Yeah, saw that.
Landsborough is another one, but I will usually hedge that their 8/10 is closer to a 6.5 or 7. Switzers I have found to be better.
Switzers I have only ever done online, Landsborough I like to go onsite to at least inspect closer on preview night if I can't go onsite the day of. I'll save the additional 5% hammer fee if i am ambitious. When you are looking at lots 40 and 640, it pays to have registered online even if you go onsite. I'll pick the rifle up onsite, then bid on the smalls from home and save half a day of sitting near the guy who had his yearly shower 364 days ago.
Can't say enough... know your prices and set a limit which includes hammer fee and taxes. It's an ok deal till they hit you with another 23-28%.
Inspect as thoroughly as you can, if you can. I brought one rifle home and it passed inspections and full takedown, other than the angled scope base tapping which I knew about before I bought it. First shot, front sight blew off. They had gone full screw up on the irons and drilled the end sight all the way through. The $125 mismatched project rifle was now going to be a $325 project rifle off the bat if the smith cut and crowned. It sat around waiting until I had time to attempt it myself, but another project came along so I tossed it back in an auction. That one actually worked out for me as I bought it in a slow auction and sold it in a busy spring auction. Made $200 after their commission on that one.
Oh, and there is a huge difference between the first of the year spring sales and every other sale.
The spring sales get buuuuuuusy. Everyone has the spring gun fever coupled with auction fever.
Sales on nice sunny days during harvest and mid summer are usually the ones with the best deals and poorest attendance. More Online bidding doesn't make them as good as they used to. You can still ride a tractor and bid online.