I made a cheeky bid on an item on Evilbuy, a little below what I thought the LGB item was worth. The seller had it overpriced IMO.
He didn't accept my offer and black listed me when I tried to buy from him another time, for an item he had priced competitively.
His loss....
There is a lot, and I mean A LOT of over priced stuff on ebay at the moment, i too sometimes feel putting a realistic offer in for some items but have resisted, especially when i have watched them buy the items at the auction I also purchased stuff on so know how much they often paid (inc fees). With ebay you sometimes have to by a "Lot" of stuff to get the one item you want so ebay is a great way of shifting the other lots, never been stuck with anything if its realistically priced but ebay traders are trying it on It feels at the moment.I made a cheeky bid on an item on Evilbuy, a little below what I thought the LGB item was worth. The seller had it overpriced IMO.
He didn't accept my offer and black listed me when I tried to buy from him another time, for an item he had priced competitively.
His loss....
There is a lot, and I mean A LOT of over priced stuff on ebay at the moment, i too sometimes feel putting a realistic offer in for some items but have resisted, especially when i have watched them buy the items at the auction I also purchased stuff on so know how much they often paid (inc fees). With ebay you sometimes have to by a "Lot" of stuff to get the one item you want so ebay is a great way of shifting the other lots, never been stuck with anything if its realistically priced but ebay traders are trying it on It feels at the moment.
Yes, your right to complain ! I wonder how many do.. I purchased a LGB FO Panorama Coach from an auctioneer a few months back, it was described (as now I see most of the lots were) as "Near Mint in Near Mint Window Box with Outer Sleeve.... The only "mint" part was in fact the Box, the coach was awful, scratched, very dirty and very faded so had been sitting in the sun for a long time outdoor. Now these Pano coachs are on ebay go for £300 quid plus and I was paying £150 9(inc fee and vat) and £20 for packing and delivery. But it should have been described correctly and have better pictures. The Auctioneer in fairness to them agreed from my pictures it was incorrectly described and offered to have it collected and refunded. I said I was happy to take £25 refund which they took me up on. Its now another "bash" project.... There were three other similar coachs in the sale I missed out on so wonder if they were the same condition and the new owners happy with what they received.Yes, I have spoken to one or two sellers "flipping" an item they bought at an auction house on Ebay. Good luck to them, although some do not seem to have realistic expectations. If somebody puts in a "cheeky" bid the seller should accept it gracefully with a simple no. Why activate the "make an offer" function if you don't ? Blocking that bidder in future is knocking out a potential buyer with an established interest in the market you are servicing. Some people don't understand how selling works
I find it irritating the way mainstream auctioneers bundle lots to shift low grade items by including a "gem" to boost the sale price. But it's their job to get the best price for the seller and their commision. I have to say I have seriously fallen out of love with one the most prominent specialists houses. 3 times in a row I had to return £100+ items as the description and as recieved condition were, shall we say, somewhat misaligned. The excuse I was given for the serial failures, which they agreed as their fault - The volumes of sales they were handling, due to then recent media exposure, meant their "specialist" assessors were overworked or simply not familiar with the lots they were being charged with examining. Ahem. Max
I've seen this a couple of times many moons ago - I wonder if the seller won't ship to the UK.Checking the latest sales on eBay, I looked at an Accucraft coach, and was presented with this banner:
View attachment 348609
Tried a few other of their items and received the same notice!!!
While it didn't use to matter whether sellers were registered as "Private" or "Business" (because both paid a listing fee), it seems odd that Jolly Toys can be "Private" having sold more than 2.1k items (and with over 300 items listed currently). Surely "Private" is intended to cover those of us that choose to move on items that we have owned for a while, but no longer need . . . and not someone who is clearly buying things in to sell on (and now expect the buyers to pay the equivalent of the listing fee). I wonder what ebay would do if this was pointed out to them.
I think it is more go over a break point and you will have to show you are still a private individual selling your own collection. That is if they chase you on it. So far they appear to be targetting those who are way beyond that break point which can still happen even for private sales. A few years ago, before all this, I started selling my vinyl collection (LPs not some fetish!) and that ran into thousands.At that time HMRC took little or no notice of a private individual's Ebay side hustle. They just did not understand that part of the economy. Now they do and are trying to define what is a pure non taxable private sale and what is business sale for income tax reasons. Principal method being kited is based on Ebay sales turnover alone. Go over a break point and you will be liable to tax on it and all other earned income irrespective of purpose of sale.
I'd agree, regarding this particular seller, they are not too on the ball regarding LGB. Works both ways, as I have in the past captured a couple of track items they had significantly undervalued.Some of jollytoys211 ideas on pricing are way out and wonder if this is in part due to a lack of knowledge about LGB. For two examples, he has two LGB Toy Train girder bridges as one lot at a starting bid of just over £99, reasonable enough for the LGB L50610 bridge but the Toy Train sells for £25-£30 on eBay. The second example is also a Toy Train one, the green USA style box car, with a starting bid of just under £58, which usually goes for £25 to £30.
On the other hand this is not to say that some sellers buy something cheap at an auction and then resell on eBay asking a much higher price, "flipping" as maxi-model says. I found a nice French Hornby O gauge set for £160 starting bid or thereabouts thhat the seller had bought recently for £60. I didn't bid.