LVSteve
Member
I have a (bad?) habit of placing BS bids on strange guns that aren't attracting much interest at auctions. Usually they are guns with offbeat operating systems like rotating barrels or gas delayed blowback. I did it again last night, and was pipped at the post by another bidder. That's fine, my auction strategy is to calculate the total cost I am prepared to incur and bid accordingly.
When I checked the auction I found I had been knocked out by a bidder with no feedback (NR)...and the item was shown as "relisted". There is nothing in the listing to show that the seller won't deal with NR bidders, but the relisting notice intrigued me. Is it a way of getting around a listing charge when you have multiple examples of a gun to sell?
Then the nasty, suspicious part of my mind kicked in. Did the NR bidder suddenly appear because otherwise I was getting the gun too cheap for someone's liking? I have a bid on the relisting, so we shall see what happens with that. Watch this space.
When I checked the auction I found I had been knocked out by a bidder with no feedback (NR)...and the item was shown as "relisted". There is nothing in the listing to show that the seller won't deal with NR bidders, but the relisting notice intrigued me. Is it a way of getting around a listing charge when you have multiple examples of a gun to sell?
Then the nasty, suspicious part of my mind kicked in. Did the NR bidder suddenly appear because otherwise I was getting the gun too cheap for someone's liking? I have a bid on the relisting, so we shall see what happens with that. Watch this space.