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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Aug 2009
    Location
    USA
    Posts
    6,064

    Default How to find "sold" prices on Gunbroker

    I have a Ruger Vaquero in 45 colt that I need to value. Looking at Gunbroker I can find no way to find what these guns have sold for.
    Can you help?
    Thanks,
    Major Tom

  2. #2

    Default

    Only active auctions are returned in the search function. Ended auctions stay on the system for a few months before their individual pages disappear. So one way to do it is to just add these auctions to your watch list and accumulate the information over time going forward. If you're wanting to start cold today and go back 3-4 years in GB auctions, forget it. Their system is in fact designed to make that impossible.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Sep 2009
    Location
    London, Ontario
    Posts
    3,251

    Default

    I don't think Gunbroker publishes that info. Listings 'expire' after 90 days from the start date too.
    "...have a..." Look for the same thing you have in the same condition. Barrel length, chambering, SS or not, grips, etc. Give you a ball park figure at least.
    Spelling and grammar count!

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Aug 2009
    Location
    Arkansas
    Posts
    974
    Blog Entries
    1

    Default

    Finding completed auctions is not difficult. Steps are as follows.

    Go to gunbroker auction.
    In the upper right side of the screen just to the right of the green search block is the small work "advanced". Click on it.
    Then on the left side of the screen are two squares labeled current and completed. Click on completed.
    Then type in the search description of the type item you are looking for.
    Scroll down to a list showing how far back you want to search. The you can click on 30 days etc.
    When the list comes up you just click on the item you want to see.
    The item that come up will be labeled "sold" or "item has ended".

    The "item has ended" will be on most auctions but the sold items gives you solid pricing information.
    Last edited by Herschel; 06-03-2018 at 10:40.

  5. Default

    Read Herschels post above. It will bring you to what has sold in the past for a reasonable amount of time. Someting that has sold a lot will drop off the radar more quickly.

    However.... you need to have a Gun Broker account { registration is free } to be able to access the advanced section to look at past auctions
    Last edited by Sandpebble; 06-03-2018 at 02:47.

  6. #6

    Default

    Gunbroker;

    Watch what items you have, have sold for lately. Mostly, you will see exorbitantly priced items that don't sell. Those ads are good for education. If you want to sell something, price it at .01 and let the market determine it's value. It helps to take some good pics(get a IPhone) and intelligently describe what you are selling(no BS). If you expect to make a fortune on your one rifle/pistol you're in for a disappointment.
    If I should die before I wake...great,a little more sleep.

  7. Default

    Quote Originally Posted by dryheat View Post
    Mostly, you will see exorbitantly priced items that don't sell. Those ads are good for education.
    They're good for mis-education, & distortion of the market, because simple-minded folk with a similar gun will jump to the false conclusion that their gun, too, must be worth as much--not knowing that the "exorbitantly priced item" has been sitting there for a year, maybe longer, with no takers. Any half-way reasonably priced item will sell quickly.

    Unfortunately, unless one watches the same category month after month, seeing the same items re-listed again & again with no bids, there's no way to know how long it's been listed--that's one piece of info GB forbids bidders to know, because it might show up the cheating dealer for the thief he is.

    In ordinary commerce, a merchant can't overprice his goods too outrageously, because he requires the income derived from their sale. But antique & collector gun-dealing is NOT ordinary commerce--far from it! To many of these dealers, it's merely a lucrative hobby, not a livelihood, which explains why they can afford to post sucker prices, then sit back & wait as long as it takes for the sucker to bite.

  8. Default

    In the 'completed listings', scroll down to the menu which provides 'highest number of bids first'. That is what I use as it gives an idea of how much interest there is in an item.

  9. Default

    Quote Originally Posted by barretcreek View Post
    In the 'completed listings', scroll down to the menu which provides 'highest number of bids first'. That is what I use as it gives an idea of how much interest there is in an item.
    But not necessarily how much serious interest when bidding begins at a ridiculously low level, like one dollar. Do the cheapskates who bid as "much" as, let's say, $100 on what's obviously, at a minimum, a $1000 gun REALLY think they have a chance of a snowball in hell of winning it?

  10. #10

    Default

    I start all of my auctions a .01 But I also often bid $25-200 for stuff I want on my "buying" list just so it stays on my screen after the auction ends. I've also bid up Reserve auctions just to see where the end figure is. It's kind of reckless,but I think it's fun. So far I haven't gotten stuck. The reserves are so silly I know I'll never hit it.
    If I should die before I wake...great,a little more sleep.

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