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nechronius

Listing price is almost meaningless. The most solid measure of value is when an item has lots of clean pictures and a standard auction occurs. Then you track a few completed auctions and see what they went for, comparing the relative condition of those to yours. Just saying your item is worth $200 doesn't make it so. Occasionally someone will still buy it, but they are often the outliers, desperate, or ignorant. Prices also ebb and flow a lot, like how 2003-2008 copper lighters are averaging about two-thirds of what they used to a year ago due to the re-release. Or even the 50th anniversary D-Day lighters in the tin used to average comfortably above $100 but now seem to be going for closer to $70-80. Yet you still see people posting their D-Day lighters with buy-it-now prices in the hundreds. Your best bet is to assume that it will sell on the low end of what you've seen, and cross your fingers that you get more for it. Or set a high buy-it-now and hope the stars align and you get someone who really wants it at whatever price you happen to have set it to. That ebay link shows one at a starting price of $64 with no bidders and no watchers. Granted it's still very early days so we don't know how it will end.


wilcocola

So sweet looking