I know what they go for, but the eBay auction here, http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&rd=1&item=9720068893 has a buy it now price of $300. So why would he offer $385?MSRP for Z6s range from $600-$900, so a price of $385 is a steal.
I didn't even bother to take notice of this last night when I first happened across this thread but this is an excellent point!I know what they go for, but the eBay auction here, http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&rd=1&item=9720068893 has a buy it now price of $300. So why would he offer $385?
Exactly, it looks like he could have payed $325 shipped and had a legit deal through eBay, unless the auction was changed after the fact somehow. I didn't think that was possible though.Decipha?!? Why would you offer a seller $85 above the BIN price on any item???
It's not. The only thing you can edit after a listing has active bids on it is adding to the item description - which isn't even an edit but rather an addition. You cannot change the BIN price (if you have one) and you cannot raise the reserve price (if one is used) You can lower the reserve and you can add more detail to your item description and it will show that it was an after-the-fact addition at the bottom of the listing.Exactly, it looks like he could have payed $325 shipped and had a legit deal through eBay, unless the auction was changed after the fact somehow. I didn't think that was possible though.
That's what I thought. What a bonehead!It's not. The only thing you can edit after a listing has active bids on it is adding to the item description - which isn't even an edit but rather an addition. You cannot change the BIN price (if you have one) and you cannot raise the reserve price (if one is used) You can lower the reserve and you can add more detail to your item description and it will show that it was an after-the-fact addition at the bottom of the listing.