need4art wrote:Well Brian,
The lady was neither uneducated or desperate-bad assumption on your part. I saw that you were attempting to work out something on the machine from your ebay posting and I notice that you purchase and sell machines on a somewhat regular basis. I do not-in fact I have not sold 1 machine in the 5 years that I have in the hobby. This machine needs some restoration work and since that's what I do for a living I have been trying to avoid buying machines that need work. I do not do "quick jobs" each of the 3 machines that I have redone have taken about 200 hours each.
The truth is that the lady has worked at both the MET and at the Fields and we had something in common. I showed how the machine worked and talked about what I would do to it-but I was NOT going to buy it until she offered to GIVE it to me because I knew about the machine-and folks on the board helped me to understand about it. She had done some research, visited Proudfoot's websight and was not uneducated about it. It was than that I made her the offer.
In addition there was 5 hours of my time, and $60.00 in gas.
I have noted at times that members use this chat board to take potshots at each other- that is not what I see it for-exchange of information, support in what has a very small collector base and help that is what it is for. Yes I posted a price but I know that I will put more into the machine. Re-plating, repair of the repoducer, and time and materials to do what needs to be done to the cabinet. Perhaps that is something you do not understand or value. In any case if I was going to sell the machine at some point it would not be to....
Abe
I actually was in touch with her since it was first posted on ebay and the only thing I was finalizing was transportation for it. I was more than happy to pay her asking price which, at 250, I think was incredibly fair, if not low. I was fine, however, with the fact that someone else closer to it got it before I did, it's happened to me numerous times before and it will again to be sure. so be it. no "pot shots" were intended at all because of that. I simply found it lame how, even after the discussion generated here in terms of value, the fact that her asking price was incredibly low, that someone - even such as yourself, a restorationist by trade who had done the research and was familiar with the relative scarcity and worth of this machine - would still make a lowball offer (regardless of the gas, the 200 mile drive and the worn nickel plating). it just struck me as cheap... perhaps because I've dealt with too many people mainly through craigslist who just can't pay an asking price, no matter how low, and must get it for less to be happy.