Edit: on further reading of the OP, I wouldn't bother listing that Sound Blaster card. As everyone else said, it's not a high value card even when fully working, and is basically scrap with that many issues. Just send that one to e-waste & be done with it. I'll leave this post up in case you have other stuff that's a little less knackered to deal with though.
I've gotten into flogging stuff on Ebay lately & have had really good luck doing so. Converting stuff I don't need into cash in my paypal that will eventually turn into stuff I do need, is nice. Even if you only make a few bucks doing it, it's out of your hair and didn't go to recycling. If I think something's worth more than about $5 or $10 I usually give it a shot.
Ebay sales have been far, far less aggravating than trying to sell stuff to the local bozo contingent on CL or Kijiji.
Here's my method to make Ebay as painless as possible:
- pack and weigh the item before you even make the listing. This seems like extra work, but trust me on this. If it doesn't eventually sell you can always unpack it and re-use the packing materials for another listing. It's a lot easier to deal with a stack of packed boxes pending sale in your front hall than a bunch of random items strewn everywhere.
- always list what you're selling as "for parts or not working", even if it "sort of" works. Describe exactly what's wrong with it in the ad listing, and maybe even include a picture if it throws an error message on-screen or something.
- use the Ebay shipping calculator when you make the listing. Input the dimensions and weight & it gets the rates. Don't bother doing it yourself.
- When the thing sells, Ebay will give you the option of using a partner shipping broker site to print the shipping label at home. Do this. Then you can just walk into the post office, they'll scan it, and you're done.
- start the auction at the price you need to make it worth your time to sell. I usually stick $9 as the starting price for a low-value item. Don't fret about the total including shipping because that's not your money. If someone thinks it's worth your take + whatever the actual shipping rate is, they'll buy it; end of story.
- look up "high" past sales prices for the same thing in similar condition, subtract 10 or 15%, and stick that as your buy-it-now. If someone sees your thing and wants to have it NOW, they'll bite.
Pretty much everything I've put on there has sold after a few weeks, some stuff right away. Ten extra bucks for something you never thought would sell is still ten extra bucks. I've been funding all my recent game & random thrift store pickups from Ebay sales, so I'm not buying crap out of my food money. Nice guilt-free feeling.
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