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Wondrous Tales of Price Differential...
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I think the 6000 dollar Kaline has better gloss.
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I thiink
they misplaced a decimal point
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...and many days later, the card remains unchanged in price...
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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...
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I didn’t think Dean’s Cards discounted that heavily.
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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.
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Whoa!!!! Spoke way too soon. He has now suddenly increased his new 'steal of an opening bid' price by 75 freaking percent...
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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. |
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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.
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And yes, you can name your price, and someone with more money than common sense will come along. Just have some patience...
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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.
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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). |
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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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