Skip to main content

...but I'm not. A new eBay buyer, with a feedback rating of 1, put in his max bid a couple of days ago for an item I wanted. His bid withstood several proxy bid challenges, winding up at his max bid of $38.00 but still high bid by one dollar (as it turned out). Everything was calm for about 6 hours -- until the last 8 seconds, during which time I walked off with the item for $39.00. Bet that newbie buyer is still wondering what hit him. Big Grin Big Grin Big Grin
Original Post

Replies sorted oldest to newest

If there was, I don't remember it. I do recall being highly p*ssed off by being sniped; I felt that the bid was mine by rights and anybody who snuck in there in the last few seconds (and it was usually 10 seconds or more) was a nefarious good-for-nothing.

I even fired off an angry e-mail to one sniper, whose reply was "Have I broken any rules? Did I do something wrong by bidding for something I wanted?" That made me stop and think...much to the ultimate detriment of proxy bidders everywhere. Eek
I regret that after being sniped so many times, and then learning about AS, that it took me several months to sign-up. Like others, I was paranoid about giving AS my ebay ID and password (stupid!). During all that time, I continued doing manual snipes. What a pain. What a disruption of one's life. What a way to have a heart attack.

I've said this before: Snipers live longer. Wink


"It's a free country" - Not if you pay your credit card charges. Razz
I was sniped several times in my early days, so I started sniping manually. One of the most challenging parts was when I would not be near a computer, so in those cases I would just bid as late as I could, though that was sometimes hours away.

Sniping manually worked fairly well when I was at the computer and I had a pretty good record. But the time that sniping stung me the most was a mix of both being there and not being there. I had not expected to be at the computer when an auction ended, so I put in a manual bid 90 minutes before auction end, hoping that this would prevail.

As luck would have it, I got home before the auction ended and was, in fact, at the computer as the seconds clicked down. Now, since I had already put in my max bid for the rare book (I think it was $70+, which is more than most auctions for me), I was not entering any snipe manually. I was just hoping that my high bid would prevail. As I kept hitting the refesh button, I became quite excited as I was still the high bidder with only 15 seconds left! My heart was thumping at the thought of getting this rare edition and...and...and...and when I hit refresh one last time, I found........that I had lost to a sniper!

I was livid. I could not understand how this fellow managed to get his bid in at 7 seconds. "How could he do it so late?" I wondered, as processors were still a bit slower than they are now. Moreover, that individual stole my book, damn it! (I uttered far worse vulgarites than that, I must admit, which was even more ironic, considering that the book in question was a religious text.)

I whined to a coworker the next day. She shared stories with me of having lost Precious Moments and other knick-knacks at the last second, for which she had "cleared a place on the shelf" in her mind. Like me, she knew that she absolutely wanted her missed items FAR MORE than the sniper could EVER have wanted it. Somehow, wanting it more meant that we should have these items, that we were entitled to them.

Two or three weeks later, I looked at an auction (I may even have won it; I do not recall) that had an Auction Sniper logo at the bottom of the description. Curious, I went to the website and the rest is history. Once I ascertained that there were many, many other folks who had had the same feelings, and that AS would not charge when I lost the auction, and that there was no way I could bid against myself, I was an immediate convert.

And, not surprisingly, the whining coworker is also using AS now, as well! Big Grin
Chatter,

You are AS' Prince of Prose. Out of respect, I waited until someone over-posted you (lisa, PLEASE don't be mad at me), or 24 hours expired (which ever came first).

Your post was at 4:26. If that was a reply to Steve's post (3:11), that would be 1:15 after his post. Considering lost time to see his post, and then to come up with your response deserves respect. If you replied to my post (4:01), that would be :25 in responding. That would be nothing less than phenomenal.

L. Ron Hubbard wrote a 100 words a minute. You must be the 2nd fastest writer.
I just sniped a rare set of pots for my antique stove. I contacted the other main bidder alst week to pool our resources and win (I only need three of the six items) but he very cutrly told me he wasn't interested. So I sniped him. In the end he had already gotten beat out, but he was the one I was 'going for' Smile That's what happens when you are rude! Big Grin

I don't mind manual sniping, as it gets the adrenalin flowing, but this was nice and easy to watch! I just kept hitting refresh and watching.
Manually, with a Radio Shack timer. I hunted around until I found an auction that ended at 5:00:00 precisely, set the timer to match the auction time, allowed a couple of seconds of "Kentucky windage" for the time needed by the AS server to process the post, and...voila!

It doesn't pay to trifle with an old manual sniper. Big Grin

Add Reply

Post
×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×