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I've got a HP calc for sale on you-know-where. Haven't sold one in a long time.
I've had two zero feedback bidders so far, both of which I have canceled because I think they are just scammers trying to up the market price. I know it's to my advantage as a seller, but I don't like it as it ruins it for everyone. And if they are the only bidder they almost certainly won't go through and buy it.
I sell lots of other stuff and never get zero bidders. So is this common when selling HP calcs?
Dave.
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Hi Dave
Why not try the classified here? Cheers! Johnny
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Hi Dave,
Two possibilities I can think of: 1) Some people (like myself) are put off by shipping costs from far away continents (although I seem to be in the minority if I go by what I read on the museum forum). 2) Sometimes several potential bidders wait to snipe in the last few seconds.(I was watching a Nixie tube calculator the other day and it went from 99p to £32 in the last 5 seconds).
It can be very unpredictable. As a previous reply said, put a link to it in the museum classifieds section.
OTOH we all had to start as zero feedbackers I suppose, and calculator collecting, particularly HP, seems to be a growing fad. You are right though that we do live in a world with scammers and caution should be applied.
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Quote:
Hi Dave,
Two possibilities I can think of: 1) Some people (like myself) are put off by shipping costs from far away continents (although I seem to be in the minority if I go by what I read on the museum forum). 2) Sometimes several potential bidders wait to snipe in the last few seconds.(I was watching a Nixie tube calculator the other day and it went from 99p to £32 in the last 5 seconds).
It can be very unpredictable. As a previous reply said, put a link to it in the museum classifieds section.
OTOH we all had to start as zero feedbackers I suppose, and calculator collecting, particularly HP, seems to be a growing fad. You are right though that we do live in a world with scammers and caution should be applied.
I have no concerns about the number of bidders, I know the calculator will sell, I know all about sniping and how the system works. It's just that I found it interesting that I've had two zero feedback bidders on a HP calculator, and never on anything else (and I've sold hundreds of items). Something is definitely suss. But not terribly surprising I guess given all the things I hear about various HP dealers on the auction site.
Dave.
Edited: 9 Apr 2010, 5:23 a.m.
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But not terribly surprising I guess given all the things I hear about various HP dealers on the auction site.
Do you suppose that other HP calc sellers try to keep the prices high with a second (dummy) eBay account?
I think there are some categories of items (e.g., vintage calcs & computers, ...) for which eBay is the easiest way to get one. Perhaps this might be a reason why there are more zero-feedbackers on such items.
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I think there are some categories of items (e.g., vintage calcs & computers, ...) for which eBay is the easiest way to get one. Perhaps this might be a reason why there are more zero-feedbackers on such items.
Yup, that was how I discovered eBay - decided I 'needed' a hp-41 to replace a Casio and remembering the mystique that surrounded hps (very expensive and RPN) when I was a kid at school in the 70s I made my first of many hp calculator purchases (35, 45, 67, 21, 25C, 34C, 41C, CV and CX, 10C, 12C, 15C, 16C, 48S and 48G and 71B). Thinking about it, I would have been quite a bit richer if my original zero-feedback bid had been cancelled!!
Have since found eBay to also be a good source of Innocenti Mini Cooper (Italian built version of the sixties British Mini Cooper) spares.
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Quote:
Do you suppose that other HP calc sellers try to keep the prices high with a second (dummy) eBay account?
That is exactly what I suppose.
Quote:
I think there are some categories of items (e.g., vintage calcs & computers, ...) for which eBay is the easiest way to get one. Perhaps this might be a reason why there are more zero-feedbackers on such items.
Perhaps. But I have contacted these people and they do not reply. Hence they are almost certainly fake accounts.
Dave.
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Hi,
over the last year or so, I also had some bidders
with zero to below-ten feedback points.
I also had slight doubts whether they were serious buyers and would actually pay.
However each of them was a serious buyer so far.
A few years ago, there were some unreliable bidders who did cost me time and nerves.
Then I decided to activate some restrictions for bidders, and actually no fake bidder showed up ever since:-)
Raymond
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I had similar experiences/doubts. But when looking back I conclude that shipping is the biggest problem (especially when you ship worldwide). I had much more shipping related problems than problems with non-paying customers.
People on eBay are just a mirror image of the society; there are good guys and bad guys, but the bad guys are only a minor fraction, as in real life.
But back to DaveJ's suspicion: is it really that easy to have a normal account for selling and a second account to play whatever games you want to play?
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Hi Dave,
Ummmmm, Zero Feedback Bidders.
I seem to remember that I was once a Zero Feed Back Bidder as we all were at one time.
Question: How does a person get feedback if they are never allowed to bid? Chicken and the Egg.
I would suggest you contact them, see if they will give you references, such as web sites they mey have posted at, or even a phone number. When I sell on the HPMuseum web site, I always check the person out who is wanting to purchase what I have offered. I also check their shipping address to see if it matches their name (not always possible I know).
Of couse, the auction site is a different animal. I'd be wary if you only receive Zero Feedback bidders - any HP calculator should also receive some valid bidders with feedback. I miss the days where the bidders weren't hidden and I could check to see what else they had bid on.
Bill
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I did contact the bidders, they did not reply, therefore they are almost certainly fake accounts.
Dave.
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