There was a very nice Canon F-1n that was due to close yesterday and I planned to bid on it, but I got invited out to dinner and just forgot about it. After remembering my error, I logged back into the site, expecting to see that the F-1n had gone for some serious change, but I was surprised and not a little frustrated to see that the auction had closed for $51. Grrr. I would easily have paid double that because the camera really was in superlative condition. So there's an example for you of a popular item that didn't get bidded up beyond reasonable limits. It still happens some. I also had my eye on a really nice Sony amp/receiver that, according to a web search I did, was worth used north of $200. It closed with one bid at $5.99. Made me even angrier. I should have skipped that dinner. Yet K1000s and AE-1s routinely go for more than they do on eBay.
I don't think it's a scam. I think it's ignorance in part and auction fever also in part. Scams usually involve straw-man bidding with the intended purpose of leaving the unlucky bidder in the lurch. This practice is illegal though. And as for it being poor quality stuff they're offering with blurry photos, while this used to be a frequent recurrence, it happens much less often now. Usually -- not always, but usually -- there are sufficient sharp photos that aid the bidder in making a decision. Frequently, if there is damage or excessive wear, they will have one or more photos pointing out the damage or wear, and in the following descriptions now they will often point out the problem. So this isn't the problem it used to be. And if you've got questions, you can always send a note with the question. My experience with that is, most of the time, they're prompt in their answers and they're helpful, sometimes supplying additional photos. As for their inventory, I suspect a lot of it is gear that's been sitting on closet shelves for years that nobody cares about anymore, gear which often got very little use. Usually if a camera is being sold with an everready case, chances are the camera will be in very clean condition -- because it's lived its entire life in that case.
But I do think that some of the goodwill locations excessively pad their shipping prices. Especially one location in Oregon. It's shipping costs are often 3x or even 5x higher than anyone else who's equally far away from my location. I've also noticed that what the item is can affect its shipping price. Your typical camera with a lens may have a shipping price of $15, which I consider high, but not unusual. Yet I can go and look at guitars, which are a good deal larger and a good deal heavier, and often I can find that shipping prices for them are often no higher. Now, why would that be?
Nonetheless, I still tend to be a careful shopper and not infrequent buyer there. I've just found too many good deals to ignore the place, and if I occasionally get a dud, usually I haven't paid more than a few dollars for it, so in the overall scheme of things, I'm still way ahead.