Merkava_4
Banned
Does it depend on your connection speed?
I've got a 1.5Mbp/s connection.
I've got a 1.5Mbp/s connection.
Does it depend on your connection speed?
100Mbp/s ?!? Holy Smokes!![]()
Okay, I'm thinking I should click on [Place Bid] about 15 seconds before the auction ends if I want to snipe it.
Would that give me enough time?
I connect through DSL and manually snipe at 6 seconds. I will have 2 windows open; one to keep track of eBay auction time and the other with my bid confirmation ready to go. Works out pretty good for me that way.Okay, I'm thinking I should click on [Place Bid] about 15 seconds before the auction ends if I want to snipe it.
Would that give me enough time?
The highest max bid at the time the auction closes wins.What if my bid is $75.01 at 10 seconds to spare and the other guy bids after me with $75.00 at 5 seconds to spare; do I win?
No kidding. Who is your ISP? That's like 10x faster than cable.
At work, we are on the eve of having 1000Mbps connections to the net. Of course most workstations will only do 100Mbps tops, and the connections to the LAN switches are limited to that as well.
Is it unethical for me to be asking these questions?![]()
Ooops! Looks like I have no idea what I'm talking about!
Just went to a site to test my connection speed and I'm advised I am connecting at 1386kbps down and 679kbps up.
(I got that 100Mbps figure from the little "connected computers" icon thing on the bottom-right of a Windows PC... What does that mean?!)
Okay if I'm not mistaken, that converts over to 1.386Mbp/s.
At that speed, how much time in seconds before the auction ends could you place a bid?![]()
It means your local network connection (between your PC and your modem/router) is a 100Mbps Ethernet connection.
It sounds like your internet connection is a typical 1.5Mbps ADSL. ("A" means "asynchronous"....i.e., your download is faster than your upload).
Okay then, say the item is at $65.49 at 1 minute before the auction closes, do you place a bid at the next 50 cent increment at $65.99 or do you place a bid of $70.00 so you'll be sure to win?
Yes, and yes.That's what I have - ASDL at 1.5Mbp/s
Could I safely place a bid in the last 15 seconds and have it count? Do some guys wait even longer than that?
If you want to be sure to win, why not just bid $250?
Yes, and yes.
Many auctions are won in the final second or two. I don't use sniping software, but I am sure it is capable of bidding within a fraction of a second.
I know I've lost a few that way.
Because he almost certainly doesn't want to be on-the-hook for up to $250! you seem to be assuming that the bidding will only go to $75 or so at the high end, but what if some idiot really bid $245?! Our friend would have to pay!
What if the "idiot" was really the Seller (or his agent) shill-bidding. It might be hard to prove, and do not count on eBay to lift a finger to help you!
I don't use software, but I've found a 3-seconds-remaining manual snipe to be a successful strategy.
As an example, here's one I won today.

Of course. The point I was trying to make is that there must be a maximum you are willing to pay, and that takes precedence over winning the item at any cost.
Winning bid US $1.25 ?!? LOL!!!
The last of the big spenders. . . LOL!!!![]()
Looks like the bidding was really fierce on that one...LOL![]()
Winning bid US $1.25 ?!? LOL!!!
The last of the big spenders. . . LOL!!!![]()
I just now placed a bid and the very instant I did someone else placed a bid 50 cents higher. Could that person be using auction software?
How do figure out what the other guy's max bid is?
What the difference between [Place Bid] and [1 click bid]?




As a eBay seller, I wish that they were to use the software that continues the bidding process for 15 minutes after the last bid is placed. This would make it more like a true auction, and eliminate sniping completely. Yahoo auctions were like this, and as a buyer, I didn't care for it, but I honestly can see how it would benefit the sellers and the other buyers that would keep trying to outbid the other person. Live auctioneers will keep the bidding going as long as there are two people fighting over the same item. I would also like to see eBay giving sellers more of a choice as to how the bidding would go. I would like to have it so if a bidders bids $20, then that is the current bid, no matter that the person before them bid only $10. I have been to live auctions where the bidding started at $5.00, and I will then jump in at $30 if I want the item. That usually eliminates all the bottom feeders that will be bidding in small increments. It also helps to move the auction along faster.