gramophone-georg wrote:Jerry B. wrote:only buy it if you are happy with what you are looking at, not what you perceive it to be...
So you'd be happy to sell off a good portion of your collection to buy an old tinfoil machine only to find out that a perfect replica was aged on a back patio for an Oregon winter and then was sold by an unscrupleljss antique dealer?

Really

As the current Allstate commercial states... this has happened! (but I don't know if Allstate covered the loss)
Jerry Blais
If I was going to make that kind of a purchase I'd most certainly consult an expert because we all know that probably 90% of the tinfoil machines out there are replicas anyways.
But if you actually did buy it from a dealer that purposefully misrepresented it, you'd think that you could press fraud charges somehow, yes?
I think that what that statement is saying is that one needs to go into these things with one's eyes open.
It is truly "Buyers Beware" in any collectible market. Jerry, I would never think of selling my entire collection for one machine that I was not entirely certain of.... That was my point: If you are going to pay a premium for ANY machine, you either have to be an expert yourself, or only buy things that you are happy with no matter what the outcome... Many collectors as well as experts have been fooled, either by intent or by lack of knowledge by the buyer or seller. If you go to buy a used car, do you trust everything that the sales person says? Or, do you take a chance on it being as described or do you hire a mechanic to look it over? Even then, the car may be fine as far as usefulness, even though it was submerged in a hurricane in Louisiana and rebuilt from the ground up...
Would you buy a rare Honus Wagner baseball card, knowing that the technology exists to produce an exact replica...? I wouldn't... On April 20, 2012, an anonymous New Jersey resident purchased a VG-3 graded T206 Wagner card for more than $1.2 million. On April 6, 2013, a T206 card sold for a record for a baseball card on an online auction. It brought in $2,105,770.50 in an online sale by Goldin Auctions.
That sale makes any phonograph purchase sound like a no brainer...
