Yup, we know what the lesser EVIL is.JNewell wrote:Right on. Uncle Joe and Chairman Mao knew exactly how to deal with people like that.

Yup, we know what the lesser EVIL is.JNewell wrote:Right on. Uncle Joe and Chairman Mao knew exactly how to deal with people like that.
That's an excellent result that came from your passion for spydies.Donut wrote:How about this one. I pre-ordered an EDC Forums Manix 2, someone else that I know pre-ordered one.
When they arrived to EDC Forums and were ready to ship, the person I know didn't want his, so he passed on his pre-order to me. I paid for it and had it sit for a few months. I ended up trading his Manix for three knives whose totals added up to double what I paid for the Manix.
Donut wrote:I right out told him what I paid for it and he told me he was fine with the trade.
+1wrdwrght wrote:I detest speculators.
This is the case with me. Often I am not sure if I am going to end up carrying a particular model until after I have had it awhile. If I find that I am not carrying it much after a year or so, I sell it. Sometimes it sells for more than I pay for it, sometimes not. That all depends on the demand, which I don't control. For knives I have sold, I have done all via E-bay auction. The bidders control what it sells for. Sometimes I trade. Depends on my mood. I do have some that I don't carry that I save and will never sell because I like them that much.Sequimite wrote:Churning knives is the only way I can afford to buy the Spydies I want.
This is not correct. It is applicable to some sprints. Quite a few sprints available for a long time. I paid $170 for my Shabaria shipped at NGK about a year and half ago, you can pick it up for $130 now on secondary market or at GPK for a few bucks more. I sold my Zowada right away, because I didn't like it loosing only $15.Agent_Ohm wrote:Every sprint in the last 2 to 3 years I have seen go for absurd prices on both ebay and bst sections of other forums.
+1Sequimite wrote: To answer the poll, yes, I often buy Spydies in order to resell, trade or as gifts. Churning knives is the only way I can afford to buy the Spydies I want.
I don't see how you can separate the 2. Spyderco dealers and spyderco, sell to, and make money off people who buy, sell and trade knives. I see it as a symbiotic relationship. I feel confident that if BST folks didn't exist, then places like CS and KW wouldn't sell sprint run knives as fast as they just did. Nor would you see as many new sprint run knives being commissioned by vendors.NoFair wrote:I don't. Mostly because imho it isn't worth the effort and it just drives prices up and availability down. I'd rather see Spyderco and dealers making money than flippers.
jtoler_9 wrote:I don't see how you can separate the 2. Spyderco dealers and spyderco, sell to, and make money off people who buy, sell and trade knives. I see it as a symbiotic relationship. I feel confident that if BST folks didn't exist, then places like CS and KW wouldn't sell sprint run knives as fast as they just did. Nor would you see as many new sprint run knives being commissioned by vendors.
If there is a market where I can commission a sprint and sell out and pay off my loan in a month, then I am probably going to do it. So if you kill off the "flippers" then you probably kill a few future sprint run knives because there is more risk for the dealers.
I could be wrong here, I am not a dealer. And my "flipping" is limited to probably 10 knives in 2 years. So I am still new to this, but the market is the market. It's the same thing that happened to the housing market. People were buying and flipping homes because they knew that the equity would continue to go up "forever" or so they thought. At some point people will settle down and stop dropping 400+ for a CF Para 2 S90v and the flipping will slowly diminish. What is surprising is that I don't think we have found the ceiling yet. There is no moral high ground here. It is what it is. Most of us have cool new sprint run knives because there is a market for it.
Agree. Reminds me of a dealer that raised the price of a sprint above the prevailing street price (but still below MSRP) a few years ago. The dealer was widely vilified here and elsewhere. Never made sense to me.jtoler_9 wrote:I don't see how you can separate the 2. Spyderco dealers and spyderco, sell to, and make money off people who buy, sell and trade knives. I see it as a symbiotic relationship. I feel confident that if BST folks didn't exist, then places like CS and KW wouldn't sell sprint run knives as fast as they just did. Nor would you see as many new sprint run knives being commissioned by vendors.
If there is a market where I can commission a sprint and sell out and pay off my loan in a month, then I am probably going to do it. So if you kill off the "flippers" then you probably kill a few future sprint run knives because there is more risk for the dealers.
I could be wrong here, I am not a dealer. And my "flipping" is limited to probably 10 knives in 2 years. So I am still new to this, but the market is the market. It's the same thing that happened to the housing market. People were buying and flipping homes because they knew that the equity would continue to go up "forever" or so they thought. At some point people will settle down and stop dropping 400+ for a CF Para 2 S90v and the flipping will slowly diminish. What is surprising is that I don't think we have found the ceiling yet. There is no moral high ground here. It is what it is. Most of us have cool new sprint run knives because there is a market for it.