Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/01/17
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Thanks Robert. I agree with you. Personally, I'd never buy anything sight unseen and unless I knew it's history. I have three mint Nikon AI-S lenses that I offered someone for $600. The response was that he could buy the lenses for a lot less money at a dealer and that I should sell them for *trade-in* price. That's crazy, he'd never get mint lenses at a dealer and he wouldn't know their history. I decided to just trade them in on the new M6 .85 if it turns out I want one. Bud - -----Original Message----- From: robert <louzan@worldnet.att.net> To: leica-users@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us <leica-users@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us> Date: Saturday, January 17, 1998 12:42 PM Subject: Re: [Leica] WTB:LEICA DR 50mm f2 SUMMICRON-M >Bud, > >No offense taken, glad to answer. Well, there are always at least two sides >to everything. First, if I had the money and wanted to pay retail, I >wouldn't buy the lens privately. Instead, I'd go to NYC (15 min. ride) and >buy it from a reputable dealer who would offer a 15 day MBG and a 6 month >guarantee. > >Dealers have to pay salaries, rent, electricity, publicity, and still make a >small profit if they want to stay afloat. As for buying privately, I try to >be as honest as I can and tell everyone up front that I am paying dealer's >price (partly to avoid dealers themselves on the web.) Anyhow, a lot of >folks offer stuff one never even requested; others are very vague in giving >serial numbers, whether it's Canadian or German, and above all, what the >condition of the lens is. From this side of the computer, I can only >speculate on the condition of the lens, which I almost always overrate. A >lot of people fail to consider edge separation, haze, fungi, coating >problems, etc. And of course, they are not going to give ma a 6 month >guarantee. Repairs are expensive, anywhere from $50-200, for an old lens >which perhaps cannot be fixed. > >What bothers me is when I make an honest offer, am turned down, and then - >a few weeks later - the equipment is sold to a bad dealer (for a fraction of >what I offered) who will sell it for 5 times more. And, of course, I won't >give anyone the hassle that a dealer would in buying it. Finally, the most >important issue is in sending money by mail. How do I know I'm going to get >a lens and not a brick? > >There are no fixed rules on buying or selling prices, just what one person >is willing to sell it for, and what the other is willing to pay. If you >decide to sell a lens of yours, then... well, let me know! > >Regards, > >Robert