Boombox prices
tpr - 2005-07-31 00:58
Please read why we don`t appraise radio price values.
To get more clearance about this theme.
And it is very hard to be flooded with e-mails from unknown persons like:
....there are not 20 mails a week anymore sometimes we get DOZENS a week about this theme! That`s the reason to get allergic reactions bout this on this board. Now I get these questions about my paypal email address.
A lot of posters came finally to the board, posting here the same questions without effort then disappearing in grey ebay fogs again. Nobody here is in the situation to say the price or the value of a radio.
I only can repeat the following statement:
My tpr is GOLD worth for me personally. All members have their own "GUSTO" related to boxes, their romantically remembering, their personal reasons to buy a specific box, brand, series.
tpr - 2005-07-31 01:16
Comment from radio attic`s "Friendly Webmaster"
I DON'T KNOW WHAT YOUR RADIO IS WORTH!
You may just want to stop reading now and skip the rest of the page
I get many requests from people wanting to know the values of their radios. Appraising a radio's value takes time, and it would take more time than I have available to make a stab at fulfilling all the requests I get. But more important than the time it would take to research these requests, the subjective nature of radio valuation makes it something I am just not qualified to do. One could do so with the radio and references in hand, or with a detailed description of the radio's cosmetic and operating conditions, but you're always guessing. Anyone who has priced the same radio using both a Bunis and Stein reference is probably still wondering what the radio is "worth." I have several Stein books and a complete set of Bunis books; all are in storage except for Bunis Edition One, which is twelve years old and quite outdated. The "value" of a radio eventually becomes simply what one is willing to pay for it. Or what someone is willing to part with it for. Ask three people and you'll get three answers. Gosh, we're still trying to figure it out!
Here's a good example of what I'm trying to say. You go to a swap meet with a bunch of radios, including your favorite (got to make room). One price guide says it's worth $200, another says $300. You split the difference and put a price of $250 on it. 300 people go by your table on day one and you get no offers. Day 2, you lower the price to $150; no offers all day. Day 3, after you have your table set up, you decide you want to keep the radio after all but don't want to rearrange your table. So you change the price to $450 so no one will buy it. Twenty minutes later, someone says, "I've been looking for one of those for YEARS!" and gives you $450 for the radio. So what was the radio worth? $450? Not on day 1. Not on day 2.
If you tell a buyer you want $100 for a radio and he agrees, you got it right: it was worth $100.
[Don't take this paragraph wrong: I don't hate people, I just hate eBay!] Then there's the other side. A good number of people who ask me to appraise a radio turn around and list the radio on eBay. I used to see if such requests were from eBay sellers and would ignore them if they were. Now eBay hides their sellers' identities. If you don't want to list your radio for sale at the Radio Attic (or sell it to me!) then please forgive me if I don't want to spend time doing free research so you can make some money in a particularly distasteful venue.
If you are contemplating advertising your radio for sale at the Radio Attic, please remember: since the Radio Attic charges an advertising fee based on selling price, it would not be ethical of me to assist a seller or potential seller in setting a value. So please don't ask (even after all this, I hate to say no).
There are several excellent and respected value guides available. Marty Bunis put out several over the years; while the most recent is at least four years old, you can get an idea of your radio's value relative to other radios. Mark Stein has also published several identification and price guides. In general, the Stein prices run higher. All the Bunis books are out of print, so you will have to find them in libraries or in the used book section of amazon.com or someplace like that. Stein's books are currently available for sale at his web site (below). They are an excellent investment for anyone who collects old radios. But remember, even if you or someone else gets a "value" for your radio from one of these references, that every cosmetic defect, every missing tube or non-original part, every whistle or hum that is not supposed to be heard, subtracts from that restored-and-operating value printed in the book. If your radio is cracked, if it has aluminum knobs instead of the original carved wood, if it has a piece of carpet for the speaker grille, or if it has mud-dauber nests or smells of rodent urine, throw the book value away, as you likely have a piece of flea market junk. Maybe with many hours of careful cleaning and restoration, it will be "worth" something, but for now... junk. Potential value as a a restored radio simply can't be figured into the value of a broken or rotting hulk, no matter what your neighborhood antique dealer or Aunt Minnie says.
If you stumbled on a nice old tube radio that's complete & undamaged and want to make a quick buck, send it to me and I'll give you $20. THAT was quick!
If you don't want to find or purchase a value guide, check Radio Attic's Links page (or A.R.C. magazine) for a radio club near you. Someone there may be willing to hazard a guess or research the radio's value. There are many nice folks at the rec.antiques.radio+phono newsgroup who may help also. If you want a real appraisal for insurance purposes, contact Mark at Radiomania.com; he will appraise your radio for a fee.
link: http://www.radioattic.com/radiovalue.php