I have been on
Ebay since 1999 and in the past few years-- fees have become horrible unless:
A. You are a power seller and listing thousands of things at a time
or
B. You have parts that are in High demand off High Demand cars
I have pulled many a cars in, and I always have this pie in the sky idea that some dude is really going to buy my tail lights out of a 1998 Chevy Mailibu. Then I decide to leave them on the car and let them get crushed. I have toyed with the idea of selling parts-- my problem is that I have NO storage. I don't have a barn or 30 acres to store doors, fenders, windows or "fill in the blank" parts. So I core what goodies I can and let the rest go.
I recently ran into a guy who rents commercial space to do body work. This guy literally has a fence line packed with doors, tailgates, windows, bumpers, fenders, trunk lids.. and HE can't get rid of them. I looked at a car that he has for sale- Sunfire, He wanted $425 for it- 2 of 4 rims, he's robbed the timing out of it, no battery, no tail lights. I offered him $200 bucks.. he looked as if I just stabbed him in the heart. He said "I could take all the parts off that car and sell them" I was kind, but in my mind I knew if he took 20 hours of labor to take parts- he'd never get his money back. Maybe someday someone will come and need that fender- trick is- will it ROT before that time comes??
For what it is worth, Take some of the cherry items off some vehicles- look on Ebay to see what is in demand for the vehicles you have. If the gauges sell for $85 bucks off a car- pull that part and try and give it a go- or take a picture and if it doesn't sell- you never took any more time than to take a picture and list it- no physical labor involved. Another option is- try Craigslist, gather 20 different parts- plop them up locally on CL for free- you get bites- pure profit, if not, only time spent trying. Granted Ebay has a VASTLY larger, worldwide, audience, but you can test the waters locally and see what may even have an interest.
Aaron
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