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Metalworking (rec.crafts.metalworking) Discuss various aspects of working with metal, such as machining, welding, metal joining, screwing, casting, hardening/tempering, blacksmithing/forging, spinning and hammer work, sheet metal work. |
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#1
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The auction requirements were a 25% deposit of what you thought you were
going to spend. ID. Company card. blah blah blah. When I got there, all I did was fill out the stub on a card, and was handed back the top portion. I provided no identification of any type. I made no money deposit of any type. If I had been a putz, or had an ax to grind with this company, or overspent, or just had buyer's remorse, I could have filled in Joe Schmuckatelli, Hillbilly, Kansas, and bought a LOT of stuff that they would have been stuck with. If I was buying with cartel cash, I could have come and gone, and there would be absolutely no evidence save a little forensics that I was ever there. I didn't get the thought till today, and was wondering how the pre-registration and identification processes are at other auctions. Steve |
#2
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Steve B wrote:
The auction requirements were a 25% deposit of what you thought you were going to spend. ID. Company card. blah blah blah. When I got there, all I did was fill out the stub on a card, and was handed back the top portion. I provided no identification of any type. I made no money deposit of any type. If I had been a putz, or had an ax to grind with this company, or overspent, or just had buyer's remorse, I could have filled in Joe Schmuckatelli, Hillbilly, Kansas, and bought a LOT of stuff that they would have been stuck with. If I was buying with cartel cash, I could have come and gone, and there would be absolutely no evidence save a little forensics that I was ever there. I didn't get the thought till today, and was wondering how the pre-registration and identification processes are at other auctions. Steve If you actually place a bid, a guy sitting next to the auctioneer enters that info on a laptop, and they immediately check the balance on the cashier's check you left with them. When you exceed your deposit, they will re-open the bidding a few seconds after it was declared "sold" and say something like "oops, the winning bidder is disqualified, we're reopening the bidding" and start at the price before your last bid. I've seen that happen before. Kind of strange you got a bidder number without a deposit - I suspect that was an actual screw-up by the auctioneer's staff. Or else, it was a small auctioneering outfit that hasn't gotten their act together. Jon |
#3
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On Wed, 21 Dec 2011 09:03:19 -0800, "Steve B"
wrote: The auction requirements were a 25% deposit of what you thought you were going to spend. ID. Company card. blah blah blah. When I got there, all I did was fill out the stub on a card, and was handed back the top portion. I provided no identification of any type. I made no money deposit of any type. If I had been a putz, or had an ax to grind with this company, or overspent, or just had buyer's remorse, I could have filled in Joe Schmuckatelli, Hillbilly, Kansas, and bought a LOT of stuff that they would have been stuck with. If I was buying with cartel cash, I could have come and gone, and there would be absolutely no evidence save a little forensics that I was ever there. I didn't get the thought till today, and was wondering how the pre-registration and identification processes are at other auctions. Steve Most of the industrial auctions I've been to you put a $500 deposit down with a credit card and your business card (probably they have some kind of fine print that allows them to suck more out than that), get a bidder's number, and you're okay up to a couple thousand dollars bidding, IIRC. Above that you're supposed to deposit a cashier's check or make other arrangements to ensure you're good for the money. I think the business card is mostly so they can spam you with ads for future auctions. |
#4
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Spehro Pefhany wrote:
On Wed, 21 Dec 2011 09:03:19 -0800, "Steve B" wrote: The auction requirements were a 25% deposit of what you thought you were going to spend. ID. Company card. blah blah blah. When I got there, all I did was fill out the stub on a card, and was handed back the top portion. I provided no identification of any type. I made no money deposit of any type. If I had been a putz, or had an ax to grind with this company, or overspent, or just had buyer's remorse, I could have filled in Joe Schmuckatelli, Hillbilly, Kansas, and bought a LOT of stuff that they would have been stuck with. If I was buying with cartel cash, I could have come and gone, and there would be absolutely no evidence save a little forensics that I was ever there. I didn't get the thought till today, and was wondering how the pre-registration and identification processes are at other auctions. Steve Most of the industrial auctions I've been to you put a $500 deposit down with a credit card and your business card (probably they have some kind of fine print that allows them to suck more out than that), get a bidder's number, and you're okay up to a couple thousand dollars bidding, IIRC. Above that you're supposed to deposit a cashier's check or make other arrangements to ensure you're good for the money. I think the business card is mostly so they can spam you with ads for future auctions. In the late 1990s we'd just show up with a blank company check. That seemed to work. Other bidders had to keep writing checks out the auctioneer as they kept buying stuff if it started to get expensive. For under $10k of loot, nobody seemed to care. All the paperwork happened at the end. |
#5
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Cydrome Leader wrote:
In the late 1990s we'd just show up with a blank company check. That seemed to work. Other bidders had to keep writing checks out the auctioneer as they kept buying stuff if it started to get expensive. For under $10k of loot, nobody seemed to care. All the paperwork happened at the end. These days, anybody with a laser printer can forge a VERY convincing phony check. The banks are having a HUGE problem with forged cashier's checks being passed. I'm sure the auctioneers have written their contracts to be immune to these losses, but the sellers need them to at least try to verify that people really are going to pay. Jon |
#6
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On Wed, 21 Dec 2011 09:03:19 -0800, "Steve B"
wrote: The auction requirements were a 25% deposit of what you thought you were going to spend. ID. Company card. blah blah blah. When I got there, all I did was fill out the stub on a card, and was handed back the top portion. I provided no identification of any type. I made no money deposit of any type. If I had been a putz, or had an ax to grind with this company, or overspent, or just had buyer's remorse, I could have filled in Joe Schmuckatelli, Hillbilly, Kansas, and bought a LOT of stuff that they would have been stuck with. If I was buying with cartel cash, I could have come and gone, and there would be absolutely no evidence save a little forensics that I was ever there. I didn't get the thought till today, and was wondering how the pre-registration and identification processes are at other auctions. Steve There well may be "mid-west rules" but I've spent up to 60K at auction and never had them do more than take an imprint of my driver's licence. I do think they make it their business to ID the bad actors and get them moved to the side Karl |
#7
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#8
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On Wed, 21 Dec 2011 14:13:50 -0600, Jon Elson
wrote: Steve B wrote: The auction requirements were a 25% deposit of what you thought you were going to spend. ID. Company card. blah blah blah. When I got there, all I did was fill out the stub on a card, and was handed back the top portion. I provided no identification of any type. I made no money deposit of any type. If I had been a putz, or had an ax to grind with this company, or overspent, or just had buyer's remorse, I could have filled in Joe Schmuckatelli, Hillbilly, Kansas, and bought a LOT of stuff that they would have been stuck with. If I was buying with cartel cash, I could have come and gone, and there would be absolutely no evidence save a little forensics that I was ever there. I didn't get the thought till today, and was wondering how the pre-registration and identification processes are at other auctions. Steve If you actually place a bid, a guy sitting next to the auctioneer enters that info on a laptop, and they immediately check the balance on the cashier's check you left with them. When you exceed your deposit, they will re-open the bidding a few seconds after it was declared "sold" and say something like "oops, the winning bidder is disqualified, we're reopening the bidding" and start at the price before your last bid. I've seen that happen before. Kind of strange you got a bidder number without a deposit - I suspect that was an actual screw-up by the auctioneer's staff. Or else, it was a small auctioneering outfit that hasn't gotten their act together. Jon I've bid on stuff with no deposit, then after I won, I had someone come up to me and ask for money. A blank check worked then. After it was over and I went to pay they said certified checks only. My bill was under 200 and they took my company check as is. I tried a while ago to get a bank letter of gaurantee and that was like pulling teeth. Never did get one, they told me it takes 2 weeks. Might be easier now as I have a line of credit. Remove 333 to reply. Randy |
#9
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On Wed, 21 Dec 2011 09:03:19 -0800, "Steve B"
wrote: The auction requirements were a 25% deposit of what you thought you were going to spend. ID. Company card. blah blah blah. When I got there, all I did was fill out the stub on a card, and was handed back the top portion. I provided no identification of any type. I made no money deposit of any type. If I had been a putz, or had an ax to grind with this company, or overspent, or just had buyer's remorse, I could have filled in Joe Schmuckatelli, Hillbilly, Kansas, and bought a LOT of stuff that they would have been stuck with. If I was buying with cartel cash, I could have come and gone, and there would be absolutely no evidence save a little forensics that I was ever there. I didn't get the thought till today, and was wondering how the pre-registration and identification processes are at other auctions. Steve I think the last few I was at where I was not a repeat customer, I had to give them my drivers license. Remove 333 to reply. Randy |
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