Electronics Wholesale Liquidation Warehouse – 24 Salvage Gaming Monitors, A$18,765+ MSRP | bulksupplieraustralia.com.au
Sourcing electronics wholesale liquidation warehouse stock that is worth repairing requires two things: a brand list that commands real secondary market prices, and a manifest you can read before committing capital. This lot delivers both.
Twenty-four salvage gaming and desktop monitors from European distribution centres. Total MSRP above A$18,765. The brand composition covers the categories that serious gaming hardware buyers actively search: Samsung Odyssey, ASUS ROG Swift and Strix, MSI MAG, Acer Nitro, AOC, and ASRock. Average MSRP per item sits above A$782. The six highest-value units alone carry a combined MSRP exceeding A$9,550.
This is not a returns pallet. Salvage stock has been tested and carries confirmed defects: power failures, screen damage, missing accessories, and wear. The economics work when your operation has the technical capability to diagnose, repair, or extract parts value from premium display hardware. Without that capability, this lot is not the right purchase.
For the right buyer: a handful of repaired or partially recoverable OLED and premium QHD units, combined with parts revenue and fast local cash from functional Full HD monitors, is how this category pays. The full manifest is below. Every monitor listed by name and MSRP before you order.
What This Salvage Monitor Pallet Contains
The 24 items cover four market segments:
Ultra-premium gaming monitors: Samsung 49″ Odyssey G9 DQHD 1000R Curved 240Hz, Samsung 32″ Odyssey Neo G7 4K 165Hz, ASUS ROG Swift PG27AQN 27″ QHD 360Hz G-SYNC, Samsung 27″ Odyssey OLED G6 QHD 360Hz, MSI MAG 321UP QD-OLED 32″ 4K 165Hz, ASUS ROG Strix XG27AQDMG 27″ 1440p WOLED 240Hz
Professional and productivity monitors: Samsung Viewfinity S80TB 27″ 4K UHD IPS 60Hz Built-in Speakers (x3)
Mid-range QHD and ultrawide gaming monitors: MSI MAG401QR 40″ 155Hz IPS UWQHD, AOC Q27G3XMN 27″ Mini LED QHD 180Hz, Acer Nitro VG271U M3bmiipx 27″ QHD 180Hz, Acer ED270U P2bmiipx 27″ 170Hz VA QHD, ASRock PG27QFT2A 27″ 180Hz IPS QHD, ASRock Phantom PG27Q15R2A 27″ QHD 165Hz Curved with Speakers
Entry and mid Full HD gaming monitors: AOC C27G2Z 27″ Curved FHD 240Hz, ASUS VA329HE 31.5″ FHD IPS 75Hz, ASUS TUF Gaming VG249Q1R 23.8″ FHD 165Hz, MSI G27C3F 27″ 180Hz VA FHD (x2), Acer Nitro QG241Y S3 23.8″ 180Hz FHD, Acer AOPEN 27CV1 Hbi 27″ FHD 100Hz, MSI G244F E2 24″ 180Hz Rapid IPS FHD, Gateway All-in-One Intel Pentium Silver J5040 23.8″ FHD Windows 11 Home
All items are salvage stock. Tested with confirmed defects. Defects include absence of power, screen panel damage, missing accessories or components, and significant cosmetic wear. All items sold as-is.
Full Pallet Manifest – All 24 Items
| Product | MSRP (AUD) |
|---|---|
| Samsung 49″ Odyssey G9 DQHD 1000R Curved Gaming Monitor 240Hz AMD FreeSync Premium Pro LS49CG954ENXZ | A$2,140.18 |
| Samsung 32″ 165Hz VA UHD Gaming Monitor FreeSync Premium Pro 3840×2160 4K Odyssey Neo G7 LS32BG752NNXGO | A$1,811.18 |
| ASUS ROG Swift PG27AQN 27″ WQHD 1440P IPS 360Hz G-SYNC NVIDIA Reflex HDR 1ms Gaming Monitor | A$1,564.18 |
| Samsung 27″ Odyssey OLED G6 G60SD QHD 360Hz 0.03ms FreeSync Premium Pro LS27DG602SNXZA | A$1,481.23 |
| MSI MAG 321UP QD-OLED 32″ 165Hz UHD 3840×2160 4K Gaming Monitor | A$1,367.18 |
| 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 Viewfinity S80TB LS27B804TGNXGO 27″ 4K UHD IPS 60Hz Built-in Speakers | A$955.18 |
| Samsung Viewfinity S80TB LS27B804TGNXGO 27″ 4K UHD IPS 60Hz Built-in Speakers | A$955.18 |
| Samsung Viewfinity S80TB LS27B804TGNXGO 27″ 4K UHD IPS 60Hz Built-in Speakers | A$955.18 |
| MSI MAG401QR 40″ 155Hz IPS UWQHD 3440×1440 2K Gaming Monitor FreeSync Premium | A$494.18 |
| AOC Q27G3XMN 27″ Mini LED Gaming Monitor 2K QHD 2560×1440 180Hz 1ms 2x HDMI 2x DisplayPort | A$461.18 |
| Acer Nitro VG271U M3bmiipx 27″ WQHD 2560×1440 IPS AMD FreeSync Premium 180Hz 0.5ms DCI-P3 95% | A$444.78 |
| Acer 27″ 170Hz VA QHD Gaming Monitor FreeSync Premium 2560×1440 ED270U P2bmiipx | A$411.73 |
| Gateway All-in-One Intel Pentium Silver J5040 2.0GHz 4GB 128GB 23.8″ FHD Windows 11 Home GWAP42424-WT | A$395.18 |
| ASRock 27″ 180Hz IPS QHD Gaming Monitor FreeSync 2560×1440 PG27QFT2A | A$395.18 |
| ASRock Phantom PG27Q15R2A 27″ QHD 2560×1440 165Hz Wi-Fi Antenna FreeSync Premium Built-in Speakers Curved | A$395.18 |
| AOC C27G2Z 27″ Curved Frameless Ultra-Fast Gaming Monitor FHD 1080p 0.5ms 240Hz FreeSync HDMI/DP/VGA | A$296.38 |
| ASUS VA329HE 31.5″ 1080P Monitor Full HD IPS 75Hz Adaptive-Sync Eye Care HDMI VGA Wall Mountable | A$279.98 |
| ASUS TUF Gaming VG249Q1R 23.8″ 1080P Full HD IPS 165Hz 1ms FreeSync Premium DisplayPort HDMI | A$263.58 |
| MSI G27C3F 27″ 180Hz VA FHD Gaming Monitor FreeSync Premium 1920×1080 | A$247.00 |
| MSI G27C3F 27″ 180Hz VA FHD Gaming Monitor FreeSync Premium 1920×1080 | A$247.00 |
| Acer Nitro QG241Y S3 23.8″ 1920×1080 180Hz 1ms AMD FreeSync Premium HDR Gaming Monitor | A$247.00 |
| Acer AOPEN 27CV1 Hbi 27″ Full HD 1920×1080 AMD FreeSync 100Hz 1ms ZeroFrame Low Blue Light | A$214.18 |
| MSI G244F E2 24″ 180Hz Rapid IPS FHD Gaming Monitor 1920×1080 | A$181.18 |
| Total MSRP | A$18,837.99 |
Estimated Retail Value and Salvage Resale Margins
Total MSRP: A$18,837.99 Number of items: 24 Average item MSRP: approximately A$784.91 MSRP range per item: A$181.18 to A$2,140.18
| Resale Pathway | Typical Revenue Per Unit (AUD) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Premium OLED or ultrawide, fully repaired | A$576 – A$1,483 | Samsung Odyssey G9/Neo G7, ASUS ROG, MSI QD-OLED |
| Premium monitor listed for parts or not working | A$247 – A$741 | Panel and board value drives salvage pricing |
| Samsung Viewfinity 4K, repaired or functional | A$329 – A$576 | Strong B2B demand from IT buyers |
| QHD gaming monitor, reconditioned | A$197 – A$494 | AOC, Acer Nitro, ASRock, MSI MAG401QR |
| Full HD gaming monitor, functional resale | A$82 – A$148 | Fast local cash via Facebook Marketplace and Gumtree |
| Parts revenue per non-repairable unit | A$66 – A$329 | OLED panels, power boards, stands, cables |
Real Profit Examples
Scenario one: A repair workshop tests all 24 units and identifies ten that are repairable. Those ten are reconditioned and listed on eBay Australia at an average of A$412 each, generating A$4,120 in gross revenue. The remaining fourteen units are triaged for parts: OLED panels, power boards, stands, and cables listed individually at A$66 to A$247 per item, adding A$924 to A$3,458 in parts revenue depending on component condition.
Scenario two: The Samsung Odyssey G9 49″ is tested and powers on with cosmetic wear. It is listed on eBay Australia as working with described condition at A$1,071. The ASUS ROG Swift PG27AQN 360Hz does not power on and is listed for parts or not working at A$576. Those two units alone generate A$1,647 from two listings.
Scenario three: Three Samsung Viewfinity S80TB 4K units, if functional or near-functional, are offered as a B2B lot to a corporate IT buyer or systems integrator at A$494 each. Three units at A$494 generates A$1,482 in a single transaction without platform fees.
Scenario four: The six Full HD monitors that pass a basic function test (AOC C27G2Z, ASUS VA329HE, ASUS TUF VG249Q1R, MSI G27C3F units, Acer Nitro QG241Y) are listed locally on Facebook Marketplace at A$99 to A$131 each with local pickup, eliminating outbound freight and generating early cash flow while you work through the high-value items.
Who This Pallet Is For
This lot requires technical capability. That is not a caveat added for legal protection. It is an accurate description of the buyer this pallet is commercially suited to.
The lot fits your business if you operate an electronics repair workshop with display hardware expertise and access to component sourcing for Samsung, ASUS, and MSI monitors, are a gaming hardware reseller on eBay Australia or Amazon AU who sources and reconditions premium displays, deal in electronics parts with established buyers for OLED panels, power boards, and display components from premium brands, export reconditioned or salvage electronics to European markets where Samsung Odyssey, ASUS ROG, and MSI MAG have strong documented resale demand, or purchase salvage gaming hardware specifically to supply the repair and enthusiast community who cannot source these components through standard channels.
If your model is buy, test, and list without repair or parts capability, look at the consumer returns pallets in the bulksupplieraustralia.com.au catalogue. Those lots are structured for that workflow. This one is not.
How to Process This Salvage Pallet
The recovery sequence for a salvage monitor lot runs by value, not volume.
Start with the Samsung Odyssey G9 49″ and the Samsung Odyssey Neo G7 32″ 4K. Combined MSRP of A$3,951.36. The G9 is one of the most searched ultrawide gaming monitors on eBay Australia, in both working and salvage conditions. Diagnose the power fault, assess panel integrity, and determine repair viability before moving to the next unit.
Move to the ASUS ROG Swift PG27AQN 360Hz and the Samsung Odyssey OLED G6 360Hz. Both are premium IPS and OLED units with documented buyer demand in Australian gaming communities. List working units on eBay Australia. List non-working units in the for-parts condition with panel and board photos.
Process the MSI MAG 321UP QD-OLED 4K and the ASUS ROG Strix XG27AQDMG OLED next. These two units combined carry A$2,602.36 in MSRP. A working MSI MAG 321UP lists at A$823 to A$1,071 on eBay AU. A non-working unit listed for parts still attracts A$247 to A$494 from buyers sourcing QD-OLED panels.
Work through the Samsung Viewfinity S80TB trio. If functional, these are strong B2B candidates for corporate IT buyers upgrading monitor fleets. If not, the 4K IPS panels still have parts value.
Then process the QHD gaming tier: MSI MAG401QR 40″ ultrawide, AOC Q27G3XMN Mini LED, Acer Nitro VG271U, Acer ED270U, and both ASRock units. List repaired units individually. Extract panel and board value from non-repairable units.
Finally, triage the Full HD category. Functional units to Facebook Marketplace or Gumtree via local pickup. Non-functional units assessed for component value or disposal.
Where to Sell Electronics Wholesale Liquidation Warehouse Stock in This Category
eBay Australia is the primary national platform for gaming monitor salvage and reconditioned stock. Samsung Odyssey, ASUS ROG, and MSI MAG listings in the gaming monitor category consistently attract both working-condition buyers and parts-sourcing buyers. The eBay for-parts-or-not-working condition category is well-established for premium gaming displays, and buyers in this segment are technically literate and actively searching by model name.
Facebook Marketplace and Gumtree are effective for Full HD monitors that are functional or cosmetically worn but operational. Local pickup eliminates your outbound freight cost, which matters for large and heavy monitor units, and local buyers in Australian cities are consistent buyers of budget gaming and work monitors at A$82 to A$164.
For B2B in Australia: corporate IT departments, small business owners refreshing monitor fleets, PC gaming build shops, LAN gaming venue operators, and university IT procurement teams are all viable bulk buyers for functional Samsung Viewfinity 4K and QHD gaming units. A single transaction covering the three Viewfinity units can generate meaningful revenue without platform fees.
For parts specifically: eBay Australia listings for Samsung OLED panels, ASUS ROG power boards, and MSI QD-OLED components attract repair technicians across Australia and export buyers in Asia and Europe. Detailed component photos and honest condition descriptions drive conversion in this buyer segment.
For European markets: eBay Germany, eBay France, eBay Spain, and Amazon.de have consistent demand for salvage and reconditioned gaming monitors from premium brands. German buyers in particular have a well-developed market for electronics in Bastlerware condition (repair and tinkerer stock) and will pay meaningfully for ASUS ROG and Samsung Odyssey units listed honestly with defect details.
For the United States: eBay US and Facebook Marketplace USA are effective for high-value units. Samsung Odyssey G9 and ASUS ROG Swift units in any condition attract US buyers with repair capability.
Electronics Wholesale Liquidation Warehouse Stock vs Generic Mixed Pallets
| Feature | Salvage Gaming Monitor Pallet | Generic Mixed Liquidation Pallets |
|---|---|---|
| Average item MSRP | A$784.91 | A$8 to A$82 |
| Brand recognition | Samsung Odyssey, ASUS ROG, MSI MAG, Acer Nitro, AOC | Variable and often absent |
| Repair potential | High for premium display hardware | Minimal for most mixed stock |
| OLED and QD-OLED parts value | Significant: panels, boards, arms | Negligible |
| Buyer specificity | Repair workshops, gaming resellers, B2B IT, export traders | Non-specific |
| Platform search demand | High and model-specific in gaming monitor categories | Variable by item |
| Manifest transparency | Full product name and MSRP per unit before purchase | Rarely available |
| Suitable for non-technical resellers | No | Sometimes |
Why Our Pallets Are Different
The electronics wholesale liquidation warehouse market is full of suppliers who describe stock in aggregate: category, weight, approximate brand mix. You discover the actual contents on delivery and calculate your margin after the fact.
At bulksupplieraustralia.com.au, the manifest is available before payment. You know before ordering that this pallet contains a Samsung Odyssey G9 49″, an ASUS ROG Swift PG27AQN 360Hz, three Samsung Viewfinity S80TB 4K units, and the full list of the remaining seventeen monitors. You can look up current eBay Australia sold prices for each model in both working and for-parts conditions before you commit capital. You can model acquisition economics based on your actual repair capability, not on optimistic assumptions.
The stock in this lot comes from European distribution centres and liquidation channels. These are traceable premium brands with established secondary markets in Australia, the United States, and across Europe. That traceability is relevant for listing on eBay and Amazon, where buyers check model numbers and expect accurate identification.
Is Buying This Electronics Wholesale Liquidation Lot Worth It?
For a technically capable buyer with repair infrastructure and established parts buyers: the economics support a considered yes. The top six units on this manifest carry a combined MSRP of A$9,599.13. Even partial recovery from those six units, through repair, functional-with-defects listing, or parts extraction, covers a meaningful portion of a reasonable acquisition cost.
The honest risk: salvage is not returns. These items have known faults. Not all of them are economically repairable. Your actual return depends on how many units in the top tier are repairable at a cost that makes sense, what parts revenue you can extract from those that are not, and how efficiently your operation moves the Full HD tier through local cash channels.
What makes this lot commercially viable for the right buyer is the brand strength. Samsung Odyssey G9 units attract buyer interest in both working and salvage conditions because the brand, model, and panel technology are well-documented in the gaming community. Buyers who cannot afford a new unit or who repair monitors for resale are actively searching for these models. That existing demand exists regardless of unit condition, which is what separates premium salvage from commodity salvage.
How Resellers Move From Quick Flips to Long-Term Growth
The resellers who build repeatable businesses in salvage gaming hardware develop three assets over time: a diagnostic process that gets faster with each pallet, a parts buyer network that absorbs non-repairable units without friction, and a supplier relationship that gives them access to similar lots before the general market sees them.
The first pallet in this category teaches you how long repairs take, which faults are economically viable to fix, and which platforms pay best for each condition tier. The second pallet is faster. The third faster still. That compounding efficiency is what turns a one-time salvage purchase into a durable margin source.
The Difference Between Flipping Pallets and Building a Resale Business
A flipper buys this pallet, tests what they can, and sells outcomes as they come. A resale business operator buys this pallet having already contacted a B2B buyer for the Samsung Viewfinity trio, identified their parts buyer for OLED panels, and pre-built their eBay listings using the manifest data. The economics are the same. The preparation is different, and preparation is what drives consistent margin.
The manifest-first model at bulksupplieraustralia.com.au makes the prepared approach possible. You have the model names and MSRP data to do that preparation before the pallet ships.
How to Tell If a Pallet Actually Fits Your Market
Before ordering, answer four questions. First, can you diagnose monitor power faults and OLED panel damage? If not, who is your repair resource and what do they charge per unit? Second, do you have active parts buyers for Samsung, ASUS ROG, or MSI display components? Third, do your current eBay or B2B channels have existing buyers for gaming monitors in any condition? Fourth, can you absorb the acquisition cost while carrying inventory through a repair and listing cycle that may take four to eight weeks for the premium units?
All four yes: this pallet fits your market and your operation. One or more no: address the gap before committing.
Why Reliable Inventory Outperforms Exciting Inventory
The Samsung Odyssey G9 is not an exciting discovery for an experienced electronics reseller. It is a known product with a known buyer profile, a known resale price range in both working and salvage conditions, and a known repair pathway for common faults. That predictability, at a premium brand level with high average MSRP, is what makes salvage lots in this tier commercially useful rather than speculative.
Shipping Within and Outside Australia
bulksupplieraustralia.com.au ships this pallet Australia-wide via specialist freight carriers handling fragile electronics. Estimated delivery within Australia is 5 to 12 business days. All major metropolitan areas are covered as standard. Regional delivery timelines may be extended depending on location.
International shipping covers the United Kingdom, Germany, France, Spain, Italy, Poland, the Netherlands, and other European markets, as well as the United States and selected international destinations. Monitor pallet international transit ranges from 10 to 21 business days depending on destination and freight service. All freight costs are calculated at checkout. Full shipment tracking is provided from dispatch.
No Local Pickup. No Warehouse Sales. Online Only.
bulksupplieraustralia.com.au does not accept local pickup, in-store sales, or warehouse visits for any pallet orders. All purchases are made through the website checkout and delivered to your nominated address.
Truckload orders covering multiple pallet consignments may qualify for customised freight arrangements. Contact the team via WhatsApp or email to discuss.
Why Buy From bulksupplieraustralia.com.au?
bulksupplieraustralia.com.au operates as wholesaleclearanceoutlet.com, a registered wholesale liquidation business supplying 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 confirmed 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, repairability, or regulatory compliance of any item in this lot. MSRP figures are manufacturer-suggested retail prices for reference only. Revenue and margin 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 acceptance of these terms. This lot is intended for professional resale, repair, or parts use only.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is an electronics wholesale liquidation warehouse lot? An electronics wholesale liquidation warehouse lot is a bulk consignment of consumer electronics sourced from distribution centres, retail return programmes, or liquidation channels, sold below retail price to professional resellers, repair workshops, and export traders. This specific lot contains 24 salvage gaming and desktop monitors from European distribution sources.
What does salvage mean for these monitors? Salvage means the items have been tested and carry confirmed defects. Unlike consumer returns where condition is variable and often unknown, salvage monitors in this lot have documented faults: power failure, 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 in as-is condition.
What is the difference between salvage and consumer returns? Consumer returns are products sent back by buyers after purchase. Condition is variable and often not fully assessed before resale. Salvage stock has been tested and confirmed to have specific faults. Salvage carries higher repair requirements and is typically available at a lower acquisition cost relative to MSRP than comparable returns stock.
Are the items in this lot tested? Yes. Items have been tested by the source and carry identified defects. The specific fault for each individual unit is not listed in the manifest, so buyer-side diagnostics are essential upon receipt.
Are these electronics wholesale liquidation deals profitable? For technically capable buyers, yes. The Samsung Odyssey, ASUS ROG, and MSI MAG units in this lot carry MSRPs above A$1,235 per unit. Partial recovery from these through repair or parts extraction can generate meaningful revenue relative to a salvage acquisition price. Profitability depends entirely on your repair capability, parts buyer access, and channel efficiency.
Can I inspect the pallet before buying? No. All sales are online only. The manifest above lists every monitor by product name and MSRP. Use that data to research current eBay Australia sold prices for each model in working and for-parts conditions before making a purchasing decision.
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 IT buyers and gaming businesses for Samsung Viewfinity and QHD units. For European markets: eBay Germany, eBay Spain, and Amazon.de. For the US: eBay US and Facebook Marketplace.
Which unit should I test first? The Samsung Odyssey G9 49″ ultrawide. At A$2,140.18 MSRP, a working unit lists at A$1,071 to A$1,565 on eBay Australia. A non-working unit listed for parts still attracts A$329 to A$659. Testing this unit first establishes your recovery baseline for the entire lot.
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 dimensions, weight, and destination.
Can I visit the warehouse or collect in person? No. All orders are online only. No local pickup, no warehouse visits, and no in-store transactions for pallet orders. Truckload enquiries may be eligible for different logistics arrangements. Contact via WhatsApp or email.
What makes this electronics wholesale liquidation warehouse lot stand out? The brand tier and manifest transparency combined. Samsung Odyssey G9 and Neo G7, ASUS ROG Swift PG27AQN, Samsung Odyssey OLED G6, and MSI MAG QD-OLED are not commodity items. They are premium gaming monitors with active secondary market demand in working, reconditioned, and salvage conditions across Australia, Europe, and the United States. Knowing exactly which models are on the pallet before you pay is what makes the pre-purchase commercial assessment possible.














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