Pricing For this Computer- Help

TheSmurfMachine

Reputable
Nov 8, 2015
63
0
4,630
So, I have another computer I'm thinking about upgrading as well, but I decided I wanted a new CPU, which needs a new motherboard, and it would just be easier for me to replace everything. I'm planning on selling everything but the case. How much could I get for:

Titan X EVGA Hybrid (the liquid cooled one)

Intel 5820K

16 GB of Corsair Vengeance DDR4 RAM at 2666 MHz ram, I believe, may be more speed, may be less. I'll check if needed.

EVGA 1000W 80+ Gold PSU

Gigabyte MoBo, I will definitely have to check the model if needed, but base it on this: GA-X99P

NZXT Kraken x61 for CPU

Not selling the SSD or HD, I'm keeping those also.

NOTE: The CPU has never gone over 40 degrees Celsius under full load, never been OCed by me, and the Titan X has never been OCed besides what EVGA did, and has never gone above 45 degrees Celsius.

So, selling the parts listed, how much should I get? Remember, very slight use, taken care of, no OCing on my end, I got it new, etc.

 
Solution
Some of those selling points may or may not be selling points. Not saying you're not being truthful but no one has a way to know if the cpu's been overclocked or not so a K series is likely going to assume to be overclocked regardless. Being 'gently used' has little merit when it comes to parts value. In spite of being bought new by you the buyer won't get any warranty so that docks the price.

Temps are the same way, no way to verify so it may sound good or sound like it adds value but people won't likely place any additional value based on arbitrary cpu/gpu max temps it's been run at. Only because it can't be verified.

Aside from those things Karsten75 pretty much nailed it. Appropriate asking price is best determined by similar...
If you parcel it out and can't demonstrate that it's working, then on Craigslist, for instance, I'd suspect you'd get maybe, just maybe, about 1/3rd of the retail price minus some additional discount depending on age of components.


Depends if you hook a sucker or not.

Edit: Your best bet for accurate pricing is to look on the venue you decide to sell on (Craigslist, eBay, etc.) and look at completed prices for the components you intend to sell. As someone once said. It's only worth as much as someone is willing to pay for it.
 
Some of those selling points may or may not be selling points. Not saying you're not being truthful but no one has a way to know if the cpu's been overclocked or not so a K series is likely going to assume to be overclocked regardless. Being 'gently used' has little merit when it comes to parts value. In spite of being bought new by you the buyer won't get any warranty so that docks the price.

Temps are the same way, no way to verify so it may sound good or sound like it adds value but people won't likely place any additional value based on arbitrary cpu/gpu max temps it's been run at. Only because it can't be verified.

Aside from those things Karsten75 pretty much nailed it. Appropriate asking price is best determined by similar prices within the same venue you're trying to sell it and ultimately what someone is willing to pay for it. You could have all the parts $10 less than everyone else and if no one's buying it's still too high.
 
Solution