It's about understanding how these places operate. When you realize that an auction house gets really busy just when they're pushing out the catalogue, that's when all the mistakes happen. Catalogues are printed with hastily written condition reports by people who don't really know watches (people whom are borrowed from the "art department") and you end up getting a watch in awful condition that you end up paying top dollar for. Now eBay is where the watches that can't be sold, get sold, since it's known to have a more lenient clientele. I don't want third-rate stuff. Every now and then, you can find a jewel in the rough, admittedly, but I'm not that kind of risk taker.