ERV wrote:Cd
Where would you try to trade or sell this F6? My son has an e-bay account. I think the guy got it from Dodd camera, do they take trades? I have been so busy with the snow the last few days I have not had time to do much else. I will have some time tomorrow, so I can call around. The thing looks like it is brand new, I can not find one mark or flaw on it or the lenses. Even in side the camera looks like there has never been any film slid across the rail. Where the strap hooks is even clean. I will try to get some pics tomorrow to show you all what a great gift this was. If I can get the money from it I would like to go with the D300s, if not the D90 will have to do. Will be fun getting back into making pics the way I want them. Always love to make my F2 work.
Erv
I have sold all of my old Nikon gear on eBay. Since I am a pro, I upgrade when something considerably better comes out, and always sell off the "old" stuff on eBay.
Film cameras have a "cult" following. Pros are not, for the most part, using them anymore. The F6 was a pro camera. But, there are film-obsessed people who just have to have a film camera, and they will buy a good film camera.
As for the extra lenses, they are good for film or digital. They should sell well on eBay. Plus, both the camera and the lenses are reasonably cheap and easy to ship.
If your son has a good eBay feedback rating, then have him sell them for you. If you lived near me, I would sell them for you. I sell stuff for friends and family, but I have to see it and know for sure what I'm selling -- I have 100-percent positive feedback, and want to keep it that way.
If your son has a PayPal account, use that for payment.
Be absolutely honest about your items, but sell "as-is." Don't offer refunds. If you are honest, and a buyer wants a refund, then the buyer is an idiot who can't read. If there is a legitimate problem, you can always agree to a refund, but if you offer it up front, you could end up "renting" your stuff to someone for free.
Here is what you should do. Find similar items on eBay, put them on your son's "watch" list, and see what they sell for. That will tell you what to expect to get for yours.
Then, post yours up. Don't use a "reserve." Instead, set the opening bid at about 20 percent below what the going rate is. Post your items on a Tuesday, and specify a five-day auction. NOTHING is likely to happen, as far as bids, until the last day of the auction. The last hour of the auction is when the fur starts to fly.
If your son has a feedback rating like mine, you can also list a "Buy it Now" price, and if someone wants it bad enough, you'll get a great sale price in a hurry. About ten percent of my sales are "Buy it Now."
Research for a week or two, then post your auction. That's the way it works. EBay is awesome, as long as you understand it.
I think you will do well -- especially on the lenses.
BTW, if you have the original packaging and manuals, that will be a big plus in and auction. Especially the packaging. You can always download the manuals from the Nikon website.
CD