Jameshow
Established Member
Doesn't bother me as I have plenty of spares in the parts pin in fact the brakes wheels and shifters will go.Together with everlasting rear brake pads
Doesn't bother me as I have plenty of spares in the parts pin in fact the brakes wheels and shifters will go.Together with everlasting rear brake pads
I've not read through the replies so if someone has already made a similar comment then here it is again.Hi all
Been having a sortout and thought of shifting some stuff on the bay, had not used it since they were part of paypal and things have changed but for better or worse ? My initial thoughts are that they give you free listings but then want you to buy promotions in order to increase audience and still charge on a sale. What do others think and anyone have any thoughts or are there now better alternatives?
I periodically hand a bunch of parts to the local bike charity. I know what you mean the almighty faff trying to sell things till you give up in frustration, so handing them to the charity gets shot of it all and makes you feel good that somethings going to benefit someone else.I finally put some items in the bin rather than go through all that for buttons.
You can make your listing only show in the UK - there's probably a workaround, such as VPN, etc., but if you make it clear in your blurb that it's for quick and local collection only, it should help.I've had some bad experiences recently trying to sell three bicycles (nice ones). Despite being collection only the winning bidders lived in Poland, Algeria and Kent.
All of them expected me to wait around for some private courier after a 'family member' who was supposed to collect them 'couldn't make it'.
It was suspiciously like a scam so I ended up pulling them and selling locally on Gumtree and through Facebook and work.
I hadn't sold anything for a long time but eBay doesn't seem to be as seller freindly like I remember it to be
Why do you not arrange for Royal Mail to collect the item from your house ? It’s free !Well that reply certainly tempted fate.
1) Bought a case for my new phone. Really poor quality and malformed. Raised a return. Got a Royal Mail return label which in itself was a pain as it's a major round trip for us as we rarely go out. Lying toe-rag of a seller said "Damaged in the rain" and deducted 50% ! That's been raised with eBay
2) Ten days ago ordered a new Milwaukee battery and remembered today that I'd not received it. Checked the order details..."We're posting your order" ...that was Jan 18th with expected delivery 19th. Sent an "Item not received" message ...guess what...got an email from DPD saying that they're expecting it. Awaiting for any reply from seller before deciding what feedback to give.
But there're 'silly billys' out there who fail to read the listing 'proper-like', they buy it, then when you contact them to arrange collection it's a case of :- "Oh, err, em,, I'm like 150 miles away, didn't realize it's collection only" $%^£& GRRRRRRRRRRRRH! Had it several times.You can make your listing only show in the UK - there's probably a workaround, such as VPN, etc., but if you make it clear in your blurb that it's for quick and local collection only, it should help.
There’s an 80% off final fees email every other Friday. If you list on that it’s cheap, especially Buy it Now as it lasts for around 28 days.Hi all
Been having a sortout and thought of shifting some stuff on the bay, had not used it since they were part of paypal and things have changed but for better or worse ? My initial thoughts are that they give you free listings but then want you to buy promotions in order to increase audience and still charge on a sale. What do others think and anyone have any thoughts or are there now better alternatives?
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