@COUTO,
I've worked personally with literally hundreds of eBay sellers, many of them very new to eBay and ecommerce like you are. And I've noticed that most of the newer sellers have the tendency to make snap judgments about websites, resources, tools, etc. much too quickly, in their eagerness to get started with their online businesses.
Whenever I recommend a particular supplier or dropshipper to one of them, in almost every case I get an email reply back from them within only 1 or 2 days, saying that they couldn't find any decent products on that supplier's website.
I ask them how many products they actually researched (and I mean how many they thoroughly, comprehensively researched), and how many hours they spent researching potential products on the supplier's site, and 99.9% of them admit that they only researched 5 or 10 products and/or only spent a few hours researching products before jumping to the conclusion that this particular supplier didn't have any viable products to resell on eBay.
Be very careful that you don't get sucked into this mode of thinking. If it were that easy, there would already be so many people doing it that there wouldn't be room for any new sellers to break into selling on eBay.
In order for you to be able to make an accurate judgment as to whether or not a particular supplier or dropshipper (or list of dropshippers, as the case may be) has any viable products, you need to research a MINIMUM of 50-100 products, and spend a minimum of 6-8 hours doing so.
And you need to be doing adequate and accurate research using accurate, reliable research methods. So my next questions for you are: What are you using to research potential products? What research tools are you utilizing? How many different research tools are you using to compare results?
If you're like many new eBay sellers, and you're only looking at eBay listings to try and determine whether or not a particular product will be viable for you to sell, I'm here to tell you that's not enough, especially if you're only looking at active listings, which tell you almost nothing about whether or not a particular product is viable.
At the very least, you should be researching products by using the Completed Listings on eBay, but even then, you'll only be scratching the surface by doing that, and you won't be able to find enough relevant data from just looking at Completed Listings anyway.
It is absolutely essential that you use a high-quality, reputable eBay market research tool when you're trying to find viable products to sell, and even more than one tool, if possible. I personally use 3-4 different market research tools and compare the results between them, and I usually spend at minimum of 2 hours researching just ONE product.
There are many excellent eBay market research tools out there, including the Salehoo Research Labs tool and Terapeak (www.terapeak.com), eBay's preferred research tool.
Anyway, the main point I want to make is that it is literally impossible not to find dozens of viable products to sell among the suppliers listed on Salehoo, as long as you're doing sufficient, accurate market research.
I hope that helps!