A piece of used gear is worth exactly what someone will pay for it.
Not what some pseudo "expert" thinks it's worth, unless that "expert" is making a valid cash offer for the piece. Talk isn't just cheap; it's free.
I get chaffed whenever I read posts referring to the value of a particular item; rather than post "it's worth around $300-$350", how about stepping up to the plate and offering $300 cash? THAT would have relevance
If you don't have the cash, who really cares what your "learned opinion" is?
Since being a bass player for 41 years and working in music stores since 1973 (and opening my own "brick and mortar shop" from 1985-2007), i do consider myself an "expert" (not a "psuedo expert") on the value of musical instruments. I have been repairing guitars and amps during for 3 1/2 decades and determine the value of instruments based on its original retail price, its current market price, the quality of components used to build it, the workmanship involved, its originality, its rarity, and its condition. I have often said that if you don't recognize a good deal when you see it, then you don't deserve one.
johnk
Sorry to have apparently hit a nerve, my rant was not directed at anyone specifically.
Regretfully though, I must stand by my assessment of gear values. If you use your vast musical gear acumen to arrive at a value for a piece that you are not willing or able to back up with CASH, why would anyone even care what
your opinion is?
It doesn't matter what a person’s real or even embellished background is;
money talks and b*llshit walks.
Here’s an example;
If you have
never even walked in to a music store and feel a particular 200S is worth $2500, and
you put up the money, well then, that 200S was worth $2500. Likewise, if you were the seller of this theoretical 200S and were asking $2500, and some moron actually paid up for it, well then, that 200S was worth $2500.
Worth $2500 to the buyer and the seller, because both parties agreed on a value, a deal was made and money changed hands.
I always suggest "completed auctions" on eBay when looking for values. While I think eBay runs on the high side of real world transactions, and is tainted by non paying buyers and 12 yr old children, it at least it
reflects what someone was actually willing to pay instead of some "experts" opinion.
To summarize; JohnK, if you are willing to back up your opinion of a pieces value with your own
hard earned cash, your opinion definitely has value. On the other hand, if you spout out theoretical numbers based on your experience, opinion, gut feeling, tarot cards, tea leaves, etc...
Who freekin' cares?