Results 11 to 19 of 19
-
04-17-2013, 07:19 PM #11

i understand all that ... was looking for opinions i guess if somebody has sold something similiar or if you owned the card , would you ask more or less as compared to the original in the completed listing ... wasn't looking for a set in stone answer
-
-
04-17-2013, 07:25 PM #12
When I sold stuff everything started out at 99 cents and ended at whatever, so I'm no help with what an asking price should be. But yeah, if the last auto sold for $100, then I'd try 1.5 times that. I had no idea the card actually booked for what it does, and I had no idea it was actually kinda rare, at least as far as eBay goes.
Too bad it's outta my price range :(
-
04-18-2013, 09:01 PM #13
If you sold it I say you'd get between 125-150 with it being the buyback variation of the card. My personal opinion based on what the others have sold for. Ta-da?
-
-
04-18-2013, 09:11 PM #14
-
04-18-2013, 09:34 PM #15
1.5 times oh wait yeah, damn, math is hard :)
-
-
04-18-2013, 11:16 PM #16
The buyback is rarer so it should get a premium.
The only time I could see otherwise, is if the card was really sp'd and its a popular set. If I were building that auto set, I would not want the buyback.
-
04-19-2013, 01:17 PM #17
I had a few buyback autos from that set and I didn't really see any premium in price compared to the original.
-
-
04-19-2013, 09:24 PM #18
Many Buybacks have an autograph added to them. The originals didn't have that autograph. A purist would argue that if the card is a Mint Condition Rookie from the time when there were only 1,2, or 3 total sets, basically from 1933 onward to 1989, then they'd rather have the Rookie on it's own.
I am of that slant myself.
-
05-01-2013, 10:06 PM #19
Welllllllllllllllllll I guess now you know eh? If it makes you feel any better I did drive up the price on the Kesler / Luongo patch I lost out on..........
-





















