Should Children Under 16 Be Barred From...
News1 min ago
No best answer has yet been selected by Hgrove. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Say there was something that you really wanted that was currently at �10. You could place your maximum bid at say �30 but if no-one else bids, you don't want to pay �30 for something if you could have had it for �11.
Each time someone places a bid that exceeds the last one, e-bay will place a bid on your behalf, upto the amount that you specified as your maximum. In this case �30.
As mentioned above, it could be the case for your item that the person who has bid the �10 has already placed a maximum bid of higher than your �16 and if so, it normally tells you this when you try and place a bid.
Ebay increases your bid as little as possible to ensure you are still winning.
You are currently winning at �10.
If someone comes in at �11, you will then be winning at �12.
If someone else bids �15, you will be winning at �16.
If someone else bids �17, you are outbid.
(All this assumes that the bid increment is �1, just to make the numbers easier to follow.)
Thank you for all the replies but I am not sure I am going to be able to buy this item now. I am still confused. There are now two different people selling the same item. On one of them (based in Washington, UK - is it in Scotland? Does anyone know?) the current bid is �46. The seller wants �3 p&p. I am the high bidder but the reserve has not been met. It has 6 days left to run. As for the other item (seller based in Dustable) I have been outbid; the current bid stands at �40 plus �7.50 p&p. There are 4 days left. So it seems to me I am unlikely to "win" either item. Am I right? What should I do next?