GarageWarrior
Well-known member
Last weekend was helping out a family member liquidate his construction business and household inventory at a multi-consignor no-reserve auction. Brought in a 40' enclosed trailer, laid things out, good day, good weather, a little on the cool side, saw a lot of people browsing through stuff. Pricing was all over the place - some went for crazy money, most went dirt-cheap, much stuff was just given away 
Examples of stuff that did well - had a big roll of 3/4" pex tubing, about half-used - went for more than retail, boxes with sandpaper and Lenox blades did well, construction jackets and tool bags did well, plumbing valves went for good money.
Many other stuff did not fare well - 5 big boxes filled with electrical hardware went for $5 for all. A whole bunch of fans and electric space-heaters did not get a bid - auctioneer ended-up buying one heater for his trailer for $5, and the rest was combined with a $150 dehumidifier and went for $5 for all. Floor-standing band saw did not get a bid, got bundled with a new $400 dishwasher and also went for $5. $500 treadmill went for $15. Large Dewalt toolboxes went for $5 each at that auction. For comparison - I was selling much smaller Stanley toolboxes earlier at a weekly/reserve-price auction for $10 each.
I sold a few guitars - went for 30-90% retail (cheap guitars did better than more expensive guitars), sold a whole bunch of picture frames - went for about %15 retail.
Bought some stuff - a nice men's 26' bike for about %10 retail, also got a good deal on Schwinn electric scooter (but now it needs new batteries, so wasn't that good of a deal after all). My sister scored a huge set of fine-china for $5 (checked - about $300 retail), she was the only bidder. Also got a $1100 painting for $10. On the high side - saw a metal gazebo go for %200 retail, a small end-table went for $350 - was a little dinged up, must be really good wood.
All in all - some categories do well, but hard to find out what goes well where. One way is to attend a bunch of regional auctions and track closing prices and average-out seasonal variations, but who's got time for that
. Auctioneers are of little help due to obvious conflict of interest. Somebody should come up with a consulting service to help sellers (do they exist?).
Examples of stuff that did well - had a big roll of 3/4" pex tubing, about half-used - went for more than retail, boxes with sandpaper and Lenox blades did well, construction jackets and tool bags did well, plumbing valves went for good money.
Many other stuff did not fare well - 5 big boxes filled with electrical hardware went for $5 for all. A whole bunch of fans and electric space-heaters did not get a bid - auctioneer ended-up buying one heater for his trailer for $5, and the rest was combined with a $150 dehumidifier and went for $5 for all. Floor-standing band saw did not get a bid, got bundled with a new $400 dishwasher and also went for $5. $500 treadmill went for $15. Large Dewalt toolboxes went for $5 each at that auction. For comparison - I was selling much smaller Stanley toolboxes earlier at a weekly/reserve-price auction for $10 each.
I sold a few guitars - went for 30-90% retail (cheap guitars did better than more expensive guitars), sold a whole bunch of picture frames - went for about %15 retail.
Bought some stuff - a nice men's 26' bike for about %10 retail, also got a good deal on Schwinn electric scooter (but now it needs new batteries, so wasn't that good of a deal after all). My sister scored a huge set of fine-china for $5 (checked - about $300 retail), she was the only bidder. Also got a $1100 painting for $10. On the high side - saw a metal gazebo go for %200 retail, a small end-table went for $350 - was a little dinged up, must be really good wood.
All in all - some categories do well, but hard to find out what goes well where. One way is to attend a bunch of regional auctions and track closing prices and average-out seasonal variations, but who's got time for that
. Auctioneers are of little help due to obvious conflict of interest. Somebody should come up with a consulting service to help sellers (do they exist?).


