• Ernie Ball
  • MusicMan
  • Sterling by MusicMan

Fuzzy Dustmite

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 19, 2004
Messages
973
Location
Mesa, AZ
I know the Dude uses a website http://www.esnipe.com to do his last second bidding.

I use a program called Auction Sentry that does the same thing. You tell it when to bid and what you want to bid, and it does the bidding for you. Not 100% perfect, as it's bid too late (I have my bid time set at 5 seconds before the auction ends) on me a couple of times, but it does the trick.

Before I used the software, I'd do the two window thing. Open two Internet Explorers and bring the auction up on both. Fill everything in to the point of the final "submit bid" button on one and then switch to the other window. I just keep hitting refresh and/or, or use a watch with a second hand and with a few seconds left switch over and hit the submit button on the other one.

That worked for me, but it also failed for me a couple of times when the internet connection crapped out or the page didn't submit in a timely enough fashion.

Sniping isn't at all like a 'real' auction, as ebay is all based on a set close time. In a live auction, what usually happens is that the bidding continues until no one outbids the high bidder. I've seen online auctions that sort of do this. If someone bids within the last minute of the auction, the auction is automatically extened by 5 minutes.

I prefer to snipe, as it doesn't let any other interested parties know whether someone is looking at something that may not have any bids until the last few minutes. I've bid my max on a couple of things early on, and then watched as someone chipped away, betting $1 every once in a while till they outbid me.

I'm pretty set on my maxes. I know what I'll pay, and if it goes higher than that, I let it go. It's not like it'll never show up on ebay again, and I don't buy anything outrageously expensive.
 

muggsy

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 19, 2004
Messages
787
Location
Alexandria, VA
Sterling, you need to be very careful of second chance offers that don't come through Ebay. It happened to me once and I almost got scammed for big dollars. I bet if you contact the seller through the auction, he'll tell you he doesn't know anything about the 2nd offer.

Absolutely true. I got a bogus second chance offer on the CLB Bongo a few days ago. This one even looked legit, as if it was coming from ebay, but the response address was a hotmail account.

As for sniping, I've been on both sides, as sniper and snipee. Nothing wrong with it IMO, but it does take some of the fun out of ebay. Of course, the scammers took most of the fun out of ebay a long time ago.
 

muggsy

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 19, 2004
Messages
787
Location
Alexandria, VA
I know the Dude uses a website http://www.esnipe.com to do his last second bidding.

I prefer to snipe, as it doesn't let any other interested parties know whether someone is looking at something that may not have any bids until the last few minutes. I've bid my max on a couple of things early on, and then watched as someone chipped away, betting $1 every once in a while till they outbid me.

I'm pretty set on my maxes. I know what I'll pay, and if it goes higher than that, I let it go. It's not like it'll never show up on ebay again, and I don't buy anything outrageously expensive.

That's the way I approach it too. I used esnipe once and it worked like a charm. Picked up a F*nd*r CS bass for about $1200. Kept it a couple of years then sold it for a $400 profit, and used the proceeds to buy a 30th Anniversary Stingray.

:D
 

Adwex

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 8, 2005
Messages
379
Location
Long Island, NY
If you bid early, you're only giving other bidders the opportunity to drive the price up. The only reason to bid well before the auction ends is if you can't bid seconds before it ends.
 

candid_x

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 26, 2006
Messages
3,272
I’ve received info on fallacious “second chance offers”, and have almost gotten taken on one once before. Now I discard any such offer.

I also got a bad guitar trade deal off an eBay auction before the auction ended. There were no prior bids riding, so I didn’t feel it was taking the item from another bidder. But - because I forfeited the eBay feedback feature, the guy – who btw has an excellent eBay feedback rating – decided to use the opportunity to unload a completely worthless guitar case, and masked together an atrocious excuse for a shipping box. The guitar turned out to be awful, and the pickups were not what he had advertised. His advertising was misleading and false in other ways also. There was nothing I could do about it. I still see this guy selling guitars on eBay, and rest assured I’d never buy from him again. I’ve seen a couple of his eBay Ball offerings mentioned here on this forum, and wanted to raise a red flag on him, but with his great eBay feedback rating, I thought perhaps he only takes advantage of off eBay buyers. I’ll mention his name here once and that’s it: Crescendo Guitars. Let the buyer (or bidder) beware.
 

ernie1966

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 12, 2002
Messages
1,271
If you bid early, you're only giving other bidders the opportunity to drive the price up. The only reason to bid well before the auction ends is if you can't bid seconds before it ends.

Yep, I makes no sense to put in a bid early and have others drive up the price.
 

DaveB

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 1, 2005
Messages
1,069
Location
St Albans, UK
I recently won an auction on a Lava Fully Loaded Petrucci which I can pick up in Dallas <G>

But I received a second chance offer through e-mail - after I had won (and paid for) the guitar.....

You should have seen my emailed response!

Dave
 

CudBucket

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 3, 2004
Messages
1,400
i just got a second chance offer on a natural EVH from Itally...these people must think that we are stupid!

This happened to me once on a Road King combo. It was supposedly in new condition. My max bid was like $900 and I was only the 3rd or 4th highest bidder. Of course, it was a scam.
 

SteveB

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 3, 2004
Messages
6,192
Location
Pittsburgh, PA
......how do it know? I know how it knows it just reminded me of a old thermous joke..

Ha.. my buddy JaffT and I are very familiar with said Thermos joke. :D We use that phrase here and there as well.

I've never bought or sold anything via eBay (although I do have an account for browsing)... it just seems like such a seedy place these days. They really ought to make it more sporting by setting limits like 1 bid per hour from a particular buyer on any one auction item. Maybe they could create a separate type of auction with these limits... call it a "gentleman's auction" or something. (No offense to the ladies.) Sellers listing an item could choose which type of auction to run. Of course, most sellers probably don't mind sniping, as it helps their bottom line.
 

beej

Moderator
Joined
Aug 16, 2004
Messages
12,409
Location
Toronto, Canada
Sniping is the reality, and if there's something you really want that's how to get it ... I echo what Ernie and everyone else said on that topic.

I dunno ... eBay is an open marketplace. I favour fewer rules, let the market decide how it wants to operate. If people really don't like it there will be an opportunity for another company to come in and take some market share away.
 

candid_x

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 26, 2006
Messages
3,272
Sniping is the reality, and if there's something you really want that's how to get it ... I echo what Ernie and everyone else said on that topic.

I dunno ... eBay is an open marketplace. I favour fewer rules, let the market decide how it wants to operate. If people really don't like it there will be an opportunity for another company to come in and take some market share away.

I hear ya.

On the bright side, eBay and it’s affiliate (Pay Pal, etc) contributes to a robust economy. It provides the entrepreneur the means to run their own business, the buyer to buy used items at a fair or bargain price, the casual seller to get rid of what they don’t use, and something for us to talk about.

I’m a casual eBay user. I have 66/100% positive feedback transactions on sales and purchases. While there were a couple of snags, they were resolved satisfactorily. All transactions were handled with integrity, both ways. I have no complaints. I’ve found it to be a whole lot safer and more reliable than buying or selling online without mediation.
 
Top Bottom