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Old December 4th 04, 11:19 PM
Henry Kolesnik
 
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There's nothing wrong with getting top dollar because if you don't and the
buyer gets too good a deal, he'll just sell it and make profit that you
should have made. If you have the time take and need the money take the
time and you'll see what's fair. Very few will pay too much ...You can
always get bottom dollar if you rush.
good luck
Hank WD5JFR
PS I'd like to see what you have for sale, please email me the list.
"Mel A. Nomah" wrote in message
ink.net...
I am helping a nursing-home-bound elderly ham sell off his equipment. Some
of it is old equipment of "collector" status which I have no idea of the
value. Trying to find out a proper starting price for eBay auction, I
asked
on a QTH.NET reflector of that brand for estimates of the reasonable
value,
but did not ask for bids.

Got several private responses, one of which was a bid for one of the
items.
The bid to me seems more than fair and we'd be happy to sell the item at
that price, but I feel uncomfortable that others didn't get a chance to
bid.
At the same time, I don't want to look like we're trying to raise the
price
of the item.

Would it be ethical for us to tell the group that we have a bid for the
item
(not revealing the amount of the bid) and ask others who wish to send
private bids also? If we do that, should we give the original bidder a
chance to match any higher bid?

How can we be fair here, without starting a food-fight and looking like
we're trying to "milk it for all it's worth"?

Thanks for your thoughts.