Yeah, all of these online markets do have pluses and minuses. the eBay route can certainly add up the fees with listing fees, PayPal, Shipping, etc.. And although it reaches a large audience, there is no guarantee it will sell or that a bid will win. But, it helps filter out a lot of flakiness (not all). I still like Craigslist and fine Mustang classifieds such as Stangnet

. Sometimes it isn't the method of the market, unfortunately it is just the way people can be sometimes. We all want a good deal and we all want items to be represented reasonably well and certainly truthfully. I am willing to accept lower bids than my asking prices, especially if the bidder is buying multiple items (which I am -look around..). But, if one is going to make a lower offer then they should respect that they are getting a price reduction and do what is reasonably possible to make the rest of the deal go quick and easy.
Perhaps, my expectations a bit high, or it is the tone of this thread??
I usually do try to do take some time to do research on each part I sell (market price, vendor info, applications, etc..) and have even looked up information for prospective buyers (I actually helped someone with connector pinouts and pulled up a drawing for them, took extra photos, etc..). So, there is some additional efforts put into some of these listings which adds an element beyond just the cost of parts. (I know there was a thread earlier, were someone mentioned someone wanting them to give more information on what their part's application is..) I like cars and the different projects people are working on and can actually enjoy helping people with their projects (where possible). I believe that is why many of the message boards like Stangnet come together is for this type of sharing of information. The classifieds is probably almost secondary. Any Admins want to chime in on the founding principles, etc.??