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Post by Night Ranger on Jun 14, 2012 5:54:55 GMT -5
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Sandbagger
Administrator/The Boss
Posts: 6,250
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Post by Sandbagger on Jun 14, 2012 6:18:39 GMT -5
All it takes is for one clown to list a radio for a super inflated price, and the next thing you know there are all sorts of copy-cats. Of course listing something for that high of a price is one thing. Actually selling it for that is totally another.....
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Post by cbrown on Jun 14, 2012 8:46:37 GMT -5
All it takes is for one clown to list a radio for a super inflated price, and the next thing you know there are all sorts of copy-cats. Of course listing something for that high of a price is one thing. Actually selling it for that is totally another..... Exactly. Although I wish him luck, I doubt he'll sell it.
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Post by kevcarr959 on Aug 30, 2012 2:21:59 GMT -5
Just looked at the radio that's still up for sale. He's dropped the price to $950.00, but as everyone's said, he won't sell it. Looking at the pictures he's got on the auction, it's an exceptionally clean radio, but still way over-priced....
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Sandbagger
Administrator/The Boss
Posts: 6,250
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Post by Sandbagger on Aug 30, 2012 6:12:44 GMT -5
Just looked at the radio that's still up for sale. He's dropped the price to $950.00, but as everyone's said, he won't sell it. Looking at the pictures he's got on the auction, it's an exceptionally clean radio, but still way over-priced.... Heck, I'd sell mine for that amount, if that ends up being the going rate. But some people are just nuts........ On the other hand, it might just be part of an elaborate strategy. List something several times for a super high price, so when people search for it, they'll see the high prices, so when the seller finally lists is for a lower, but still high price like $500, people might think "Hey what a deal!" and hit "buy it now".
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Post by cbrown on Aug 30, 2012 9:35:32 GMT -5
Maybe I should list one of my radios for a million, and then a month later list it for $250,000. That's a huge discount!
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