03-12-2023 01:07 PM
The ending time listed on the item is different than the actual ending time. These discrepancies in the ending time suck.
It was listed at 11:26 pm EST. i was watching the countdown down to zero. i wake up this morning and no card. it seems there was a bid accepted. It was 47 seconds after 11:26 ending time. Explain that to me. Why wasn't it listed as 11:26:47? I'm a retired teacher and when it says 11:26 as ending time it's 11:26!
Paul Carollo
03-12-2023 04:41 PM
Bidding ends a set number of days after the auction started down to the exact second. Bids are accepted so long as a bid for a valid amount is received by eBay's server before the auction ends, even if those bids are not displayed on individual bidders' pages around the world until a few seconds later.
eBay does not extend bidding. Once you have bid your maximum, bid extensions can not help you, only hurt you.
For some unknown reason eBay no longer displays the ending time to the second at the top of the bid history page, but if there are any bids you should be able to calculate the actual ending time by examining the starting time of the auction at the bottom of the page. Auctions always begin and end at the same time down to the exact second, unless the auction is ended early by the seller. All bidders have the same time to place valid bids, and no one gets any extra time. eBay time stamps every bid as it is received by eBay, and the times are displayed to the second in the bid history if you use a desktop browser.
If you think you have encountered an auction where a bid was accepted after the end of the auction, examine the starting time closely and compare it to the time the bid was received and you should find that the bid was received before the auction actually ended. If not, please post an item number so that others can see it.
If you bid the maximum amount you are willing to pay (taking into account any shipping or taxes) then the only way you can lose is if someone is willing to bid more than you were and actually does so, or if someone bid the same exact amount, earlier.
No one can count on having the last bid, and bidders should assume that other bids will be placed at the end of the auction too late to be reacted to, and set their bids accordingly.
If your auction countdown is not behaving correctly, check to make sure your computer's time zone is set correctly, and the date and time are synchronized with an internet time server such as time.windows.com or time.nist.gov.
03-12-2023 04:49 PM
If you are a teacher, then you know that if something that has 'seconds' on it- but only shows 'minutes' that there can be a 'lag' in the real time.
As always- bid the highest you are willing to pay, early.
Also not- that even AFTER the auction is over and the 'real time' is revealed- that the 'real time' does NOT include 100's of a second- but that is what is used.
So, even 11:47:45 could be 11:47:45 & 74/100 to the EXACT end.