Rupp
Senior Member
How many of the posters here made the trip? That should answer your questionAre people really that stupid? They see the word closing and 10% and think they are getting a deal.

How many of the posters here made the trip? That should answer your questionAre people really that stupid? They see the word closing and 10% and think they are getting a deal.
Maybe I'm a bit dense today, but I don't get it. The only reason I went was because it was right across the street from my allergy doctor's office. I also stated that the store was packed BUT nobody was carrying out any merchandise.How many of the posters here made the trip? That should answer your questionAre people really that stupid? They see the word closing and 10% and think they are getting a deal.![]()
I got some sweet deals when Tweeter went under and was hoping for more from Circuit City, guess I'll have to wait and see.
I had a gift card that I had to use, so I visited the local CC today. The place looked fairly picked over already. Lots of consumer electronics were empty and they were only 10% off. Music and video were 20% off. I didn't see much at 30% off... what I did see at 30% was stuff that we all would have bought elsewhere cheaper anyway. I did see that they had iTunes gift cards for 20% off, which is what I suspect a co-worker will be spending his gift card on.
CC Web site said:Will Circuit City stores continue to accept Circuit City gift cards?
Yes, customers holding Circuit City gift cards may redeem them at full value at our stores during the liquidation sales. Once the stores are closed and the company is out of business, the gift cards will have no value.
The problem is that these sales are run by third party companies. And they get paid based on the amount of cash they take in. Then Circuit City's (or whoever's) creditors get paid from the balance. So it's in the liquidation company's best interest to get top dollar. And they base their prices on the "original selling price," which usually means MSRP.
Unfortunately for folks like us, the general public seems to be completely oblivious to reality. Personally I don't even go into those sales until the signs say 50% off or better. I end up with the dregs, but sometimes you can get some deals. I bought all kinds of demo/broken/used type pieces from CompUSA when they went down and most of it was actually fine.
Otherwise I usually do way better shopping around.
"One of the best things that I've gotten is some of the "infrastructure" stuff, i.e. shelves, etc. Sometimes they also sell this too and it makes good garage shelving."
A local pharmacy recently went out of business (actually they moved to a new location) and I strolled in looking for a steal and found a nice four post, 84U 19" equipment rack with rolling shelves and other accys. A quick $50 and it was mine
They had all kinds of video monitoring stuff but the salvage company said the parent company wanted that stuff back.