Bulk Electronics Liquidation Deals Wholesale – 25 Salvage Gaming Monitors, A$18,765+ MSRP | bulksupplieraustralia.com.au
Most bulk electronics liquidation deals wholesale are priced for the optimistic scenario: everything works, everything sells, margin is easy. Salvage pallets do not work that way, and this listing will not pretend otherwise.
This is a 25-unit salvage monitor pallet from European distribution centres. The monitors have been tested. Known defects have been identified: power failures, screen damage, missing components, and cosmetic wear. You are not buying functioning retail stock. You are buying premium-brand monitors at salvage pricing, with the understanding that repair capability, parts knowledge, or access to a technical buyer is what turns this purchase into profit.
What makes the economics work is the brand and product composition. Two ASUS ROG PG32UCDM 4K QD-OLED monitors carry an MSRP of A$2,140.18 each. Three MSI MAG 271QPX QD-OLED 360Hz units at A$1,235.18 each. Three ASUS ROG Strix XG27AQDMG WOLED units at A$1,235.18 each. On a 25-unit salvage pallet, you do not need every item to be fully repairable to generate a viable return. A handful of working or partially repairable high-value units, combined with parts revenue from the rest, is how this category pays.
This lot is available to professional resellers, repair workshops, gaming equipment dealers, and export traders across Australia, the United States, and Europe. The full manifest is below. Order online only.
What This Salvage Monitor Pallet Contains
The 25 items cover three monitor market segments:
Ultra-premium 4K and QHD OLED gaming monitors: ASUS ROG Swift PG32UCDM 32″ 4K QD-OLED 240Hz (x2), MSI MAG 321UPX QD-OLED 32″ 4K 240Hz (x1), ASUS OLED XG27AQDMG 27″ 1440p WOLED 240Hz (x1), MSI MAG 271QPX QD-OLED 27″ 1440p 360Hz (x2), ASUS ROG Strix XG27AQDMG 27″ 1440p WOLED 240Hz (x3)
Mid-range QHD and curved gaming monitors: Samsung Odyssey G65B 32″ 240Hz VA WQHD FreeSync Premium Pro (x1), AOC Q27G3XMN 27″ Mini LED QHD 2K 180Hz (x1), Acer Nitro 34″ 21:9 Curved UWQHD 3440×1440 100Hz (x1), ASUS TUF Gaming VG32VQ1B 32″ 165Hz QHD Curved (x1), ASRock PG27QFT2A 27″ 180Hz IPS QHD FreeSync (x1)
Entry and mid Full HD gaming monitors: Samsung LS27C392EANXGO 27″ 75Hz FreeSync Curved (x1), Philips 278E1A 27″ 4K UHD IPS (x1), ASUS TUF Gaming VG249Q1R 23.8″ 165Hz FHD IPS (x2), MSI G274F 27″ 180Hz Rapid IPS FHD (x1), Acer Nitro QG241Y S3 23.8″ 180Hz FHD (x1), Acer QG271 Ebii 27″ 100Hz FHD IPS (x1), Acer Nitro VG240Y bmiix 24″ 75Hz FHD IPS (x1), Acer AOPEN 24KG3Y M3bip 23.8″ 180Hz FHD (x1), ASUS VZ249QG1R 24″ 75Hz FHD IPS (x1), Aopen 24SA2Y HBI 23.8″ 100Hz FHD (x1)
All items are salvage stock. They have been tested and carry known defects. Condition varies per unit. Defects may include absence of power, screen panel damage, missing accessories or components, and significant cosmetic wear.
Full Pallet Manifest – All 25 Items
| Product | MSRP (AUD) |
|---|---|
| ASUS ROG Swift 32″ 4K OLED Gaming Monitor PG32UCDM – UHD 3840×2160, QD-OLED, 240Hz, 0.03ms, G-SYNC Compatible, 99% DCI-P3, 90W USB-C | A$2,140.18 |
| ASUS ROG Swift 32″ 4K OLED Gaming Monitor PG32UCDM – UHD 3840×2160, QD-OLED, 240Hz, 0.03ms, G-SYNC Compatible, 99% DCI-P3, 90W USB-C | A$2,140.18 |
| MSI MAG 321UPX QD-OLED 32″ 16:9 Gaming Monitor, 240Hz 0.03ms, 3840×2160 UHD, Height Adjustable Arm | A$1,481.23 |
| ASUS OLED XG27AQDMG Gaming Monitor 27″ 1440p Glossy WOLED, 240Hz, 0.03ms, G-SYNC Compatible, 99% DCI-P3 | A$1,235.18 |
| MSI MAG 271QPX QD-OLED 27″ 16:9 Gaming Monitor, 360Hz 0.03ms, 2560×1440 WQHD, Height Adjustable Arm | A$1,235.18 |
| MSI MAG 271QPX QD-OLED 27″ 16:9 Gaming Monitor, 360Hz 0.03ms, 2560×1440 WQHD, Height Adjustable Arm | A$1,235.18 |
| ASUS ROG Strix 27″ 1440P OLED Gaming Monitor XG27AQDMG – Glossy WOLED, 240Hz, 0.03ms, G-SYNC Compatible, 99% DCI-P3 | A$1,235.18 |
| ASUS ROG Strix 27″ 1440P OLED Gaming Monitor XG27AQDMG – Glossy WOLED, 240Hz, 0.03ms, G-SYNC Compatible, 99% DCI-P3 | A$1,235.18 |
| ASUS ROG Strix 27″ 1440P OLED Gaming Monitor XG27AQDMG – Glossy WOLED, 240Hz, 0.03ms, G-SYNC Compatible, 99% DCI-P3 | A$1,235.18 |
| Samsung 32″ 240Hz VA WQHD Gaming Monitor FreeSync Premium Pro Odyssey G65B LS32BG650ENXGO | A$988.18 |
| AOC Q27G3XMN 27″ Mini LED Gaming Monitor 2K QHD 2560×1440, 180Hz 1ms, 2x HDMI 2.0, 2x DisplayPort | A$461.18 |
| Acer Nitro 34″ 21:9 Curved UWQHD 3440×1440 Monitor, Adaptive-Sync, 100Hz, 1ms, AdobeRGB 90% EDA343CUR | A$461.18 |
| ASUS TUF Gaming 32″ 165Hz QHD HDR Curved Monitor 2560×1440, 1ms, FreeSync Premium, DisplayPort, HDMI VG32VQ1B | A$444.78 |
| ASRock 27″ 180Hz IPS QHD Gaming Monitor FreeSync 2560×1440 PG27QFT2A | A$395.18 |
| Samsung 27″ Full HD 1920×1080 75Hz FreeSync Curved Monitor LS27C392EANXGO | A$378.78 |
| Philips 278E1A 27″ Frameless Monitor 4K UHD IPS, 109% sRGB, Speakers, VESA | A$378.78 |
| ASUS TUF Gaming 23.8″ 1080P Monitor VG249Q1R – Full HD IPS, 165Hz, 1ms, FreeSync Premium, DisplayPort, HDMI | A$263.58 |
| ASUS TUF Gaming 23.8″ 1080P Monitor VG249Q1R – Full HD IPS, 165Hz, 1ms, FreeSync Premium, DisplayPort, HDMI | A$263.58 |
| MSI 27″ 180Hz Rapid IPS FHD Gaming Monitor G274F, G-Sync Compatible, 1920×1080, 94% Adobe RGB | A$247.00 |
| Acer Nitro QG241Y S3 23.8″ 1920×1080 180Hz 1ms AMD FreeSync Premium HDR Gaming Monitor | A$247.00 |
| Acer 27″ 100Hz IPS FHD Gaming Monitor 1ms FreeSync 1920×1080, 99% sRGB QG271 Ebii | A$247.00 |
| Acer Nitro VG240Y bmiix 24″ Full HD 1920×1080 1ms 75Hz AMD FreeSync IPS Gaming Monitor | A$247.00 |
| Acer AOPEN 24KG3Y M3bip 23.8″ Full HD 1920×1080, AMD FreeSync Premium, 180Hz, 1ms, sRGB 99% | A$214.18 |
| ASUS 24″ VZ249QG1R Full HD IPS 75Hz 1ms FreeSync Eye Care Ultra-slim Monitor | A$181.18 |
| Aopen 24SA2Y HBI 23.8″ Ultra-Thin 1920×1080 100Hz AMD FreeSync Monitor | A$164.68 |
| Total MSRP | A$18,774.99 |
Estimated Retail Value and Resale Margins
Total MSRP: A$18,774.99 Number of items: 25 Average item MSRP: approximately A$750.99 MSRP range per item: A$164.68 to A$2,140.18
This is a salvage lot. Standard resale margin modelling does not apply in the same way as returns pallets. The table below reflects the repair and parts-based economics typical of salvage monitor lots.
| Resale Pathway | Typical Revenue Per Unit | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| OLED gaming monitor, fully repaired | A$659 – A$1,483 | Functional ASUS ROG or MSI MAG OLED units |
| OLED gaming monitor, listed for parts or not working | A$329 – A$823 | Still significant value from panel and board |
| QHD gaming monitor, repaired | A$247 – A$659 | Samsung Odyssey, ASUS TUF, AOC Mini LED |
| Full HD gaming monitor, functional resale | A$99 – A$148 | Fast-moving on Facebook Marketplace and Gumtree |
| Parts revenue per non-repairable unit | A$66 – A$329 | OLED panels, power boards, arms, cables |
Real Profit Examples
Scenario one: A repair workshop tests the full pallet and identifies eight monitors that are repairable. Those eight units are reconditioned and listed on eBay Australia at an average of A$379 each, generating A$3,032 in gross revenue. The remaining seventeen units are broken down for parts, with OLED panels, power boards, and stands listed individually on eBay at A$66 to A$247 per lot, adding a further A$825 to A$2,150 in parts revenue.
Scenario two: Both ASUS ROG PG32UCDM 4K QD-OLED units are tested. One powers on with minor cosmetic defects and is listed on eBay Australia as working with described cosmetic wear at A$988. The second does not power on and is listed for parts or not working at A$494. Those two units alone, from a 25-item pallet, generate A$1,482 in gross revenue from two listings.
Scenario three: The ten Full HD monitors (ASUS TUF VG249Q1R x2, MSI G274F, three Acer models, Aopen, ASUS VZ249QG1R) that pass function testing are listed individually on Facebook Marketplace locally at A$99 to A$131 each. Ten units at an average of A$115 generates A$1,150 in cash without platform fees, using local pickup to eliminate outbound freight cost.
Who This Salvage Pallet Is For
This lot is not for resellers who primarily buy and list without technical involvement. Salvage monitor stock requires the ability to diagnose and repair display hardware, or access to a buyer who does.
This pallet suits you if you operate an electronics repair workshop with monitor and display expertise, are a gaming equipment reseller who sources and reconditions hardware for eBay Australia or Amazon AU, deal in IT and gaming hardware parts and have established buyers for OLED panels and power boards, export salvage or refurbished electronics to European markets including Germany, Spain, Poland, and the Netherlands, or purchase broken screen stock at low prices and sell to specialist repair communities.
If your operation is buy-test-list with no repair or parts capability, this is not the right lot. The returns-condition electronics pallets elsewhere in the bulksupplieraustralia.com.au catalogue are better suited to that model.
How to Process This Salvage Pallet
The sequence here is driven by unit value, not unit volume.
Start with the two ASUS ROG PG32UCDM 4K QD-OLED units. Combined MSRP of A$4,280.36. A single functioning or partially repairable unit at this tier can represent a meaningful portion of your total acquisition cost. Diagnose power fault, test panel integrity, assess what repair is required and whether it is economic.
Move next to the three MSI MAG 271QPX 360Hz and three ASUS ROG Strix XG27AQDMG WOLED units. Six monitors with an average MSRP above A$1,235 each. Even listing non-working OLED panels individually generates A$164 to A$494 per unit depending on panel condition.
Then work through the mid-range QHD category: Samsung Odyssey G65B, AOC Q27G3XMN Mini LED, Acer Nitro 34″ ultrawide, ASUS TUF VG32VQ1B, and ASRock PG27QFT2A. These have meaningful repair or parts value and a clear buyer market on eBay Australia.
Finally, triage the Full HD monitors. Functional units go to Facebook Marketplace or Gumtree for fast local cash. Non-functional units are broken for power boards, stands, and cables if viable, or disposed of.
Where to Sell Bulk Electronics Liquidation Deals Wholesale in This Category
eBay Australia is the primary platform for salvage and reconditioned gaming monitors. ASUS ROG, MSI MAG, and Samsung Odyssey listings in the gaming monitor category consistently attract buyers in the used and for-parts conditions. The brand recognition drives search traffic regardless of unit condition.
Facebook Marketplace is effective for Full HD units that are functional or near-functional. Local buyers looking for a budget gaming or work monitor in the A$82 to A$164 range are active on this platform and prefer local pickup for bulky items, removing your outbound freight cost entirely.
Gumtree reaches a similar buyer profile to Facebook Marketplace and is particularly effective in major Australian cities for mid-range working monitors.
For B2B in Australia: PC gaming build shops, LAN gaming venue operators, corporate IT buyers upgrading monitor fleets, and computer lab managers are all viable bulk buyers for functional or reconditioned QHD and Full HD monitors.
For parts specifically: dedicated eBay listings for OLED panels, power supply boards, monitor stands, and cables attract repair technicians and other resellers who cannot source these components otherwise. OLED panel parts from ASUS ROG and MSI MAG monitors have documented demand in the repair community.
For European markets: eBay Germany, eBay Spain, Amazon.de, and refurbished electronics marketplaces in Poland and the Netherlands have consistent demand for salvage and refurbished gaming monitors from premium brands. German buyers in particular have a well-established market for Bastlerware (repair/tinkerer stock) at reduced prices.
For US buyers: eBay US and Facebook Marketplace USA are the strongest channels. The ASINs for these monitors are active on Amazon US, meaning reconditioned units can be listed directly on existing product pages.
Bulk Electronics Liquidation Deals Wholesale – Salvage Monitors vs Mixed Category Pallets
| Feature | Salvage Gaming Monitor Pallet | Generic Mixed Liquidation Pallets |
|---|---|---|
| Average item MSRP | A$750.99 | A$8 to A$82 |
| Brand recognition | ASUS ROG, MSI MAG, Samsung Odyssey, Acer Nitro, AOC | Variable |
| Repair potential | High: display hardware is repairable by specialists | Minimal |
| Parts revenue pathway | Strong: OLED panels, power boards, stands | Negligible |
| Buyer audience | Gaming enthusiasts, PC builders, repair workshops, exporters | Non-specific |
| Platform search demand | High and consistent in gaming monitor categories | Varies by item |
| Manifest provided | Yes, full product name and MSRP per unit | Rarely |
| Suitable for non-technical resellers | No | Sometimes |
Why Our Pallets Are Different
The default in the salvage market is opacity. You buy by weight or by approximate category and discover the actual contents and condition on delivery. That model transfers maximum risk to the buyer and minimum transparency from the seller.
At bulksupplieraustralia.com.au, the manifest is available before payment. Every monitor in this lot is listed by full product name and MSRP. You know before ordering that this pallet contains two ASUS ROG PG32UCDM 4K QD-OLED units, three MSI MAG 271QPX 360Hz units, and three ASUS ROG Strix XG27AQDMG WOLED units. You can research current eBay Australia sold prices for each model in both working and for-parts conditions. You can model your acquisition economics before committing capital.
The stock in this lot originates from European distribution centres and liquidation channels. These are not unknown or unbranded items. Every monitor on the manifest is a product with an established resale market and documented buyer demand.
Is Buying This Bulk Electronics Liquidation Deal Worth It?
For a technically capable buyer: the economics are defensible. The OLED and QHD monitors in the upper half of this manifest carry enough unit value that even a 30 to 40 percent repair rate on those specific units generates meaningful revenue. Add parts income from non-repairable units and fast local cash from the Full HD monitors, and the overall lot can pay.
The honest risk: this is salvage, not returns. The source confirms items have been tested and carry known defects. You are not buying stock with condition uncertainty. You are buying stock with confirmed issues. The question is whether those issues are economically repairable, and that depends entirely on your diagnostic and technical capability.
If you do not have that capability, do not buy this lot on the expectation of learning it on arrival. Salvage monitor repair requires specialist knowledge of display panel diagnostics, power supply fault finding, and component sourcing. Without that, a significant portion of this lot becomes scrap.
For the right buyer, this is a strong value proposition. For the wrong buyer, it is an expensive learning exercise.
How Resellers Move From Quick Flips to Long-Term Growth
The resellers who build durable businesses in salvage electronics are not buying one pallet at a time. They develop a repeatable process: receive, diagnose, triage into repair, parts, and disposal streams, list each stream through the appropriate channel, and measure outcomes per unit across each category.
Over time, that process produces data. You know which monitor brands have the best repair success rates. You know which platforms pay best for OLED panel parts. You know which Full HD units convert fastest locally. That data is what turns a salvage pallet into a repeatable business rather than a one-time experiment.
The Difference Between Flipping Pallets and Building a Resale Business
Flipping this pallet means testing what you can, listing what works, and selling parts from what does not. A resale business in salvage electronics means having a buyer for OLED panels before the pallet arrives, a repair queue system that moves units from intake to listed in a predictable timeframe, and supplier relationships that give you access to similar lots ahead of the general market.
The manifest-first purchasing model at bulksupplieraustralia.com.au supports the second approach. You can contact B2B parts buyers with the specific model list before the pallet ships. You can pre-qualify repair economics before you commit capital. That preparation is what separates consistent margin from unpredictable outcomes.
How to Tell If a Pallet Actually Fits Your Market
Three questions before ordering. First, do you have the technical capability to diagnose monitor power faults and assess OLED panel damage, or reliable access to a technician who does? Without this, the high-value OLED units in this lot are not recoverable through your business. Second, do you have established channels for parts sales, specifically OLED panels and power boards for premium gaming monitors? If not, the non-repairable units represent a write-off rather than a revenue stream. Third, do your current resale channels include gaming hardware on eBay Australia or direct B2B buyers for reconditioned monitors?
Yes to all three: this lot fits your business. One or more no: address the gap in capability before committing to a salvage pallet at this value.
Why Good Inventory Feels Boring (And Why That Is a Good Thing)
An ASUS ROG PG32UCDM 4K QD-OLED with a power fault is not exciting inventory. What it is, for the right workshop, is a known diagnostic challenge with a known repair pathway and a known resale price on the other side. That predictability, grounded in brand strength and documented secondary market demand, is what makes salvage at this price tier commercially viable rather than speculative.
The brands on this pallet are not exciting discoveries. They are the gaming monitor brands that eBay Australia buyers search by name. That existing demand is what justifies the repair investment.
Shipping Within and Outside Australia
bulksupplieraustralia.com.au ships this pallet Australia-wide. Monitor pallets are shipped via specialist freight carriers capable of handling fragile electronics. Estimated delivery within Australia is 5 to 12 business days depending on destination. All major metro areas are covered. Regional deliveries may carry extended transit times.
International shipping is available for this lot to European markets including the United Kingdom, Germany, France, Spain, Italy, Poland, the Netherlands, and others, as well as the United States and selected international markets. International freight for a monitor pallet ranges from 10 to 21 business days depending on destination and carrier. Freight costs are calculated at checkout based on pallet weight, dimensions, and delivery address. Full tracking is provided.
No Local Pickup. No Warehouse Sales. Online Only.
bulksupplieraustralia.com.au does not accept local pickup, warehouse visits, or in-store purchases for any order. This applies equally to this salvage monitor pallet. All purchases are completed through the online checkout and shipped to your nominated delivery address.
Truckload orders involving multiple pallet consignments may be eligible for customised logistics. Contact the team via WhatsApp or email to discuss truckload arrangements specifically.
Why Buy From bulksupplieraustralia.com.au?
bulksupplieraustralia.com.au operates as wholesaleclearanceoutlet.com, a registered wholesale liquidation business servicing professional resellers, repair workshops, and export traders across Australia, the United States, Europe, and international markets.
WhatsApp: 468201942 Email: sales@bulksupplieraustralia.com.au
Legal Disclaimer
All items in this lot are salvage stock sold as-is. Items have been tested and carry known defects which may include power failure, screen damage, missing components or accessories, and significant cosmetic wear. bulksupplieraustralia.com.au does not guarantee the operational condition, completeness, or repairability of any item in this lot. MSRP figures are manufacturer-suggested retail prices provided for reference only. Resale and repair revenue estimates are based on observed secondary market data and do not represent guaranteed financial outcomes. All items must be assessed by the buyer upon receipt. Purchasing this lot confirms your acceptance of these terms. This lot is intended exclusively for professional resale, repair, or parts use.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are bulk electronics liquidation deals wholesale? Bulk electronics liquidation deals wholesale are lots of consumer electronics sourced from retail returns, distribution centres, or liquidation channels and sold below retail price to professional resellers, repair workshops, and export traders. This specific lot contains 25 salvage gaming monitors from European distribution sources.
What does salvage mean in this context? Salvage means the items in this lot have been tested and carry identified defects. Unlike consumer returns where condition is variable and often unknown, salvage stock has confirmed faults: power issues, screen damage, missing parts, or significant wear. You are buying at a price that reflects those defects, with the expectation of repair, parts extraction, or discounted resale.
What is the difference between salvage and consumer returns pallets? Consumer returns are items sent back by buyers after purchase. Condition varies and may include fully functional units alongside defective ones. Salvage stock consists of items tested by the distributor and confirmed to have defects. Salvage carries higher repair requirements but is typically available at a lower acquisition cost relative to MSRP.
Are the items tested before sale? Yes. The items in this lot have been tested by the source. Known defects including absence of power, screen damage, missing accessories, and cosmetic wear have been identified. The specific defect profile of each unit is not individually listed, so buyer-side diagnostics are essential upon receipt.
Are these bulk electronics liquidation deals wholesale profitable? For technically capable buyers, yes. The OLED gaming monitors in this lot carry individual MSRPs above A$1,235. Even partial repair or parts-only recovery from these units generates meaningful revenue relative to a salvage acquisition price. Profitability depends entirely on your repair capability and channel access.
Can I inspect the pallet before buying? No. All orders are online only. The manifest above lists every monitor in the lot by full product name and MSRP. Research current eBay Australia sold prices for each model in working and for-parts conditions to assess the economics before ordering.
Where can I resell salvage gaming monitors? eBay Australia for both working and for-parts listings. Facebook Marketplace and Gumtree for functional lower-value units via local pickup. Direct B2B to gaming shops, LAN venues, PC builders, and repair communities. For European markets: eBay Germany, eBay Spain, and Amazon.de for reconditioned units.
What is the best item to test first on this pallet? The two ASUS ROG PG32UCDM 4K QD-OLED units. Combined MSRP of A$4,280.36. A single functional unit in this range can generate A$988 to A$1,483 on eBay Australia. Even a non-functional unit listed for parts or not working produces A$329 to A$823. Testing these first establishes your acquisition cost recovery baseline.
Do you ship outside Australia? Yes. bulksupplieraustralia.com.au ships to Europe, the United States, and selected international markets. Freight costs and timelines for monitor pallets are calculated at checkout based on weight, dimensions, and destination.
Can I pick up the pallet in person or visit the warehouse? No. All orders are online only. No warehouse visits, no local pickup, no in-store transactions for individual pallet orders. Truckload enquiries may have separate logistics options. Contact via WhatsApp or email.
What makes this different from other bulk electronics liquidation deals wholesale? The manifest and the brand composition. You know the exact model of every monitor before you pay. ASUS ROG, MSI MAG, Samsung Odyssey, and Acer Nitro are brands with active, documented secondary market demand in both working and salvage conditions. That combination of pre-purchase transparency and premium brand value is what distinguishes this lot from opaque or unbranded salvage stock.















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