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Why are TM always for sale?

AttackBunny

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I don’t understand, considering TM has a great reputation, loyal fan base and they provide some good guns to the market… why are they always seemingly for sale? 
especially the rifles/DMR variants. 
 

maybe it’s just me, I am pathetic and spend far too much time on selling sites. 
 

This isn’t To start a TM rules debate or my brand is better than your brand. But people spend a lot of money on them and then sell them in fairly quickly

Picture of the tactical retriever. Hope that one day she will be able to pick up all the mags I drop or lose ?

View attachment 122361

 
My take:

1. most airsofters are fickle, me included, one minute "x" gun is the best thing since sliced bread, 5 minutes later, there's something new their going gooey eyed over. 

2. TM are considered a sound investment & hold their money better than most brands, so when moneys needed quick, you know you'll not lose much flogging it. 

 
I've had my TM recoils for around 8-9 years now, in that time they've had minimal down time, been great performers and have held their value (in my opinion). Before that I had other TM recoils (but a bit battered!)

As for your question, why are they always for sale? People come into and leave this sport on weekly basis. 

Some of these people have ok to decent incomes and after their first budget rif (or even their first RIF altogether) a TM is often on the want list. Those that can afford it go for it and then 6/12 months later they have lost the bug and they are the next people to leave the sport. It's an ever spinning circle of players, some stick for a while, some a few months, some even a few years but very few stick with it 5+ years. 

and why hang onto a rif at all? Especially when they retain their value and it's not something you plan to use again? 

Essentially you could ask, why are there always specnas etc available for sale? 

 
They're one of the most popular and long-standing brands, so it's only natural that you see more of them being sold and bought.

Also as has been mentioned, airsofters are fickle, someone will pile a load of money into a build, still feel unfulfilled and sell it to justify  moving onto the next one.

 
I think some good reasons have already been given, but it could also be impacted by people getting into the sport and learning to do basic teching over time. Once you know how to change out a hop rubber, nub and barrel, you can get a Cyma, change out those parts and have a gun that shoots better than a TM for a fraction of the price.

Could be impacted by airsofter's wives too. "You spent what on that new gun?"

 
My take:

1. most airsofters are fickle, me included, one minute "x" gun is the best thing since sliced bread, 5 minutes later, there's something new their going gooey eyed over. 

2. TM are considered a sound investment & hold their money better than most brands, so when moneys needed quick, you know you'll not lose much flogging it. 


I'm definitely a sucker for this.... I'll spend months reviewing something, I'll look up every possible combination of accessories to go with it, eventually buy it, a week later something shiny catches my attention and the process repeats itself... Like an ADHD magpie...

 
For unmodified examples i can think of 3 cases:

1. Typical airsofter fickleness

2. Popularity

3. Unrealistic performance expectations

For modified examples it's much more simple:

1. Coating it in superglue and dragging it through the prometheus catalogue is not the same thing as actually improving the performance.

 
1. Coating it in superglue and dragging it through the prometheus catalogue is not the same thing as actually improving the performance.


? ? ? Fantastically worded, Sir. 

Fully modified...

evk-36551.jpg


 
I don’t understand, considering TM has a great reputation, loyal fan base and they provide some good guns to the market… why are they always seemingly for sale? especially the rifles/DMR variants.


There are a lot of reasons.

  1. TM have an excellent reputation for making reliable, accurate and reasonably affordable guns, so they sell a lot of them new. A lot of new guns sold means a bigger pool of used guns.
  2. TM make very reliable guns, so they last a long time. A TM might be resold multiple times when something cheaper was scrapped by its second (or even first!) owner, so again - a bigger pool of used guns.
  3. TM make some relatively high-end stuff, especially the NGRS/MWS rifles you're probably talking about. Guns like that are very expensive, so when people don't want them any more they sell them to get the money, rather than forget about them in the loft. A £100 SRC might not be worth the trouble of selling - a £700 Recoil Shock is a different proposition. Expensive guns are also worth repairing when things go wrong, prolonging their lifespan where a cheaper gun that suffered the same failure might have been scrapped.
  4. People that can afford to buy high-end stuff can afford to chop and change more frequently.
  5. People that can't afford to buy high-end stuff but did so anyway need to sell stuff more frequently.
 
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I guess it’s the same with any Ford; more of them on the road than anything else so you see more for sale. 

I guess this answers my question though thank you. Quality remains quality; and if they keep their value I guess it makes the most sense to move them on. 
 

I just see a lot of adverts for TM guns (by the way you can list TM guns for sale without having everything in caps) 

 
I guess it’s the same with any Ford; more of them on the road than anything else so you see more for sale. 
 
More like BMW’s

Largest manufacturer/retailer of “luxury” vehicles in the uk

Residual values make them easy & relatively cheap to finance, but folk are forced to change them at the end of their pcp term

The vehicles get offloaded onto the marketplace at the end of term

Dont get me started with what happened when the Olympics were in london

all of the official cars were BMW’s , and were put to the auctions in bulk

Private owners cars values plummeted! ?

 
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