2manyoranges
Old School Grand Master
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How do I price things? Are there are principles?
I will ignore all the nonsense around Kleins and Graftons and very rare esoterica.
But what about reasonable bog-standard items?
Of course the standard response will rightly be...what people are prepared to pay...or ‘the going rate’. But this doesn’t really get to it.
I thought about cars...new cars tend to depreciate by around 10% the moment they leave the showroom. Odd...since they have not changed in any way physically. I know that Veyrons increase after purchase, but we are back in Klein territory there. I have always assumed that this immediate depreciation is down to a small measure of inflation through company purchasing of vehicles - elevating the price over the price the consumer is prepared to pay.
But in the retro community I like the circulation of parts (good for the planet; good for building; good for a sense of community) and I like doing as much Karma as possible. That’s simple.‘I have this and it’s free’. I like that, and do it as much as I can. But I have to buy heaps of extremely expensive new parts for my own and my son’s current bikes - and some parts are eye-watering, especially top end suspension forks. One recent build for the Grom was not short of 4000 and that was done with second hand forks and frame. So I’d like to recoup some cost on some of the retro stuff in the store boxes. But the thing is this: in selling something, I would like to feel a sense of ‘ah that money coming in is useful and I did not rip the purchaser off in any way’ and have the purchaser feel ‘well I am glad I bought that, it was a fair price’.
So...a real case...I have a perfect rear wheel with very few miles on it. Mid 90’s. Quite rare rim. 9/10 condition. A new wheel now will cost me 120 for the hub, 80 for the rim, and 50-80 for the build. About 170 then. Yes, I know that this is a top notch modern thing. But functions in much the same way as the mid 90s rim. So what price for the 90’s wheel? It seems we have four things in the mix - function/condition, original price, replacement cost, and historical premium (if any). Fifty per cent of a modern wheel? The point is..no idea. But it would be great to hit that sweet spot where both seller and purchaser have smiles. As I said, I’d prefer to Karma things but sometimes I have to groan inwardly at the cost when the Grom manages to whang another rim or rip another tyre...
Does it all boil down to - check out any equivalents on here or ebay...stick it up and see what happens?
I will ignore all the nonsense around Kleins and Graftons and very rare esoterica.
But what about reasonable bog-standard items?
Of course the standard response will rightly be...what people are prepared to pay...or ‘the going rate’. But this doesn’t really get to it.
I thought about cars...new cars tend to depreciate by around 10% the moment they leave the showroom. Odd...since they have not changed in any way physically. I know that Veyrons increase after purchase, but we are back in Klein territory there. I have always assumed that this immediate depreciation is down to a small measure of inflation through company purchasing of vehicles - elevating the price over the price the consumer is prepared to pay.
But in the retro community I like the circulation of parts (good for the planet; good for building; good for a sense of community) and I like doing as much Karma as possible. That’s simple.‘I have this and it’s free’. I like that, and do it as much as I can. But I have to buy heaps of extremely expensive new parts for my own and my son’s current bikes - and some parts are eye-watering, especially top end suspension forks. One recent build for the Grom was not short of 4000 and that was done with second hand forks and frame. So I’d like to recoup some cost on some of the retro stuff in the store boxes. But the thing is this: in selling something, I would like to feel a sense of ‘ah that money coming in is useful and I did not rip the purchaser off in any way’ and have the purchaser feel ‘well I am glad I bought that, it was a fair price’.
So...a real case...I have a perfect rear wheel with very few miles on it. Mid 90’s. Quite rare rim. 9/10 condition. A new wheel now will cost me 120 for the hub, 80 for the rim, and 50-80 for the build. About 170 then. Yes, I know that this is a top notch modern thing. But functions in much the same way as the mid 90s rim. So what price for the 90’s wheel? It seems we have four things in the mix - function/condition, original price, replacement cost, and historical premium (if any). Fifty per cent of a modern wheel? The point is..no idea. But it would be great to hit that sweet spot where both seller and purchaser have smiles. As I said, I’d prefer to Karma things but sometimes I have to groan inwardly at the cost when the Grom manages to whang another rim or rip another tyre...
Does it all boil down to - check out any equivalents on here or ebay...stick it up and see what happens?