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Old May 25th 05, 06:31 AM
Vector
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On Wed, 25 May 2005 03:01:56 GMT, Anita said:

On Tue, 24 May 2005 17:47:06 -0500, Vector wrote:

Most likely anyone reading this already knew what I learned the hard
way recently.
I bought a roll of coins on eBay which the seller described in the
item line and in the description as an EXTREME ROLL...
Let the buyer beware and all that, and I've learned a lesson. But,
what kind of feedback would you leave for this?


If you were expecting a gem roll based on the seller's description and
received a AU/BU roll, the seller was not being honest. I would either
leave no feedback or a neutral if the price was reasonable, as you
say. The only thing here is that unless it was a BIN, the price could
have gone much higher if people believed it was a cherry-picked roll.
Maybe the seller really meant that all the cherries had been picked
*out* of the roll.

I've been reluctant to buy rolls. Sellers can misrepresent single
coins that have pictures. What might we get with a whole roll of
hidden coins? There are some reputable sellers, but the rolls are so
pricey that there would be a monetary loss if a couple of the coins
did not grade very high. I am hesitant about buying a roll where each
coin cost more than MS64 greysheet :-( Might as well buy single coins
that are already graded -- much cheaper in the end.

Anita


Let me clarify. Up for bid was a roll of 1964 Kennedy Halfs. OK, I
put in a bid, low as I normally do. I periodically buy silver coins
for their bullion value. I lose more than I win, that is my strategy.
Forgive me if you're a seller. But, I think this practice probably
helps the sellers more than anything. I set a bottom line.
Here's the item ... http://tinyurl.com/akwz8
OK, I paid 6x face .. maybe that's not so low. Maybe I was influenced
by the ad. I did expect more than AU/BU though. I am inclined to
leave no feedback, as you suggested.
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