bruce I would imagine he sold a pretty good amount of stickers, he spammed a lot of groups and his prices were eventually about the same as everybody else s. Iirc, the prices were from 10-30 bucks or so for most of his stuff so the percentages were probably absorbed by the legit sales he had beefed up with his own bids. I openly accused him here and at E-Bay, he never defended himself, he just dissappeared... Like I said, if you had seen the spam and the feedback, you would probably come to the same conclusion I did. Scotty I did pretty well on another auction site. After 13 years, the crystal broke on my trust black luminox diver's watch. A proper repair was going to run more than $75, so I shopped around for a new luminox, but a different style. We all saw the picture of your fat nail chewed hand and your cheap ass Casio watch. |
ebay boats not selling
On Fri, 08 Jan 2010 12:42:15 -0500, NotNow wrote:
We all saw the picture of your fat nail chewed hand and your cheap ass Casio watch. Oh! yur such a bully. I bet that gets yu al wurm + fu-fu-fu-fu fuzzy inside |
ebay boats not selling
NotNow wrote:
In article , naled24511 @mypacks.net says... I am Tosk wrote: In article , Bruce71 @gmail.com says... I am Tosk wrote: In , Bruce71 @gmail.com says... Harry wrote: Tim wrote: Usually the winter time is when to find the bargains, and I always like looking at ebay for boats, and I see some delicious craft that should move and they're not even geting a bid. OR they have reserves and starting bids so jacked up no one is interested. Looks like some people are wanting to get out of them for what they either have left on the loan, or they feel because it is apraised at $15,000, it ought to sell for $15,000. What ever happened to the $10.00 opening bids with a fair reserve? Regardless, it looks like people are stuck with what they have. It's possible that some sellers would rather keep their boat or whatever than to sell it to some opportunistic shark. I haven't shopped ebay in a long time. Last time I looked, it seemed full of sellers who used their other accounts or the accounts of their friends to sell merchandise. How would you know that? Bruce He said "it seems"... I assume that means it is his opinion.. Either way, it happens. Several years ago right here we had a guy who was spamming us with his "boat stickers". I started watching his bidding site on ebay and found that every item seemed to sell to similar sellers for almost the exact same price. I went to his profile and found about 5 different "feedback" phrases repeated over and over again in a pattern.. I called it to the attention of EBay and they pulled him down. It was pretty obvious he was bidding his own stuff up to keep the prices fixed and when he didn't get his bid he simply bought it himself and put in his own feedback.. Either way, I assume they (ebay) saw it they way I did as they pulled him down a day or so later, and he dissappeared... He would have paid the final value % to eBay. How can that be profitable? Bruce I would imagine he sold a pretty good amount of stickers, he spammed a lot of groups and his prices were eventually about the same as everybody else s. Iirc, the prices were from 10-30 bucks or so for most of his stuff so the percentages were probably absorbed by the legit sales he had beefed up with his own bids. I openly accused him here and at E-Bay, he never defended himself, he just dissappeared... Like I said, if you had seen the spam and the feedback, you would probably come to the same conclusion I did. Scotty I did pretty well on another auction site. After 13 years, the crystal broke on my trust black luminox diver's watch. A proper repair was going to run more than $75, so I shopped around for a new luminox, but a different style. We all saw the picture of your fat nail chewed hand and your cheap ass Casio watch. Well it's not a Rolex but it is a nice watch. My nail chewing is a nervous habit. Let me see a picture of your hands, bub. |
ebay boats not selling
Harry wrote:
NotNow wrote: In article , naled24511 @mypacks.net says... I am Tosk wrote: In article , Bruce71 @gmail.com says... I am Tosk wrote: In , Bruce71 @gmail.com says... Harry wrote: Tim wrote: Usually the winter time is when to find the bargains, and I always like looking at ebay for boats, and I see some delicious craft that should move and they're not even geting a bid. OR they have reserves and starting bids so jacked up no one is interested. Looks like some people are wanting to get out of them for what they either have left on the loan, or they feel because it is apraised at $15,000, it ought to sell for $15,000. What ever happened to the $10.00 opening bids with a fair reserve? Regardless, it looks like people are stuck with what they have. It's possible that some sellers would rather keep their boat or whatever than to sell it to some opportunistic shark. I haven't shopped ebay in a long time. Last time I looked, it seemed full of sellers who used their other accounts or the accounts of their friends to sell merchandise. How would you know that? Bruce He said "it seems"... I assume that means it is his opinion.. Either way, it happens. Several years ago right here we had a guy who was spamming us with his "boat stickers". I started watching his bidding site on ebay and found that every item seemed to sell to similar sellers for almost the exact same price. I went to his profile and found about 5 different "feedback" phrases repeated over and over again in a pattern.. I called it to the attention of EBay and they pulled him down. It was pretty obvious he was bidding his own stuff up to keep the prices fixed and when he didn't get his bid he simply bought it himself and put in his own feedback.. Either way, I assume they (ebay) saw it they way I did as they pulled him down a day or so later, and he dissappeared... He would have paid the final value % to eBay. How can that be profitable? Bruce I would imagine he sold a pretty good amount of stickers, he spammed a lot of groups and his prices were eventually about the same as everybody else s. Iirc, the prices were from 10-30 bucks or so for most of his stuff so the percentages were probably absorbed by the legit sales he had beefed up with his own bids. I openly accused him here and at E-Bay, he never defended himself, he just dissappeared... Like I said, if you had seen the spam and the feedback, you would probably come to the same conclusion I did. Scotty I did pretty well on another auction site. After 13 years, the crystal broke on my trust black luminox diver's watch. A proper repair was going to run more than $75, so I shopped around for a new luminox, but a different style. We all saw the picture of your fat nail chewed hand and your cheap ass Casio watch. Well it's not a Rolex but it is a nice watch. My nail chewing is a nervous habit. Let me see a picture of your hands, bub. You told me it was from sexual tension. |
ebay boats not selling
Don White wrote:
Harry wrote: NotNow wrote: In article , naled24511 @mypacks.net says... I am Tosk wrote: In article , Bruce71 @gmail.com says... I am Tosk wrote: In , Bruce71 @gmail.com says... Harry wrote: Tim wrote: Usually the winter time is when to find the bargains, and I always like looking at ebay for boats, and I see some delicious craft that should move and they're not even geting a bid. OR they have reserves and starting bids so jacked up no one is interested. Looks like some people are wanting to get out of them for what they either have left on the loan, or they feel because it is apraised at $15,000, it ought to sell for $15,000. What ever happened to the $10.00 opening bids with a fair reserve? Regardless, it looks like people are stuck with what they have. It's possible that some sellers would rather keep their boat or whatever than to sell it to some opportunistic shark. I haven't shopped ebay in a long time. Last time I looked, it seemed full of sellers who used their other accounts or the accounts of their friends to sell merchandise. How would you know that? Bruce He said "it seems"... I assume that means it is his opinion.. Either way, it happens. Several years ago right here we had a guy who was spamming us with his "boat stickers". I started watching his bidding site on ebay and found that every item seemed to sell to similar sellers for almost the exact same price. I went to his profile and found about 5 different "feedback" phrases repeated over and over again in a pattern.. I called it to the attention of EBay and they pulled him down. It was pretty obvious he was bidding his own stuff up to keep the prices fixed and when he didn't get his bid he simply bought it himself and put in his own feedback.. Either way, I assume they (ebay) saw it they way I did as they pulled him down a day or so later, and he dissappeared... He would have paid the final value % to eBay. How can that be profitable? Bruce I would imagine he sold a pretty good amount of stickers, he spammed a lot of groups and his prices were eventually about the same as everybody else s. Iirc, the prices were from 10-30 bucks or so for most of his stuff so the percentages were probably absorbed by the legit sales he had beefed up with his own bids. I openly accused him here and at E-Bay, he never defended himself, he just dissappeared... Like I said, if you had seen the spam and the feedback, you would probably come to the same conclusion I did. Scotty I did pretty well on another auction site. After 13 years, the crystal broke on my trust black luminox diver's watch. A proper repair was going to run more than $75, so I shopped around for a new luminox, but a different style. We all saw the picture of your fat nail chewed hand and your cheap ass Casio watch. Well it's not a Rolex but it is a nice watch. My nail chewing is a nervous habit. Let me see a picture of your hands, bub. You told me it was from sexual tension. Nerves... Tension... What's the difference. |
ebay boats not selling
cupcake wrote:
On Fri, 08 Jan 2010 12:42:15 -0500, NotNow wrote: We all saw the picture of your fat nail chewed hand and your cheap ass Casio watch. Oh! yur such a bully. I bet that gets yu al wurm + fu-fu-fu-fu fuzzy inside Hmmm. I don't own a casio watch. Nothing wrong with them. I have a luminox, quite elderly, a rolex, even older, a seiko, about 18 years old, and a new luminox, when it arrives. |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 11:08 AM. |
|
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 BoatBanter.com