by midger » March 31st, 2010, 7:14 pm
I use eBay a lot--over 2000 sales and at least 200 purchases. I've had very few issues, as I mainly deal with fly fishing things, and for the most part, I've found buyers and sellers of flyfishing items a fairly honorable bunch.
Areas you really need to use caution in is when buying from those who inherited or who obviously know nothing about what they are selling. These folks often overstate the condition of the rod, reel, etc. The reliable sellers have high postive feedbacks and most offer a money back guarantee or a 3-7 day inspection period if you are talking their higher priced items.
You also really need to know what you are buying. If you aren't sure of the value of that Granger or Fenwick rod, use caution and make sure you don't overbid. That's easy to do if you haven't done your research. I keep books on antique rods and their values, Reels and their values, and I used to use Marriotts catalogs as a general price guide until they stopped publishing them--I still use the old ones for general informational purposes when I want to see what an item originally retailed for, as many sellers vastly over inflate what the item originally sold for. This is especially true with rods and reels.
I also try to buy new or as new unless it is an absolute steal, which is rare these days on ebay as there are so many folks now using it. Unlike its early days in the mid 90s when there were lots of real bargains, now you can often get more for an item as a seller on eBay than you can selling it through a bulletin board ad.
As for credit card theft, I don't know how that could happen using PayPal. Nobody but PayPal has your credit card info and now that they're owned by eBay, they are a very secure method of transferring funds. Again, I've used them for $1000s of dollars in transactions and never had a problem. You do need to be aware of phishing scams though that purport to be from PayPal or eBay. Some of these folks are very good at mirroring the request you might expect to get from eBay or PayPal. If they don't address you by name, don't answer the query. Rather, send their request to the eBay spoof link and have eBay validate the request. Nine times out of ten you'll find it's bogus, just like the widow who had 10 million in Nigeria, but they need you to help them get it out of the country.
There are good deals. I just picked up a pair of blued, red agate strippers for $4.25. I've also purchased a lot of reels at prices that are below what I can get the same items for wholesale. Just use common sense in your pursuit of your holy grail items.
"Should you cast your fly into a branch overhead or into a bush behind you, or miss a fish striking, or lose him,or slip into a hole up to your armpits-keep your temper; above all things don't swear, for he that swears will catch no fish."