With a fantastic price of, you guessed close, $699.95! Hurry up and get them bids-a-rollin!
Personally, I think this way out of line - which seems to be rapidly becoming the norm these days. I'm observing that the search for "Apple II" on ebay is returning 1000+ items. Which is quite alot. 10 years ago I'd scan for the same search-term and come up with maybe a hundred or two-hundred items.
And I see that a seller will come across something that might, on off-chance, look rare or be something they hadn't seen before. And is not listed. Ok. And they will then automatically think that, "Wow!! This is nowhere to be found. It's not even on ebay! Let's see what I get for it!!!!!!"
So it seems that because something is the only one of its kind to be listed, that it can command a high price.
One other way to spot a newbie or unknowledgeable seller of Apple II stuff is to see that they've automatically associated "Steve Jobs" with whatever they're selling. The quoted name goes right into the auction title, and they're thinking this is gonna be a big-bux seller!! Fer chrissakes..!
But let's get real folks. While the Vulcan HDD interface is rare. It isn't that rare. And if I was selling it, I would be asking $39.95, or perhaps $49.95 with dox & box. Anyways.. I sent the auctioneer the following text, let's see what kind of reply I receive.
"As a purveyor of fine classic computing hardware; I'm wondering what is special or unique about this card. Typically these cards would sell for 49.95 or thereabouts. So I'm trying to determine what is special or unique about this specific board.
The classic computing connoisseur in me can't immediately see anything visible from the picture that strikes me as unique or having the ability to command a $699.95 price tag. Does this have a special history behind it or is there some version of firmware or PCB revision that warrants a high price?"
Edited by Keatah, Fri Jan 13, 2012 12:56 PM.














