
Herm
Well-known member
Your teac was packed the same way my 34b was last week only it didnt even have the foam penuts in the box. just two layers of bubble wrap.
Stupid is that stupid does.
Stupid is that stupid does.
Tapehead said:A few things about Ebay. I certainly look at the feedback but also look at the items sold. If someone has twenty positives, all in the last two months, and the items sold were low value ($1-2), I have very little confidence in that unless I'm buying something of similar value from them.
I've had many successful transactions on Ebay. The higher the value, the more carefully I look. I look for how long they've been on Ebay, their feedback, the value of items they've bought and sold, the quality of the information provided including pictures, and if necessary I email and even phone them to see if they know what they're talking about.
I have only been fleeced once, and that was on a $15 item that was only worth probably $1 ( a mini football for my son that turned out to be a little foam display one, not a real small sized one ). I just laughed about it and learned my lesson to be more careful.
The biggest ticket item I purchased was a $1000 Tascam MSR 16 tape deck. It came from a studio in Virginia (I'm in Vancouver Canada). We exchanged several emails and I phoned the owner. He had a small studio and was going fully digital. In this discussion it was clear he knew what he was talking about.
We agreed on the insurance we'd put on it and I bought it. The box arrived damaged and the unit obviously worse for the wear. I phoned him back and we worked out a deal to send it back and have the insurance company deal with it. We had good documentation and photographs and it had been shipped in its original factory box and foam protection. It looked like a forklift blade had pierced the box and and dented the unit, knocking the unit out of alignment and loosening some electronics. I figured the unit was totalled but they did a full repair and shipped it back and it was better than before since it was gone over with a fine tooth comb. So a bad luck story but a good ending. I'm not saying things will never go wrong, they can and did as I've described. For larger ticket items I would suggest really doing your homework, make sure you have good insurance, pay a few extra dollars if necessary and insist on it being professionally packed. (It's a big mistake to try to go cheap on shipping, insurance and packaging. It's better to walk away from the "deal" if all that doesn't add up to a viable purchase.)
My sympathies to all of you with these horror stories...it's very sad when this happens, not only because of the money and time lost but also I hate to see a perfectly good machine or instrument damaged like this. It ain't right.
I hope this helps, good luck everyone.
Beck said:One really important thing that a lot of people don't do is check the seller's feedback he's given to others. You can often see a bad attitude in what someone says about others. You can get an idea of whether the person may be unreasonable if something goes wrong.
Hey cjacek, have you contacted the seller about returning the item? The vast majority of my ebay transactions have been great. I have had a couple bad packing experiences from sellers like yours though. One was good enough to refund a large portion of my money, the other was a jerk.
You can replace the wood on that machine easy enough. If you don't do woodworking you can have a couple new panels made to match the originals by a local wood shop. I don't know about the rest, except to have it realigned by a Tascam tech.
I would try getting your money back first -- talk to ebay support about your options. Since he had 100% feedback you may have some recourse.
I really check sellers out before I buy anything, but something could always go wrong.
Of course I check feedback, but the ebay feedback system is flawed. One really important thing that a lot of people don't do is check the seller's feedback he's given to others. You can often see a bad attitude in what someone says about others. You can get an idea of whether the person may be unreasonable if something goes wrong.
I will also do research on the individual. Some sellers have an email posted in the listing. If they don't, I always "ask the seller a question" just so I can get his email and maybe a name in the reply. By the time I bid I will often know who the guy is, where he lives, where he works, etc. I will do a search on an address and find posts by the person on message boards like this -- again, I may see something about the person's attitude I don't like. I've even found questions by sellers about how to fix the very item they are selling as "mint condition."
I have learned to give precise packing instructions. I used to hesitate because I don't want to insult the person's intelligence (I do enough of that here), but being clear about what you expect before even placing a bid is your best bet.
There's no guarantee, but I've had over 175 transactions on ebay, buying and selling with only two major and a few minor problems.
It's not just ebay either. I've had my worst experiences with non-ebay Internet businesses. And before the Internet I got burned by a mail order audio-video house in NY City over a Panasonic Super VHS editing deck. That was in 1993, and if I ever run in to that guy...#%@*&!!!
I know how frustrating it can be -- I wish you the best in resolving this thing.
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Outlaws said:Good news!
...at least for me.
PayPal found this smuck guilty and gave me just over 50% of my money back. They said that was all that was left in his account, so that is all they are legally allowed to give me. He was't an insured seller, so PayPal doesn't back it up on their own. But they also said it was an "unsastifactory amount" and will pursure him for the rest. Until they do, his account with PayPal is done.
So in the end (so far), I am left with more than I thought I would have, plus a not so bad phone (if you can look at it objectivly for what it is, not what is should have been). I just super glued the reciever. I just hope it holds.
Vintage TX said:Sorry about the damaged deck Daniel.![]()
You should get a full refund from the seller, but shipping with USPS is not suggested at all with heavy electronics.
Good news Pay Pal refunded 50 %, chase the seller for the rest !
Looking at the pictures, the plastic fan on the back can be replaced, other models have the same fan Daniel, check the screws on the side of the motor, they maybe are just loose.
Damaged sidepanel... if you know a carpenter new ones is maybe a option.
Is the PC-board cracked or just pushed in ?
Thanks for your comments about my packing, never had one damaged yet, last month I shipped a Teac to Japan from US, Fed Ex worldwide, weight of the deck 48 lbs, after packing 65 lbs.![]()
Was little scary as customs usually cut these open looking for drugs or whatever, but it made the trip OK and the buyer is happy.![]()
PS/ I have another fan for you if you decide to fix it Daniel.![]()
Vintage TX said:Sorry for long wait, been very busy here, the fastest way is to e-mail private Daniel.![]()
Great the seller came forward and refunded his mistake.
Before you decide to start buying parts etc, check the pc-boards very carefully.
They can be cracked if the deck was dropped Daniel..
i would take both sidepanels off, and look at the frame inside, if it's bent you are out of luck, would buy another deck instead and use that one for parts.
The palstic fan comes off very easy, look between motor and fan there is a phillips screw, loosen it and pull the fan off.
About your Akai and 456 tapes, is the tape new or old ?
Shouldn't be any difference between the 2 tapes if they are new.
superstupid said:I bought a Mesa/Boogie tube head, no pictures, some shady feedback, and the guy had auctioned the same head earlier, and was put back on the block, no feedback was seen.
Well the 15 yr old idiot packed it in a beaten rack case that wasn't even screwed into the rack, inside a much bigger box with only a little bit of packing peanuts inside it.
Broken tubes everywhere. Also, he neglected to tell me that the amp did not exactly work properly. It made a sound, but had a serious clipping problem when cranked. Upon taking it to the tech, there apparently was a fire inside the amp at one point. This has been a real pain to fix. I fix it, then it fries itself again.