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Quite unique IIfx on ebay..

zackl

Well-known member
I saw this one too, I'm wondering what's driving the interest?

is it the 128mb of hard to find ram? or the Digidesign Samplecell?

Or are IIFX's in nice cosmetic condition just that hard to find now?

Z

 

CelGen

Well-known member
It will be stripped of the digidesign cards and they'll start popping up in a week or three.

 

Trash80toHP_Mini

NIGHT STALKER
The rule is meant to prevent people from making abusive comments about offerings, ridiculing sellers, overpricing, lack of knowledge (intelligence?) etc.

I'll bow to the other mods rulings on this, but we've often speculated about how high auctions might go due to rarity and undeniable worth, like the sub-200 serial no. Apple II auction recently.

 

Juror22

Well-known member
whats a digidesign card.
...I was curious too... so I found a response from 'sky' on this board entry

http://www.gearslutz.com/board/music-computers/368132-digidesign-nubus-cards-90s.html

Is this the answer? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sound_Tools

Sound Tools was a digital audio workstation released by Digidesign in the late 1980s. Its successor, Pro Tools, is the current industry standard in music production and TV/film audio post production.[citation needed]

It consisted of a NuBus DSP Card (Sound Accelerator II), Digital Interface (DAT I/O), Analog Interface (AD In) and software (Sound Designer II). It was later replaced by Sound Tools II, which utilized an improved DSP Card (Sound Accelerator II/2) and Interface (442 I/O, same as used in the original Pro Tools system).

It provided mono or stereo recording/editing/playback, as well as DSP effects like EQ, Gain Change, and noise reduction. It was initially made for the Macintosh platform with an Atari version available later.

btw, I put in a bid on it...

 

Trash80toHP_Mini

NIGHT STALKER
Always wait until the last 30 seconds to bid. Nobody wins a bidding war except the seller, who needs that? The only reason to bid early is to put the kaibosh on a BIN so nobody can snap it up before you try to snipe it. [}:)] ]'>

I just bid on a monitor. It looks like you can schedule an automatic (last second?) bid through eBay now . . .

. . . more likely it's a bidding war instigation device . . . ::)

 

CelGen

Well-known member
Always wait until the last 30 seconds to bid.
You're better off placing a $2000 bid. If you are up against people who want to go beyond their limit, pull the rug out days earlier and then tell them later how much they suck for trying to robo-bid.

 

Trash80toHP_Mini

NIGHT STALKER
:lol: They're just naive and inexperienced. eBay isn't an auction house, it's a betting parlor. Put that $2,000 bid in the last thirty seconds and that's good enough. I bid what I think I really wanna pay and more power to a sniper who wants it more than I do, I'll be disappointed, but not angry.

Nothing makes me laugh more than whining complaints about sniping. If you look at it rationally instead of emotionally, there's no other conclusion to be made about the most efficient process for buying on eBay, IMO.

 

volvo242gt

Well-known member
I'm with CelGen on this one. Put in what you're willing to pay for the item up front. If you win it, great. If not, you've saved that amount of money, instead of getting into the sniping war and finding that you've just used your kids as financing for something unintentionally. Frequently, I get what I've been looking for, at a reasonable price, by doing that.

-J

 

Juror22

Well-known member
I agree that the last minute bid with what you want to pay for it (sniping for effect?) is usually the way to go, but sometimes I want the reminders associated with posting a bid (my bid was immediately countered with an autobid and it went up a whole $2 because of me). The bid early thing almost always goes badly (from any that I've participated on), although I have had a few things that I bid early on, forgot about or was unavailable for the end and wound up winning... sometimes you just get lucky and everyone is out watching something else (or doesn't care).

 

Trash80toHP_Mini

NIGHT STALKER
IIRC, CelGen's a sniper. He was making fun of the folks who'll bid an auction up incrementally before it ever gets anywhere near what it'll go for at the end. You'll sometimes see three or four clowns have done that to each other. That's a no-win situation if you get involved.

If you bid early, that's how you get in a war. What do you do when you see that $2,001 bid? Bid just what you're willing to pay at the very end and you won't have the chance to get in a war by having second thoughts and upping the ante when you see someone has outbid you over the course of the auction.

If someone else bids more in the snipe window, so be it, you won't have a time to try to bid a second time so there's no temptation to go overboard/over-budget.

Just my $.02

 

CelGen

Well-known member
He was making fun of the folks who'll bid an auction up incrementally before it ever gets anywhere near what it'll go for at the end. You'll sometimes see three or four clowns have done that to each other. That's a no-win situation if you get involved.
Last auction I did bid in was for a DEC LA-120 on a government auction site. Set my bid an hour after the listing was up (was in touch with my university so they could tell me when it went up) and watched for four days as one guy kept stuffing bids and eventually gave up at $52.60 and three days before closing. After taxes it was $75 which was over $300 less than any similar LA-120 on ebay.

A chuckle is permitted because the money I saved pays my car insurance for three months or gives me eight tanks of gas or a small stack of university course books and supplies.

Then people can't believe I got it for so cheap. Remember how I mentioned how my Absolutely Apple IIfx system was less than $100 to build? People still can't believe it.

If someone else bids more in the snipe window, so be it, you won't have a time to try to bid a second time so there's no temptation to go overboard/over-budget.
Yeah, that's not how an auction works. That's being an asshole.

No really. It's like budging in line at the box office to buy tickets. You going to stand for that s***? No, you want your Beiber tickets, dammit!

Unlike my government auction site ebay has no incentive to push forward auction times when bids are placed in the last ten seconds. If they did they would miss out on hundreds or thousands of dollars more in item value which they can tax back in fees.

Sniping exists simply because of capitalist greed.

I stopped bidding on ebay years ago.

Eventually you get fed up on bidding $35 on an ED floppy drive, watching the bid sit for days and in the closing seconds a half dozen others blast the price up to $102.51. I've been using the Make an Offer and Buy it Now options since 2008 and between major PC and Mac hauls while living in Vancouver I've run out of reasons to buy more gear on ebay. All you are doing when you go over your budget and snipe is help inflate and bias the value of hardware which can hit very close to home when small chains of second hand stores are looking up hardware prices on ebay (and we've ALL had someone tell us "it was this much on ebay!"). I bet anyone here $1000 that if ebay ran like a REAL auction house (bid in the closing seconds and the listing time is extended ten more seconds, thus defeating snipers) the value of some of our most prized hardware would fall through the floor.

IIRC, CelGen's a sniper.
Now now. What was the forum rule about going after other members? ;)

 

Unknown_K

Well-known member
Still cheap currently for what you get. I have a samplcell card but I installed it in an early Nubus PPC (I think I left it in a 7100/66).

There is what looks like a 9 pin VGA card and some kind of SCSI card (probably the board the sample cells connect to for storage).

IIfx in nice condition plus RAM alone should fetch $200+, not sure what the cards go for these days.

 

James1095

Well-known member
Sniping has always annoyed me, never made sense why ebay hasn't included a feature to extend the auction by a few minutes each time a bid comes in within the last few minutes.

I figured if you can't beat em, join em though, and I've been using a sniping service for years. The way the game is set up, that's by far the best way to win. I agree with everything else here, bidding wars early on just drive up the price. Only time I bid early is to put in a lowball to discourage others from doing the same, or if I could take it or leave it, sometimes I do win.

 

CelGen

Well-known member
and some kind of SCSI card (probably the board the sample cells connect to for storage).
The presence of that black connector at the far end of the card is almost a sure sign that it's the interface card for a ProTools box.

100_1039.jpg.122661a93e2dd821e3d77ca8799b76ba.jpg


The box itself is missing from the auction.

 

Anonymous Freak

Well-known member
To stay off-topic. :p

My eBay technique is to bid the maximum I'm willing to pay as soon as I decide I'm willing to bid. And I come to a firm conclusion on my maximum. If I place the bid, and am immediately outbid, I give up.

Then I ignore the auction until I get the "the auction is over" email.

Makes absolutely certain I don't go over my "max" amount.

I don't care if it goes for $0.01 over my maximum bid, I don't get worked up. It's likely that the other bidder was willing to make it go much higher, and I'm not out to "punish" the other bidder for outbidding me by driving their bid up artificially.

 
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