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I mean.. not sure they are that low. I tried to sell my 3090 here for $600, no takers.Sure. We both agree that Newegg's trade-in values are low. I was simply trying to help people understand that the price you see things sold for on Ebay, is not the amount the seller keeps.
I mean.. not sure they are that low. I tried to sell my 3090 here for $600, no takers.
nah it was more of a joke.I know. You're trying to compare the value you paid on release to used/ buy back values now as if it means anything.
$70 or more for shipping a GPU card lowest priority? Is there also a brick in the box?Same.
just quick look of 3090s on ebay and i see several with 70-80usd shipping with 1-3day delivery but ship out date is a week out. So basically they will ship lowest priority but right away.
450 buck for my 3090! WOW then I only paid 1500 for it!! what a deal!!
Better still when it's the version with as-is or broken stuff. "Don't you dare send low offers on my broken junk!"its the classic fb marketplace meme of "i know what i got dont lowball me!".
Not true. As a seller, I've had 5 claims opened with me for items that were lost/stolen/undelivered/not as described.With Ebay you're 100% at the buyer's mercy.
It's down to whoever gets your ticket. See my post above for an example.eBay has not left me hanging once, but that's not to discredit the folks who have been screwed by their buyer protection policy. There is a seller protection policy as well, and if you cover your ass as I do, then you'll likely be made whole.
I've dealt with Ebay enough to know this. I've had closed tickets get re-opened, too. My main point is that if you don't have the time or energy to fight battles every time you want to sell something, this might be a worthwhile alternative. Obviously someone with more time might not mind it, but as I get older, I have less and less time for these matters.It's down to whoever gets your ticket. See my post above for an example.
I'm guessing your listing was "returns not accepted." If your listing is set to accept returns, then you generally have more control over how much to refund the buyer.It's down to whoever gets your ticket. See my post above for an example.
Agreed.I've dealt with Ebay enough to know this. I've had closed tickets get re-opened, too. My main point is that if you don't have the time or energy to fight battles every time you want to sell something, this might be a worthwhile alternative. Obviously someone with more time might not mind it, but as I get older, I have less and less time for these matters.
Yes, to try and keep wishy-washy buyers away. I'm grateful to have only had trouble a few times on eBay before ditching it.I'm guessing your listing was "returns not accepted." If your listing is set to accept returns, then you generally have more control over how much to refund the buyer.
But I get it, seen enough horror stories of bogus INAD claims on listings that "don't accept returns." So I always accept returns, then prepare to issue a partial refund.