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Funny thing is that the dealers at the local train shows around here want ridiculous prices even for garbage. Like old Bachmann cabooses (not new run) with rapido couplers for $15! Some even still have the original $5 price tags! You would think they have gold for sale. Yes, there are sometimes few bargains to be found, but those are rare. Our shows are sort of what eBay has become - everybody *DOES* want to get rich selling crappy models.
Regarding the "repeat o-vendors"... I'm convinced that a lot of those guys just enjoy the train show atmosphere. If they make nothing then the cost of the table is just their entertainment. Most of us pay x amount of money to do things we enjoy, so I don't think it's that different.Granted that doesn't make for a very exciting train show from the attendee perspective if everyone was like that. But fortunately there's usually some decent percentage of new blood too.
From my vantage point at the last show here in Medford I watched how things really work. One vendor goes to another vender, buys a bunch of stuff and the puts it on his table with few pennies added to the cost. Minutes later another vendor visits his table and spirits off with a few boxes of stock...it gets a few pennies added to the cost. and on and on. I watched a bunch of really old tyco cabeese migrate pretty much completely around the showroom in two days and apparently gained considerable value during the process. I wonder if there's a category for that at Guiness? lol Joe
This is why I've mostly given up on train shows. Been seeing tables full of the exact same junk for the past 20 years and it's usually around $30 just to get in the door ($15 to park and $15 for entry). Do these people travel all over the country hauling around those same, cheap junker HO cabooses year after year after year???
Regarding the taxes; if Joes Train Shop has a table at Timonium, he must collect MD sales tax. What about random modeler Joe Smith who decided to got to Timonium to sell some of his stuff because he changed scales, does he have to charge tax too?
As for hunting bargains, at least around here, we wait until Sunday, especially if traffic is slow because the Cowboys are on TV, making attendance low and slow. As mentioned pricing gets very realistic near the end of the show with those types of vendors because they hate to haul the same amount of "treasure" as they brought with them.
It's funny, the two best times to score real deals are when the show first opens and right before it closes. The first because "I don't want to sit on this all weekend" and the second "I don't want to have to take this home with me".
Actually it's less that folks who can get in before the public get better deals and more thry get to pick through the bettsr stuff!
I can't help but notice the contrast between this thread and another where people are falling over themselves to buy $250 rivet counter locomotives. https://www.therailwire.net/forum/index.php?topic=56798.0;topicseen
I always take a tour of the venue before opening and occasionally grab a deal .. its a perk of setting up our layout for the public to see ..