Mr W seems to be in a special world where Lecroy products are available at huge discounts to the open market, not that they'd share with us how to get these amazing bargains.
Only in your mind. In reality, there are lots of good 2nd hand deals out there for those that aren't lazy:
500MHz 4Ch for less than $600:
http://www.ebay.com/itm/LeCroy-Waverunner-LT354M-Oscilloscope-500MHz-1-GS-s-DSO-/231903891732http://www.ebay.com/itm/LeCroy-Waverunner-LT354M-Oscilloscope-500MHz-1-GS-s-DSO-/231910736019(BTW: these have 4M sample memory, not 250k as stated in the text!)
There was also one with a few scratches on the protective transparent plastics screen (which isn't difficult to replace) for $460, so pretty much DS1054z money. There's no serial decode but as compensation you get 500MHz BW, 1GSa/s on all channels, and (depending on which software options are enabled, which isn't clear from the text) advanced FFT with up to 1Mpts, jitter/timing analysis, history, statistics and a ton of other math and analysis functions.
1GHz and 8GSa/s for a bit over $1k:
http://www.ebay.com/itm/Lecroy-LC584AL-1GHz-and-8GS-s-in-perfect-working-condition-/272224857602(BTW, all the software options for that scope can
legally be enabled for a few bucks/free, as LeCroy has made them available to hobbyists years ago!)
2GHz, 16GSa/s and 32M sample memory for $1600:
http://www.ebay.com/itm/LeCroy-WavePro-960-Series-2-GHz-4-Channel-Color-LCD-Display-Digital-Oscilloscope-/2523920282954Ch 500MHz 5GSa/s 24Mpts plus lots of very advanced waveform analysis functions and serial decode for a wide range of standards for less than $1500:
http://www.ebay.com/itm/LECROY-WAVERUNNER-6050A-500MHz-QUAD-5GS-s-DIGITAL-OSCILLOSCOPE-/231965700171www.ebay.com/itm/LECROY-WAVERUNNER-6050A-500MHz-QUAD-5GS-s-DIGITAL-STORAGE-OSCILLOSCOPE-/231977345364All within the price range of your average hobbyist gear, with best regards from my "special planet"
However, in case you were talking about new gear, I guess you missed that I explained, many times btw, that the best way to get bargain prices for kit from any big brand is to go through the manufacturer, talk to their sales staff and start negotiating. Base price for scope plus a range of options thrown in is pretty easy to achieve. There often are also demo scopes which often go for a lot less than 70% of the original price, plus they usually are loaded with options.
If you go through resellers (which want their slice of the cake) then worst case you'll pay list price and best case you get a few bread crumps.
This of course doesn't work everywhere, i.e. countries where the manufacturer has no office, in which case you'd have to go through the importer. If you happen to live at such a place, bad luck.
So no, it's neither "my special world" nor a secret.
When us regular people compare eBay or other auction prices the traditional rule of "you get what you pay for" still applies.
That rule pretty much always applies, but if you can't find any bargains then maybe, just maybe you're simply not looking hard enough? There's no such thing as free lunch, and if you want to find good deals, no matter what brand you're looking into, you have to do your homework.
If you can't be arsed to do that then you'll pay premium. It's as simple as that.
However, all this is unrelated to the topic of this thread. If you truly want to talk about how to find bargains then I'd suggest you start a new thread.