grizz30_06 wrote: |
I always laugh when I hear "Evil Bay". My answer to the why is it called evil bay has to do with many different reasons:
1. Modelers see many things that they want but can't afford |
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That's true of anywhere. The local Porsche dealer was showing the $500,000 Carrera GT. I can't afford that. Does that make HIM evil? Okay, the thePontiac dealers putting a huge mark-up on the new Solstice border on evil. (Not that I'd want one having read a bit about them. I'd feel like I was slumming after my S2000.)
2. Some people will sell models at ridiculusly high prices...like the Tamyia Sheridan for US $115 |
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Some people are willing to pay ridiculously large sums for something they really want. The seller who starts his auction too high will not sell his stuff. Ever watch the Barrett-Jackson auto auction? Cars that sold new for under $5,000 routinely sell for more than $100,000. IIRC, about a year ago, there was a Chevelle SS-454 that sold upwards of $150,000.
3. At times bidders will wait to the last minute to bid on something that you have bid on thus out bidding you for a dollar. |
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Okay, this is frustrating, especially when bid-bots are invloved, but this is an auction. It's how on;ine auctions work. If there were no time limits, the price would go higher. Further, in using E-bay, you should always make you highest willing bid right off and ignore the auction. You may be outbid, but you won't be drawn into a foolish bidding war. In the real world, guy walks into the LHS and picks up the last item in stock that you want. Does that make him evil? Same principal.