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-   -   ct-100 (http://www.videokarma.org/showthread.php?t=257077)

aerials 01-20-2013 08:11 PM

ct-100
 
30 minutes left on e-bay 5000.00 dollars looks pretty good. radiola3 is the seller

lnx64 01-20-2013 08:20 PM

I don't think a CT100 is worth $5000. That's a lot for something that's likely going to already need some work.

ohohyodafarted 01-20-2013 09:05 PM

It didn't sell. It didn't get any bids. Looks like CT100s have become commonplace. They aren't the rare items they once were.

David Roper 01-20-2013 09:13 PM

I wouldn't go that far. I think raising the minimum bid by $1K shortly into the auction may have made the difference between sale and no sale.

Eric H 01-20-2013 09:46 PM

Spending five grand for a set with an unobtainable CRT that can go to air at any time would scare me.

Maybe the ones that have survived this long weren't defective to start with?

bgadow 01-20-2013 10:25 PM

There is a limit to how many of these can sell for a decent price, but I don't know that things are that bad yet. I'd like to see it listed with a 99 cent starting price, more fun to watch the bidding that way and maybe the most effective way to find the real value of a set at a given time.

David Roper 01-20-2013 10:58 PM

Exactly. I think Nick nailed it when he said the seller didn't really want to part with it after all.

Steve McVoy 01-21-2013 07:14 AM

I think the price was too high. The tube was questionable, and the cabinet needed work.

oldtvman 01-21-2013 07:39 AM

Ct 100
 
Other than people who were in the business or collectors people don't even know what the CT100 was and is and what part it played in history. The value of this item it limited to a small group of tv collectors so the value is relative.

miniman82 01-21-2013 11:31 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by bgadow (Post 3059865)
There is a limit to how many of these can sell for a decent price, but I don't know that things are that bad yet. I'd like to see it listed with a 99 cent starting price, more fun to watch the bidding that way and maybe the most effective way to find the real value of a set at a given time.


You hit the nail on the head!

I list nearly all my auctions this way, because my feeling is that a no reserve auction starting at $0.99 will end at a price that reflects true market value. An auction starting as high as that one did puts bidders at a disadvantage, and they are less likely to 'bite'. Another way to do it is if you have a high value item you are uneasy about letting go for too low a price is just put a reserve on it, that way if bidding is slow and you don't hit your target minimum the item doesn't sell. This also puts bidders at a bit of a disadvantage, but it's one of the tactics I use at times to determine the market's viability. In other words, put up an item like that with an astronomical reserve so you're sure it won't sell. Then when the auction ends, you can see what people are willing to pay for it, and figure out if you really want to sell it or not. I think it only costs $0.50 each time you do it, which is cheap for high dollar items like this.

It would be a different story if the CRT was confirmed good before the auction, rather than 10 years ago or whatever it was. There's no way in hell I'm bidding on a 15GP22 equipped set if there's any question at all as to its functionality, they are just too hard to find if you need one. Heck, sets using the 21AXP22 are getting more than scarce these days so I'm even apprehensive about those ones. Soon approaching is the day when even sets using glass CRT's will command a premium, I predict it will happen within the next 10-15 years. That combined with a market recovery could send prices for vintage sets sky high, though if you ask me the current political situation will prevent any such recovery from happening in the near future....which is unfortunate, because sets are more likely to be saved when people know they command a premium price on the open market.

ohohyodafarted 01-21-2013 07:34 PM

Personally I like the "Best Offer" option with the "Buy IT Now" price. You can get your asking price using BIN or you can haggle back and forth on offers and test the waters to see what the market will bear.

Sandy G 01-21-2013 08:21 PM

I'd LOVE to have a CT-100...But I CAN'T afford $5K for an "Iffy" one..

ChrisW6ATV 01-26-2013 02:42 PM

A fully-restored one, with pictures of it operating, sold for around $4500 on Ebay a few years back.


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