on 17-01-2019 10:44 PM
on 18-01-2019 07:53 PM
go tazz!
ok, thanks. best answer. Doing that reduces the number of hits significantly. There are still some stray results but it's much more useable!
cheers ... Graham.P
on 18-01-2019 08:49 PM
Glad it helped,
For future reference I used the m2.5 screw in the advanced search with Exact words,any order from the drop
down box and then used the side menu on the search to select the 2.5 diameter.from the Thread diameter.
on 18-01-2019 08:51 PM
thanks!
Graham.P
19-04-2020 12:59 PM - edited 19-04-2020 01:01 PM
Well over a year later, tiny, tiny creatures trying to take over the planet, etc, I have this same problem.
I often need to search using terms like "3.5mm", "6.3mm", "6.35mm", "2mm", and so on.
Recently, I needed to use "1.5mm" and "0.3M" - but neither search term does anything useful, any more.
For example, trying to find a small pinion, to fit a 1.5mm diameter motor shaft - these exist, and ebay claims to "have everything"... So,
"1.5mm" pinion
- 446 results, maybe 3 of them relevant. As it turns out, probably zero useful, but that's now a lot harder to verify.
Did I wander onto Amazon by mistake?
The one thing that really made eBay work, for me, was a search engine that returned relevant results, and had some relatively powerful search term parsing - including the simple requirement of literal text, in quotes.
So, some idiot (and I use the term advisedly), decided to make the search engine replace "." with just a space, even if the "." was inside quotes.
Needle in haystack - difficult situation, but not something we're not used to dealing with.
Needle in much bigger haystack - much worse.
Why, I have to ask myself, do these people still get paid? There are far better programmers asking for spare change, outside my local mini market.
30-04-2020 02:31 AM - edited 30-04-2020 02:32 AM
As you have noticed, eBay's search does not recognize the "." character, even when enclosed in quotes. Special characters are treated as identical and interchangeable: . / & ? - *
That does make it difficult to search for things like machine screws using keywords.
Often, you can start with a basic keyword search, and then narrow the category. Once you have done that, you may have access to certain category-specific filters on the left side of the page (if you are using a desktop browser). Choosing the thread diameter using a filter allows you to bypass the limitations of the keyword search:
For things like pinions, there may not be a specific size filter, but if you narrow the category down far enough, you may eliminate many of the false positive results: