Anybody else notice that bidding on ebay seems to be way down. Hardly any bids at all on the first 150 items I checked with a priced highest first search.
Anybody else notice that bidding on ebay seems to be way down. Hardly any bids at all on the first 150 items I checked with a priced highest first search.
And now for today's weather....sunny, with a chance of legs
"Give me six hours to chop down a tree and I will spend the first four sharpening the axe." - Abraham Lincoln
I don't frequent ebay enough to notice any pattern, but I know I haven't had any inquiries about my cafe classified ad.
Scott
And the Dow's down about 1000 points -- horns are being pulled in all over America (and strings too, pun intended).
We may be going through a bout of decreased consumption. When all the economic news is bad, I personally feel sorta like holding on to my money.
Allen Hopkins
Gibsn: '54 F5 3pt F2 A-N Custm K1 m'cello
Natl Triolian Dobro mando
Victoria b-back Merrill alumnm b-back
H-O mandolinetto
Stradolin Vega banjolin
Sobell'dola Washburn b-back'dola
Eastmn: 615'dola 805 m'cello
Flatiron 3K OM
Not a good time for selling right now There's nobody buying. I'm putting instruments in cases and holding on to them for the time being... although I did buy an Ovation MM68 and a Flatiron Bouzouki 3MC (pre Gibson) yesterday.
That's cuz all the bidding happens in the last 30 seconds! I've missed two guitars that way in the last week. The last one I missed, a guy jumps in literally in the last 30 seconds and drives the price up by $600. The crazy part.....for about $150 more he coulda bought a brand new one!!
Shaun Garrity
http://www.youtube.com/user/spgokc78
eBay is revamping many of their long time policies to try to counter poor sales. Sellers are taking the brunt of this experiment, but eBay feels it has to try to do something to survive. I believe that many sellers are throwing in the towel.
Last edited by lovethemf5s; Sep-18-2008 at 8:25pm.
'03 Collings MF5
I hate that bidding in the last 30 seconds thing. I sold a guitar amp last year that got something like 12 bids all in the last minute. I was watching the listing at the time and I would constantly press reload and the bid was up every time.
Personally, I don't trust selling anything that's worth anything to me on there anymore. I'd rather just sell on craigslist or some other way locally.
It occurred to me a while back that eBay could get around this kind of bad bidding behavior by doing like flesh and blood auctions do - keep the bidding going until they stop. Maybe add 15 minutes to the auction every time a bid gets in during the last half hour or so. Something like that would help cut down on the last minute low ball bids and kept it going for us honest folks.
That is funny... I noticed that bidding seems to be up but only on the items I want to bid on.
I know that the sniping seems not fair but I am not sure that the advantage of sniping is in the bidder's favor. In order to win, you still have to have to bid the highest price over and above the other bidders, regardless of when you do it.
If you really want to win you have to bid that max bid. It is interesting tho to see people inch up on the high bidder by small amounts until they surpass him/her before the auction is over. So then they know what the previously high bidder was bidding. In the meantime there are all these snipers waiting in the wings or, more likely, setting their sniping software to bid their best shot in the last few seconds.
You are right, tho: it would be fairer to increase the ending a few minutes until the bidding stops, but I think that that would be to the advantage of the seller, certainly not the bidder. I think the experience ebayers among us know the rules and know how to play them to win.
Frankly, I have gotten few real bargains on eBay, more likely pay the going rate or step aside and let someone who is willing to do so, win.
Jim
My Stream on Soundcloud
Playing lately:
Brentrup A4C -- 1915 Frank Merwin Ashley violin -- 1904 Embergher Type 3 -- 1937 Gibson L-Century -- 1939 Gibson L-00 -- ca. 1890s Celebrated Benary Banjo -- 1985 Monteleone Grand Artist Mandola
Sniping on ebay is a two-edged sword. I have used it successfully and also been nailed at the last minute on some things I thought I had in the bag. While it hasn't happened to me, it seems possible that one could get burned sniping, if a few bidders put in sand bag snipes and wind up jacking up the bidding beyond what they would otherwise like at the end.
I haven't bought a mandolin on the ebay in quite some time, though I have slept or worked through a few interesting bargains that I forgot to set up a snipe for. But these were way under the radar items. It seems as if most quality instruments are well noted and bid up into a fair market range.
It is hard to imagine that the harder economic times wouldn't take its toll. Some folks still have deeper pockets than me. I do have my short wish-list that I am patiently waiting out. I do wish I had Allen's good sense/good luck on snaring such great finds.
Mick
I have noticed that prices seem down as well. Could just be that the students are back to school or some such. Could be the economy, dunno.
Last week I bought a 2007 Gypsy's Music 10-string mandolin in good condition. I bid $300, expecting to get outbid ... then one day passes, two, three, four ... and no one else bid on it.
Can't wait til it gets here.
=brian
many folks are reluctant to use ebay now since the rule changes. i for one have stopped even looking at ebay.
so many mandolins, so little time.
Jim
My Stream on Soundcloud
Playing lately:
Brentrup A4C -- 1915 Frank Merwin Ashley violin -- 1904 Embergher Type 3 -- 1937 Gibson L-Century -- 1939 Gibson L-00 -- ca. 1890s Celebrated Benary Banjo -- 1985 Monteleone Grand Artist Mandola
"The crazy part.....for about $150 more he coulda bought a brand new one!!"
I once sold a guitar on ebay for $100 more than I paid for it new. I don't remember if it was sniped or not. Truth is, aside from the occasional one-of-a-kind item that turns up, most things on ebay can be bought cheaper and with less hassle from traditional sources.
Well, I've missed my share too. There was a liuto cantabile (10-string bowl-back mandocello-type instrument) a few months ago that I would have loved, but...
I've only bought a couple mandolins on eBay: a Merrill aluminum-bodied bowl-back (c. 1897, from the Aluminum Musical Instrument Co.), and a Howe-Orme mandolinetto, which was advertised as "wall hanger only" due to a neck-body joint failure, but responded well to restoration and is eminently playable. (I'll be taking it out tonight to do a 19th-century historical gig.) I've also picked up a Mexican-made Weissenborn Hawaiian guitar copy, a Guitaro (Oscar Schmidt's guitar-shaped mutant Autoharp), a Johnson resonator ukulele, a Johnson repro tricone guitar (since traded on a National Havana), and, weirdest of all, a Polk-A-Le-Le, the four-foot-long ukulele with the serpentine neck.
EBay to me is a source for things you can't get elsewhere. Any time I can, I "buy locally" from one of the excellent instrument dealers here in Rochester NY, such as John Bernunzio and Dave Stutzman. But I do check eBay fairly frequently; I'm looking for a bowl-back mandocello, and they're rare, so eBay's probably my best bet.
As to dealing with sniping: I usually just decide what I'm willing to pay, and put in a bid for that amount. If someone snipes me and gets it for more, well, that's OK: I wasn't willing to pay that price anyway. I try not to get involved in the "excitement of the chase" so that I'm carried away and pay more than it's worth to me. After 40+ years of buying instruments, I have a fairly decent perspective on what things are worth -- to me, anyway.
Allen Hopkins
Gibsn: '54 F5 3pt F2 A-N Custm K1 m'cello
Natl Triolian Dobro mando
Victoria b-back Merrill alumnm b-back
H-O mandolinetto
Stradolin Vega banjolin
Sobell'dola Washburn b-back'dola
Eastmn: 615'dola 805 m'cello
Flatiron 3K OM
This is a good time to shop, if you have some extra cash. I've found some otherwise expensive items that I got, after some reasonably intense last-second competition, at prices that were still well into the wholesale range. Of course, I've missed a few as well.
Ebay seems to be a good venue for two types of product: something inherently common, which can be had very cheaply, as everyone is trying to unload the item, and items of some rarity, for which you need to seek worldwide attention because of the high price and low demand. This class of product is taking a hit from the economic difficulties, and bargains can be had. Of course, the worry is that the market will continue to fall, and the item I picked up below wholesale might still be far from the bottom of its new market price.
They have stopped Sellers from giving negative feedback to buyers for one. I got stiffed on 2 instruments and I put in an "Unpaid Dispute". They were supposed to give the non-buyer an "Unpaid Strike" but they never did.
A few weeks ago I got a "second offer" n a bouzouki....seems they guy who won it didn't pay up and his reason was...."The guy who was going to buy it from him changed his mind". I'm sure that's an excellent reason - btw that person didn't get an "Unpaid Strike" either.
Also be aware that Paypal will get any buyer their money back for apparently any reason.
It's tough being a Seller on Ebay. There's no binding in the "contract to buy".
Notorious: My Celtic CD--listen & buy!
The Priest and the Publicans: Gospel bluegrass out of the box.
Emando.com: More than you wanted to know.
Donaldson • Rigel • Thormahlen • Andersen • Old Wave • Bacorn • Yanuziello • Fender • National • Gibson • Roberts • Franke • Fuchs • Aceto • Three Hungry Pit Bulls
Apparently the Federal Reserve are going to ensure that all potential mandolin buyers have all of their debt paid off, so that they can satisfy their MAS whilst boosting the US economy. It's just a temporary nationalisation of the mandolin market until free market conditions apply again, and please nobody mention Marx.
I was thinking about picking up those two loars at Elderly and then selling my debt to the highest bidder.
I happily scored a 000 guitar earlier this week on a "buy-it-now or best offer". There had been one other offer that must have been too low as the seller neqotiated a price that we both were happy with. I suppose if more buying action was going on, I might not have had my offer accepted, not sure.
Cabin Fever String Band, National Pike Pickers
I want to buy a Loar as a shortsell. When everyone hears that Eddie has a Loar they will offload theirs and the market price will drop so much that I will make a few thousand and never have to even own one - who wants a stinking Loar when even Eddie has one....
Gibson will then go bankrupt and be bought out by Weber.
Last edited by Eddie Sheehy; Sep-19-2008 at 11:17pm.
I just lost out on an octave mandolin on eBay because someone was using that ###### auction "sniper" software.
It's almost impossible to win an auction legitimately with people using that ####.
I was watching the clock and with 2 seconds to go I was wining, then as soon as it ended it told me I had been outbid. The funny thing is my proxy was way higher than what the price I was wining it for was, and it never incremented. Within one second, the program someone was using was able to see my proxy bid and put in a bit $3 more.
I may not even bother with eBay anymore now that people are doing that. Either that, or I should just join them and be dishonest like everyone else.
Ebay is a place to find high and low prices on mandolins. Like today a '65 F12 just went for close to $4000 which has to be a new record for a 60's F12.
It was missing many original parts and showed a lot of wear.
Most are not finished until last few seconds so when I hear these outragous prices being had on ebay it's from those that saw it but didn't go back and check the final bid price as by that time you have to do a completed search to find it. When you do that you find ebay's prices are not down but pretty much in line with dealer prices. Many times the reserve is too much and they get sold on ebay but are sold later on without ebay's help to an interested buyer that is willing to take a risk away from ebay. There is still bargin prices to be found on ebay.
Foks! Prices are down right now on ebay because the United States is on the verge of all banks shutting down. We are on the brink of disaster. It's the sub prime mess. People buy high end stuff in good times like watches and mandolins and guitars. But in bad times, folks hold onto stuff. Nick
ntriesch
Well I have some friends who deal in various obscure corners of the antiques and collectables world, and they tell me that in some things bids are up. Probably can't accurately generalize from our own specific experience.
-Trust a simple song. ---Marty Stuart
The entire staff
funny.... Sort of funny....Sort of funny also
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