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#1
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unblocked ICOM IC-R3
I bought one of these from Bandercom in 2002 and played with it for a couple
of days, then put it in a drawer where it's been sitting for years unused. I sell items on eBay once in a while but this is a prohibited item. Anyone know where I could find a buyer? It seems like a waste for it to go unused. |
#2
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unblocked ICOM IC-R3
"Icom IC-R3" wrote in
: I bought one of these from Bandercom in 2002 and played with it for a couple of days, then put it in a drawer where it's been sitting for years unused. I sell items on eBay once in a while but this is a prohibited item. Anyone know where I could find a buyer? It seems like a waste for it to go unused. You can sell them on ebay, I did a couple months ago [went for over $350 plus shipping]. Just do not trumpet the fact that it is "cellular capable" "unblocked" "full coverage" "no gaps" ect, especially in the title. In the description I said it was purchased in Canada and thus was not frequency hobbled, I left it for people to draw their own conclusions. Listed the frequency coverage as 0.495-2450 MHz with no qualifying buzz word like "uniterupted" or some such. Some who did not get the hint emailed asking about coverage and I told them yes indeed, it had full coverage - I even published one of these questions on the auction page on the last day. I see at least one up right now, the only give away is "Government/Export version: 0.495-2450.095 MHz", and ebay generally does not look for stuff like that unless someone rats them out. Still, your auction could get **** canned I guess, all I am saying is that it likely won't if you can refrain from buzz words and outright give aways. Also, I would not advise advertising your auction here, except maybe in the last 2 hours. Its happened more than once here that within hours of these unblocked scanners being advertised here for ebay auctions, they get pulled off. If the worse should happen and the auction gets yanked, you get a refund on auction charges and a warning to not do it again or else, so theres not a whole lot of risk as far as risking your account or something. Craigslist is an option also [thats where I got mine, got it for $200 and sold it for over $350]. |
#3
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unblocked ICOM IC-R3
Thanks a lot for your helpful info!
You can sell them on ebay, I did a couple months ago [went for over $350 plus shipping]. Just do not trumpet the fact that it is "cellular capable" "unblocked" "full coverage" "no gaps" ect, especially in the title. In the description I said it was purchased in Canada and thus was not frequency hobbled, I left it for people to draw their own conclusions. Listed the frequency coverage as 0.495-2450 MHz with no qualifying buzz word like "uniterupted" or some such. Some who did not get the hint emailed asking about coverage and I told them yes indeed, it had full coverage - I even published one of these questions on the auction page on the last day. I see at least one up right now, the only give away is "Government/Export version: 0.495-2450.095 MHz", and ebay generally does not look for stuff like that unless someone rats them out. Still, your auction could get **** canned I guess, all I am saying is that it likely won't if you can refrain from buzz words and outright give aways. Also, I would not advise advertising your auction here, except maybe in the last 2 hours. Its happened more than once here that within hours of these unblocked scanners being advertised here for ebay auctions, they get pulled off. If the worse should happen and the auction gets yanked, you get a refund on auction charges and a warning to not do it again or else, so theres not a whole lot of risk as far as risking your account or something. Craigslist is an option also [thats where I got mine, got it for $200 and sold it for over $350]. |
#4
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unblocked ICOM IC-R3
"Your name" wrote in message
... "Icom IC-R3" wrote in : I bought one of these from Bandercom in 2002 and played with it for a couple of days, then put it in a drawer where it's been sitting for years unused. I sell items on eBay once in a while but this is a prohibited item. Anyone know where I could find a buyer? It seems like a waste for it to go unused. You can sell them on ebay, I did a couple months ago [went for over $350 plus shipping]. Just do not trumpet the fact that it is "cellular capable" "unblocked" "full coverage" "no gaps" ect, especially in the title. In the description I said it was purchased in Canada and thus was not frequency hobbled, I left it for people to draw their own conclusions. Listed the frequency coverage as 0.495-2450 MHz with no qualifying buzz word like "uniterupted" or some such. Some who did not get the hint emailed asking about coverage and I told them yes indeed, it had full coverage - I even published one of these questions on the auction page on the last day. I see at least one up right now, the only give away is "Government/Export version: 0.495-2450.095 MHz", and ebay generally does not look for stuff like that unless someone rats them out. Still, your auction could get **** canned I guess, all I am saying is that it likely won't if you can refrain from buzz words and outright give aways. Also, I would not advise advertising your auction here, except maybe in the last 2 hours. Its happened more than once here that within hours of these unblocked scanners being advertised here for ebay auctions, they get pulled off. If the worse should happen and the auction gets yanked, you get a refund on auction charges and a warning to not do it again or else, so theres not a whole lot of risk as far as risking your account or something. Craigslist is an option also [thats where I got mine, got it for $200 and sold it for over $350]. --------- A few years back I read about another approach which was to photograph it while tuned to a cellular frequency. Knowledgeable buyers will get it right away without having to use tricky language. It's easier to search for keywords in the listings than to process the images for anyone trying to screen these units out. Of course, that also makes it a little harder for potential buyers to find it with a standard search. I don't know if that will fly on eBay, but maybe worth a try. - Doug |
#5
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unblocked ICOM IC-R3
"DougSlug" wrote in
: "Your name" wrote in message ... "Icom IC-R3" wrote in : I bought one of these from Bandercom in 2002 and played with it for a couple of days, then put it in a drawer where it's been sitting for years unused. I sell items on eBay once in a while but this is a prohibited item. Anyone know where I could find a buyer? It seems like a waste for it to go unused. You can sell them on ebay, I did a couple months ago [went for over $350 plus shipping]. Just do not trumpet the fact that it is "cellular capable" "unblocked" "full coverage" "no gaps" ect, especially in the title. In the description I said it was purchased in Canada and thus was not frequency hobbled, I left it for people to draw their own conclusions. Listed the frequency coverage as 0.495-2450 MHz with no qualifying buzz word like "uniterupted" or some such. Some who did not get the hint emailed asking about coverage and I told them yes indeed, it had full coverage - I even published one of these questions on the auction page on the last day. I see at least one up right now, the only give away is "Government/Export version: 0.495-2450.095 MHz", and ebay generally does not look for stuff like that unless someone rats them out. Still, your auction could get **** canned I guess, all I am saying is that it likely won't if you can refrain from buzz words and outright give aways. Also, I would not advise advertising your auction here, except maybe in the last 2 hours. Its happened more than once here that within hours of these unblocked scanners being advertised here for ebay auctions, they get pulled off. If the worse should happen and the auction gets yanked, you get a refund on auction charges and a warning to not do it again or else, so theres not a whole lot of risk as far as risking your account or something. Craigslist is an option also [thats where I got mine, got it for $200 and sold it for over $350]. --------- A few years back I read about another approach which was to photograph it while tuned to a cellular frequency. Knowledgeable buyers will get it right away without having to use tricky language. It's easier to search for keywords in the listings than to process the images for anyone trying to screen these units out. Of course, that also makes it a little harder for potential buyers to find it with a standard search. I don't know if that will fly on eBay, but maybe worth a try. - Doug Yes, I did that in my listing also, among the half dozen pics were a couple with cell freqs tuned in. No matter what you do though, there will always be the clueless, curious or doubters who will enquire if the scanner has any gaps ... As if the cell band really matters these days - But no doubt a no block scanner will fetch a better price. I suppose it might some time in the future if they reallocate these freqs for other use. From what I have seen, most people get away with it no prob unless they are too bold on their title or someone rats them out ... You have much better odds of having a listing of a Nazi war relic pulled than a full coverage scanner. I listed a Nazi war time magazine, I thought historical paper items were allowed, but it got canned within an hour, and I was told no listings of propaganda would be tolerated. |
#6
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unblocked ICOM IC-R3
On 7 feb, 00:53, "Icom IC-R3" wrote:
I bought one of these from Bandercom in 2002 and played with it for a couple of days, then put it in a drawer where it's been sitting for years unused. I sell items on eBay once in a while but this is a prohibited item. Anyone know where I could find a buyer? It seems like a waste for it to go unused. how much for it my friend |
#7
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unblocked ICOM IC-R3
On Feb 11, 5:52 pm, Your name wrote:
"DougSlug" wrote : "Your name" wrote in message . .. "Icom IC-R3" wrote in : I bought one of these from Bandercom in 2002 and played with it for a couple of days, then put it in a drawer where it's been sitting for years unused. I sell items on eBay once in a while but this is a prohibited item. Anyone know where I could find a buyer? It seems like a waste for it to go unused. You can sell them on ebay, I did a couple months ago [went for over $350 plus shipping]. Just do not trumpet the fact that it is "cellular capable" "unblocked" "full coverage" "no gaps" ect, especially in the title. In the description I said it was purchased in Canada and thus was not frequency hobbled, I left it for people to draw their own conclusions. Listed the frequency coverage as 0.495-2450 MHz with no qualifying buzz word like "uniterupted" or some such. Some who did not get the hint emailed asking about coverage and I told them yes indeed, it had full coverage - I even published one of these questions on the auction page on the last day. I see at least one up right now, the only give away is "Government/Export version: 0.495-2450.095 MHz", and ebay generally does not look for stuff like that unless someone rats them out. Still, your auction could get **** canned I guess, all I am saying is that it likely won't if you can refrain from buzz words and outright give aways. Also, I would not advise advertising your auction here, except maybe in the last 2 hours. Its happened more than once here that within hours of these unblocked scanners being advertised here for ebay auctions, they get pulled off. If the worse should happen and the auction gets yanked, you get a refund on auction charges and a warning to not do it again or else, so theres not a whole lot of risk as far as risking your account or something. Craigslist is an option also [thats where I got mine, got it for $200 and sold it for over $350]. --------- A few years back I read about another approach which was to photograph it while tuned to a cellular frequency. Knowledgeable buyers will get it right away without having to use tricky language. It's easier to search for keywords in the listings than to process the images for anyone trying to screen these units out. Of course, that also makes it a little harder for potential buyers to find it with a standard search. I don't know if that will fly on eBay, but maybe worth a try. - Doug Yes, I did that in my listing also, among the half dozen pics were a couple with cell freqs tuned in. No matter what you do though, there will always be the clueless, curious or doubters who will enquire if the scanner has any gaps ... As if the cell band really matters these days - But no doubt a no block scanner will fetch a better price. I suppose it might some time in the future if they reallocate these freqs for other use. From what I have seen, most people get away with it no prob unless they are too bold on their title or someone rats them out ... You have much better odds of having a listing of a Nazi war relic pulled than a full coverage scanner. I listed a Nazi war time magazine, I thought historical paper items were allowed, but it got canned within an hour, and I was told no listings of propaganda would be tolerated.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - curious. Since Ebay allows legal scanners to be sold... If you have a cell capable scanner bought in the U.S. before the law outlawing manufacture of such scanners went into effect (which is perfectly leggal to sell in the U.S.) and Ebay pulled your item because you said "unblocked" or "cell capable", ........ then what ? |
#8
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unblocked ICOM IC-R3
"------------" wrote in
oups.com: On Feb 11, 5:52 pm, Your name wrote: "DougSlug" wrote : "Your name" wrote in message . .. "Icom IC-R3" wrote in : I bought one of these from Bandercom in 2002 and played with it for a couple of days, then put it in a drawer where it's been sitting for years unused. I sell items on eBay once in a while but this is a prohibited item. Anyone know where I could find a buyer? It seems like a waste for it to go unused. You can sell them on ebay, I did a couple months ago [went for over $350 plus shipping]. Just do not trumpet the fact that it is "cellular capable" "unblocked" "full coverage" "no gaps" ect, especially in the title. In the description I said it was purchased in Canada and thus was not frequency hobbled, I left it for people to draw their own conclusions. Listed the frequency coverage as 0.495-2450 MHz with no qualifying buzz word like "uniterupted" or some such. Some who did not get the hint emailed asking about coverage and I told them yes indeed, it had full coverage - I even published one of these questions on the auction page on the last day. I see at least one up right now, the only give away is "Government/Export version: 0.495-2450.095 MHz", and ebay generally does not look for stuff like that unless someone rats them out. Still, your auction could get **** canned I guess, all I am saying is that it likely won't if you can refrain from buzz words and outright give aways. Also, I would not advise advertising your auction here, except maybe in the last 2 hours. Its happened more than once here that within hours of these unblocked scanners being advertised here for ebay auctions, they get pulled off. If the worse should happen and the auction gets yanked, you get a refund on auction charges and a warning to not do it again or else, so theres not a whole lot of risk as far as risking your account or something. Craigslist is an option also [thats where I got mine, got it for $200 and sold it for over $350]. --------- A few years back I read about another approach which was to photograph it while tuned to a cellular frequency. Knowledgeable buyers will get it right away without having to use tricky language. It's easier to search for keywords in the listings than to process the images for anyone trying to screen these units out. Of course, that also makes it a little harder for potential buyers to find it with a standard search. I don't know if that will fly on eBay, but maybe worth a try. - Doug Yes, I did that in my listing also, among the half dozen pics were a couple with cell freqs tuned in. No matter what you do though, there will always be the clueless, curious or doubters who will enquire if the scanner has any gaps ... As if the cell band really matters these days - But no doubt a no block scanner will fetch a better price. I suppose it might some time in the future if they reallocate these freqs for other use. From what I have seen, most people get away with it no prob unless they are too bold on their title or someone rats them out ... You have much better odds of having a listing of a Nazi war relic pulled than a full coverage scanner. I listed a Nazi war time magazine, I thought historical paper items were allowed, but it got canned within an hour, and I was told no listings of propaganda would be tolerated.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - curious. Since Ebay allows legal scanners to be sold... If you have a cell capable scanner bought in the U.S. before the law outlawing manufacture of such scanners went into effect (which is perfectly leggal to sell in the U.S.) and Ebay pulled your item because you said "unblocked" or "cell capable", ........ then what ? While it is perfectly legal to own, use or privately sell a pre-ban scanner in the U.S., there is not much to be done if ebay, a private venue [of which you have to agree to TOS to use] decides that they do not want people residing in the USA to sell unblocked scanners to other people living in the USA. I think that is the case. Ebay decided that, rather than going on a case by case basis, to just issue a general blanket ban. |
#9
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unblocked ICOM IC-R3
I see un-blocked scanners on e-bay ALL the time
see how they word their ads and adjust as needed "Your name" wrote in message ... "------------" wrote in oups.com: On Feb 11, 5:52 pm, Your name wrote: "DougSlug" wrote : "Your name" wrote in message . .. "Icom IC-R3" wrote in : I bought one of these from Bandercom in 2002 and played with it for a couple of days, then put it in a drawer where it's been sitting for years unused. I sell items on eBay once in a while but this is a prohibited item. Anyone know where I could find a buyer? It seems like a waste for it to go unused. You can sell them on ebay, I did a couple months ago [went for over $350 plus shipping]. Just do not trumpet the fact that it is "cellular capable" "unblocked" "full coverage" "no gaps" ect, especially in the title. In the description I said it was purchased in Canada and thus was not frequency hobbled, I left it for people to draw their own conclusions. Listed the frequency coverage as 0.495-2450 MHz with no qualifying buzz word like "uniterupted" or some such. Some who did not get the hint emailed asking about coverage and I told them yes indeed, it had full coverage - I even published one of these questions on the auction page on the last day. I see at least one up right now, the only give away is "Government/Export version: 0.495-2450.095 MHz", and ebay generally does not look for stuff like that unless someone rats them out. Still, your auction could get **** canned I guess, all I am saying is that it likely won't if you can refrain from buzz words and outright give aways. Also, I would not advise advertising your auction here, except maybe in the last 2 hours. Its happened more than once here that within hours of these unblocked scanners being advertised here for ebay auctions, they get pulled off. If the worse should happen and the auction gets yanked, you get a refund on auction charges and a warning to not do it again or else, so theres not a whole lot of risk as far as risking your account or something. Craigslist is an option also [thats where I got mine, got it for $200 and sold it for over $350]. --------- A few years back I read about another approach which was to photograph it while tuned to a cellular frequency. Knowledgeable buyers will get it right away without having to use tricky language. It's easier to search for keywords in the listings than to process the images for anyone trying to screen these units out. Of course, that also makes it a little harder for potential buyers to find it with a standard search. I don't know if that will fly on eBay, but maybe worth a try. - Doug Yes, I did that in my listing also, among the half dozen pics were a couple with cell freqs tuned in. No matter what you do though, there will always be the clueless, curious or doubters who will enquire if the scanner has any gaps ... As if the cell band really matters these days - But no doubt a no block scanner will fetch a better price. I suppose it might some time in the future if they reallocate these freqs for other use. From what I have seen, most people get away with it no prob unless they are too bold on their title or someone rats them out ... You have much better odds of having a listing of a Nazi war relic pulled than a full coverage scanner. I listed a Nazi war time magazine, I thought historical paper items were allowed, but it got canned within an hour, and I was told no listings of propaganda would be tolerated.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - curious. Since Ebay allows legal scanners to be sold... If you have a cell capable scanner bought in the U.S. before the law outlawing manufacture of such scanners went into effect (which is perfectly leggal to sell in the U.S.) and Ebay pulled your item because you said "unblocked" or "cell capable", ........ then what ? While it is perfectly legal to own, use or privately sell a pre-ban scanner in the U.S., there is not much to be done if ebay, a private venue [of which you have to agree to TOS to use] decides that they do not want people residing in the USA to sell unblocked scanners to other people living in the USA. I think that is the case. Ebay decided that, rather than going on a case by case basis, to just issue a general blanket ban. |
#10
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unblocked ICOM IC-R3
"labtech_one" wrote in news:75253$461d5c12$438c6e36
: I see un-blocked scanners on e-bay ALL the time see how they word their ads and adjust as needed Yes, you see them. Alot get **** canned too, and alot are based in Canada/Asia, who are not under the ridiculous restrictions of U.S. sellers. "Your name" wrote in message ... "------------" wrote in oups.com: On Feb 11, 5:52 pm, Your name wrote: "DougSlug" wrote : "Your name" wrote in message . .. "Icom IC-R3" wrote in : I bought one of these from Bandercom in 2002 and played with it for a couple of days, then put it in a drawer where it's been sitting for years unused. I sell items on eBay once in a while but this is a prohibited item. Anyone know where I could find a buyer? It seems like a waste for it to go unused. You can sell them on ebay, I did a couple months ago [went for over $350 plus shipping]. Just do not trumpet the fact that it is "cellular capable" "unblocked" "full coverage" "no gaps" ect, especially in the title. In the description I said it was purchased in Canada and thus was not frequency hobbled, I left it for people to draw their own conclusions. Listed the frequency coverage as 0.495-2450 MHz with no qualifying buzz word like "uniterupted" or some such. Some who did not get the hint emailed asking about coverage and I told them yes indeed, it had full coverage - I even published one of these questions on the auction page on the last day. I see at least one up right now, the only give away is "Government/Export version: 0.495-2450.095 MHz", and ebay generally does not look for stuff like that unless someone rats them out. Still, your auction could get **** canned I guess, all I am saying is that it likely won't if you can refrain from buzz words and outright give aways. Also, I would not advise advertising your auction here, except maybe in the last 2 hours. Its happened more than once here that within hours of these unblocked scanners being advertised here for ebay auctions, they get pulled off. If the worse should happen and the auction gets yanked, you get a refund on auction charges and a warning to not do it again or else, so theres not a whole lot of risk as far as risking your account or something. Craigslist is an option also [thats where I got mine, got it for $200 and sold it for over $350]. --------- A few years back I read about another approach which was to photograph it while tuned to a cellular frequency. Knowledgeable buyers will get it right away without having to use tricky language. It's easier to search for keywords in the listings than to process the images for anyone trying to screen these units out. Of course, that also makes it a little harder for potential buyers to find it with a standard search. I don't know if that will fly on eBay, but maybe worth a try. - Doug Yes, I did that in my listing also, among the half dozen pics were a couple with cell freqs tuned in. No matter what you do though, there will always be the clueless, curious or doubters who will enquire if the scanner has any gaps ... As if the cell band really matters these days - But no doubt a no block scanner will fetch a better price. I suppose it might some time in the future if they reallocate these freqs for other use. From what I have seen, most people get away with it no prob unless they are too bold on their title or someone rats them out ... You have much better odds of having a listing of a Nazi war relic pulled than a full coverage scanner. I listed a Nazi war time magazine, I thought historical paper items were allowed, but it got canned within an hour, and I was told no listings of propaganda would be tolerated.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - curious. Since Ebay allows legal scanners to be sold... If you have a cell capable scanner bought in the U.S. before the law outlawing manufacture of such scanners went into effect (which is perfectly leggal to sell in the U.S.) and Ebay pulled your item because you said "unblocked" or "cell capable", ........ then what ? While it is perfectly legal to own, use or privately sell a pre-ban scanner in the U.S., there is not much to be done if ebay, a private venue [of which you have to agree to TOS to use] decides that they do not want people residing in the USA to sell unblocked scanners to other people living in the USA. I think that is the case. Ebay decided that, rather than going on a case by case basis, to just issue a general blanket ban. |
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