Possible Better E-Waste Prices on Ebay
I've found lately that you can get better prices on some E-Waste through selling it on Ebay, even after paying the Ebay fees and shipping costs. This works best for small heavy items, such as CPU's.
Let me give an actual example:
I filled up a large flat rate box with 59 pounds of painless CPU's. Current buyers would pay about 4.50 a pound for these. That would be $265.50 for a local drop off and 250 if mailed. I sold the same box for $370 on Ebay with free shipping. It cost roughly $15 to ship, and I had 15% in fees between Ebay and PayPal. That's a price of $300 net on the box, or an increase of $35-$50 depending on whether you ship or drive in your items.
I almost have a large flat rate box full of green fiber CPUs with the caps and pins (mostly socket 478). I'm estimating it's going to come in at 50 pounds, and will bring an at least an additional $75 by selling to Ebay.
I realize not everyone may have these kinds of quantities for CPU's. However, for smaller items I think it's worth doing some numbers to see make sure you get the most for your money.
Possible Better E-Waste Prices on Ebay
I have had decent luck selling cpu's on ebay, however the person who bought those is hoping to cover the extra cost by finding working units in your lot. I would caution you to not expect that good a return on other styles of cpu. Most of the time you will probably get slightly more than if shipping to an ewaste buyer and cover your shipping cost.
Possible Better E-Waste Prices on Ebay
I don't know, all styles of cpus go for more per pound than ewaste buyers. I can't say why people buy at that price. Maybe for others they pull the pins and sell those at a profit. I look at sold listings to find a trend inorice per pound, and do the math to find the breakeven price where I would make just as much as selling directly. I think the math is going to work for more than one lot. and if no one bids, then I can always sell it elsewhere