J.Francis wrote on Jan 25
th, 2023 at 6:43am:
There are some really interesting items in this auction but if you're going to bid you need to read the special terms. Proxibid will inform the auction house of your maximum bid and also allow the auction house and it's employees to bid on each item. If you left a maximum bid of $3000.00 on a rifle and regular bidding slowed at $1500.00, chances are you're going to pay $2950.00 for the rifle. Be careful.
At the risk of offending anyone, I've got to jump in here. I bid in a small way in probably 35 different auctions, the majority covered by Proxibid. The safest auctions are the ones that reset the bidding clock back about 2 minutes every time a bid is beat. No shill bidders that way. Just keep in mind that guns, even cheap ones, are almost always bid up to or even over the accepted going price. It's just not smart to post a high max bid early. You increase it in stages. You can tell how determined a competing bidder is by how he responds to your bids, read your hidden max bids. When he starts slowing down, he's wavering, real or shill bidder. If you're still within your comfort range, you're in the driver's seat and you should win the item for your price. What the smart bidder is really after is satisfaction, a gun or barrel or whatever he needs or can't live without and has the money for it. Best, though, are the total surprises. Here are three examples: I bid on a "Mauser shotgun, 28 Gauge". Now, bolt action shotguns to my knowledge were born after WWI, fashioned out of surplus rifles. Since I have an excellent Mauser barrel, I bid and got it for app. $200, plus shipping. It turned out to be a professionally sporterized K98k 7mm, mfg. in Erfurt in 1937 with clear waffenamts. Excellent deep reblue, pristine bore, beautiful stock. Some "shotgun". Example 2: A #5 RB, average wood, described as "rough". Someone had traced a thin line of welding along the bottom of each receiver face, obscuring some stamping. I paid $200, shipping etc. another $60. A tight-fitting dry patch through the bore and it appeared UNFIRED. Turned out to be a Swedish #5, bearing the crowned block "C". Example 3: A Model 1867 .50-70 RB, Remington mfg., had a period Swedish rebarrel, shiny and pristine the whole way through. So you really can find happiness in an auction, and have fun too.