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-   -   Wondrous Tales of Price Differential... (http://www.net54baseball.com/showthread.php?t=281480)

JollyElm 04-10-2020 11:26 PM

Wondrous Tales of Price Differential...
 
1 Attachment(s)
I'll leave this here without comment...

Attachment 393716

quitcrab 04-11-2020 09:17 AM

I think the 6000 dollar Kaline has better gloss.

JollyElm 04-11-2020 03:33 PM

1 Attachment(s)
Today, the differential grows even wider...

Attachment 393803

hcv123 04-11-2020 07:55 PM

I thiink
 
they misplaced a decimal point

Bigdaddy 04-11-2020 11:02 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by hcv123 (Post 1970187)
they misplaced a decimal point

..or two

JollyElm 04-15-2020 10:24 PM

...and many days later, the card remains unchanged in price...

JollyElm 11-10-2020 03:24 PM

1 Attachment(s)
I just had to bump this old thread, because glory be!!!! The seller has cut his opening bid by a whopping two thirds. Of course, that is still over 2,000 times as much as the card listed immediately above it in the ebay search...

Attachment 425425

:D

stlcardsfan 11-10-2020 04:57 PM

I didn’t think Dean’s Cards discounted that heavily.

vintagebaseballcardguy 11-10-2020 05:08 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JollyElm (Post 2033740)
I just had to bump this old thread, because glory be!!!! The seller has cut his opening bid by a whopping two thirds. Of course, that is still over 2,000 times as much as the card listed immediately above it in the ebay search...

Attachment 425425

:D

What a deal! Because it's not how much you spend, it's how much you save! :D

jingram058 11-10-2020 06:09 PM

This kind of stuff has been going on since the inception of eBay. Here is a story, and every word true. I feel that I might be responsible for an eBay policy change. Some years back before I retired from the Navy, I watched several bidders go into a feeding frenzy over a book I owned, entitled "Battle Report - Pearl Harbor to the Coral Sea", which I bought for something like $10 in mint condition with dust jacket. It was and still is a common and available book. These people finally concluded bidding at $610. I contacted the runner-up bidder, and via PM's, he aggressively stated he wanted my book. When I asked what price, he said, well, since the eBay bidding went to $610, how about $600? I agreed, and sure enough, he sent a cashier's check in that amount. I could not in clear conscience cash that check. I returned the check, and the book, to him along with a letter stating the facts about this book, it's true value, and a request for the $10 I paid for the book. The lesson learned here is an old one, a fool and his money are soon parted. They are surely out there, and unscrupulous sellers on eBay only hope they come along. More often than not, they do.

JollyElm 11-12-2020 07:56 PM

1 Attachment(s)
Whoa!!!! Spoke way too soon. He has now suddenly increased his new 'steal of an opening bid' price by 75 freaking percent...

Attachment 425758

bnorth 11-12-2020 08:21 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by jingram058 (Post 2033820)
This kind of stuff has been going on since the inception of eBay. Here is a story, and every word true. I feel that I might be responsible for an eBay policy change. Some years back before I retired from the Navy, I watched several bidders go into a feeding frenzy over a book I owned, entitled "Battle Report - Pearl Harbor to the Coral Sea", which I bought for something like $10 in mint condition with dust jacket. It was and still is a common and available book. These people finally concluded bidding at $610. I contacted the runner-up bidder, and via PM's, he aggressively stated he wanted my book. When I asked what price, he said, well, since the eBay bidding went to $610, how about $600? I agreed, and sure enough, he sent a cashier's check in that amount. I could not in clear conscience cash that check. I returned the check, and the book, to him along with a letter stating the facts about this book, it's true value, and a request for the $10 I paid for the book. The lesson learned here is an old one, a fool and his money are soon parted. They are surely out there, and unscrupulous sellers on eBay only hope they come along. More often than not, they do.

So did you sell one book or 2?:confused:

Back in the day when eBay was new people like me did cause new eBay rules. I had many multiples of cards that were considered rare at the time. I would list them at the lowest price I would sell a card for. Then message every bidder and offer them another but same card for their high bid. So from one listing I could easily sell several cards and only pay eBay fees on one card.

todeen 11-12-2020 09:34 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JollyElm (Post 2034635)
Whoa!!!! Spoke way too soon. He has now suddenly increased his new 'steal of an opening bid' price by 75 freaking percent...



Attachment 425758

Most be Amazon bots controlling pricing

Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-G930A using Tapatalk

todeen 11-12-2020 09:36 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by bnorth (Post 2034645)
So did you sell one book or 2?:confused:



Back in the day when eBay was new people like me did cause new eBay rules. I had many multiples of cards that were considered rare at the time. I would list them at the lowest price I would sell a card for. Then message every bidder and offer them another but same card for their high bid. So from one listing I could easily sell several cards and only pay eBay fees on one card.

This is how I built my 2001 bowman heritage set. I would contact bidders of heritage lots, while bidding was occurring, and request buying duplicates or trading. It worked out great for me.

Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-G930A using Tapatalk

jingram058 11-13-2020 08:08 AM

No just the one book. I just couldn't believe how these folks went so nuts over a common book someone was selling. Yes, a $10 book went for $610 when the dust settled. So I got hold of the 2nd place bidder behind the scenes and sold mine for $600. My conscience and my wife guilted me into returning his $600 cashier's check and finally selling him the book for $10. But I proved my point that people will buy anything, including baseball cards. I can't tell you the number of fake cards that came into my nephew by marriage's stamps, coins and cards shop back in the 1990s. This is how I learned to authenticate them. Once you learn, the fakes stand out like sore thumbs, even in lo-res eBay auction photos.

jingram058 11-13-2020 08:11 AM

And yes, you can name your price, and someone with more money than common sense will come along. Just have some patience...

bnorth 11-13-2020 08:51 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by jingram058 (Post 2034755)
No just the one book. I just couldn't believe how these folks went so nuts over a common book someone was selling. Yes, a $10 book went for $610 when the dust settled. So I got hold of the 2nd place bidder behind the scenes and sold mine for $600. My conscience and my wife guilted me into returning his $600 cashier's check and finally selling him the book for $10. But I proved my point that people will buy anything, including baseball cards. I can't tell you the number of fake cards that came into my nephew by marriage's stamps, coins and cards shop back in the 1990s. This is how I learned to authenticate them. Once you learn, the fakes stand out like sore thumbs, even in lo-res eBay auction photos.

I misunderstood your original post. I thought the original listing was also yours. WOW has eBay changed over the years. In the late 90s when eBay was getting more popular. You would watch for cards that sell for good prices but still were considered rare. Then run a quick 3 day auction that ended before the other sellers listing. You would steal his high bidders and your card would sell for more.

frankhardy 11-14-2020 02:14 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by stlcardsfan (Post 2033788)
I didn’t think Dean’s Cards discounted that heavily.

You beat me to it!

jchcollins 11-16-2020 11:28 AM

Not sure what the deal was with those '73 Kellogg's cards, but there are a surprising number of them that survived apparently in Mint or Gem Mint condition.

JollyElm 11-16-2020 04:22 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by jchcollins (Post 2035731)
Not sure what the deal was with those '73 Kellogg's cards, but there are a surprising number of them that survived apparently in Mint or Gem Mint condition.

Since there is no emoji in your post, I'm going to take a chance and assume you're not being facetious. :rolleyes:

It seems most people sent away for the full, perforated sets, so they just remained untouched and unhandled for decades in attics and closets. They didn't have that 3-D Kellogg's magic attached to them, so they were forgotten about. PSA 10's are ridiculously plentiful (and I know, because I'm trying to piece together a PSA 10 set).

jchcollins 11-17-2020 04:53 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JollyElm (Post 2035837)
Since there is no emoji in your post, I'm going to take a chance and assume you're not being facetious. :rolleyes:

It seems most people sent away for the full, perforated sets, so they just remained untouched and unhandled for decades in attics and closets. They didn't have that 3-D Kellogg's magic attached to them, so they were forgotten about. PSA 10's are ridiculously plentiful (and I know, because I'm trying to piece together a PSA 10 set).

Right. It stands to reason I guess.

cardsagain74 11-17-2020 03:14 PM

I should've waited on this to get my '86 Fleer stickers

https://www.ebay.com/itm/1986-86-Fle...S/324272400062


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