Dylan777 said:With that much money, why not get a NEW 5D III from authourized dealer![]()
Jay Khaos said:Dylan777 said:With that much money, why not get a NEW 5D III from authourized dealer![]()
I thought I was the only one thinking this... +1
Even if 20K clicks is nothing... for me, the deceptive listing justifies asking for a refund. Something to the effect of "Given your shutter count (the most important factor in considering a used camera) is higher by over double what your listing claims, I propose that....etc" I'd probably make a subtle hint that you plan on reporting/leaving negative feedback if they don't agree to credit you a reasonable difference.
The fact is, if you DON'T know the actual shutter count, dont make one up. Even if it's an innocent mistake—it's still the seller's mistake and he has to be left accountable for destroying his own credibility and the piece of mind of the buyer. And now the buyer is responsible for shipping a 10lb package and being out thousands of dollars in the bank for something they didnt even want in the first place. I say you deserve a credit (do it by issuing the seller an invoice through PayPal and be clear about what it's for). If you decide to return it, I say the seller should be responsible for taking it back without hassle and comping you the return shipping. I've done that on eBay as a seller when I made a mistake in the listing...
Mt Spokane Photography said:The thing to be concerned about is that the seller is a liar. That means that anything he said about the camera is suspect.
Return it for a refund. Chances are that it has other expensive issues that you will discover later. Leave feedback explaining the issue.
TexPhoto said:I just bought a 1D Mark IV on eBay, and got a pretty good deal. I paid $2925 and $30 for shipping. Looks flawless, and only has 7500 shutter clicks (according to the listing) Problem is the camera has 26,996. (according to EOScount.com) Other than that the camera is spot on. Looks flawless, has the accessories (2 batteries, A/C adapter, big 2 batt charger)
There was another hick-up in that the buyer emailed me asking for $35 more for shipping and seemed to think it was my fault that shipping was higher than his prediction. I explained that I did not pick the shipping (set before the auction), or send the invoice with $30 shipping after the auction. A buyer can't even change the shipping, it's set by the seller. I was considering paying all or part of it when it arrived, but felt a little strong armed by the first emails.
Anyway, I think 19,494 clicks is a bit much to overestimate. And I intend to request the price is lowered, or return the camera. I don't "need" it. It was sort of a birthday gift for myself and an upgrade to my 7D.
What do you think? Just return it? Just suck it up? Ask for a partial refund? $300?
privatebydesign said:In that case, bearing in mind he has the wrong box, I wouldn't be very happy. For me it would be no Canon paperwork no sale, regardless of shutter count, excuses or emails.
I have bought several 1 series cameras via eBay, one was $4,250, but I would not deal with such waffle and excuses, if they can't back up their claims then send it back for the principal of the thing as much as anything. I am sure there is not much wrong with the camera, just the seller.
TexPhoto said:privatebydesign said:The guy clearly listed it was a refurb, does anybody know when a shutter count starts for a refurb unit? I don't but I know for a fact Canon can reset them. He also says it has 11 months Canon warranty on it, which he will honour and that Canon verified the 7,400 count. There should be paperwork supporting that, I'd trust Canon letterhead paperwork over some third party software hack that has been proven to be inaccurate in the past.
As for his feedback, he has a 190 with 132 from sales and a 100% record. Not as good as TexPhoto though none of them were for Lego, but plenty good enough to be considered honest, especially looking at the consistent type of items he has sold, 300 f4, lots of high end P&S's (which seems to be a hobby all in itself nowadays) and a laptop or two.
Without at least looking at both sides to a story I'd hold off on the crucifixion. If I were the seller and I had Canon paperwork I'd take the camera back, cancel the auction and blacklist TexPhoto.
Well, the seller cannot locate his paperwork. He says the following:
About the warrantee (or just a sales receipt):
"I have everything at home. I have the warranty document. My vacation is actually a deployment. I'm in the Army and gearing up out of state. It is hard for me to coordinate with my wife to scan the warranty paperwork for me. She had her hands full."
About the Shutter Count:
"I never got a document from canon with the shutter count."..."I just got off the phone with cps Virginia and the tech told me the total shutter count was 12,234. The count they gave me last time was 7326 and that was the total I put on the camera when I received it refurbished. The precious shutter counts make up the difference. "
Those are snips of 7 emails I've received in the 6 hours since I emailed him. Lots of words, no paperwork. Not even a forwarded email from Canon.
Jim O said:I've been a member of eBay since 1998 and did a lot of selling and buying there back in the "wild west" days when scam sellers could leave negatives for buyers. I've seen and lived through the changes as the pendulum has swing way over to the buyers' side and has only now started to very slowly swing back a small amount. I have a small eBay business now (10-15 sales/week most of the time, 50-100/week September-early December).
This sale has several red flags:
Red flag number one is when he asked for more money for shipping.
Red flag number two is the discrepancy in the shutter count. As a seller, if I were notified of that I would fall all over myself in horror and immediately offer to make things right in any number of ways including taking it back or offering some cash consideration. The seller didn't do that. In fact he seems to be changing his story.
Red flag number three is a dirty camera that was allegedly recently cleaned.
Red flag number four is the lack of any documentation from Canon, even an email.
But the biggest red flag of them all is a sale with "No Returns". An honorable seller always offers to take something back, particularly if it is not as described. I understand no returns for "buyer's remorse" but if there is a material discrepancy between the description and the actual item, that's not buyer's remorse.
You are potentially protected by eBay's buyer protection since the shutter count is off and the seller can't provide proof. It's a judgment call but eBay tends to err on the side of the buyer.
In order for eBay to make money they need buyers. They make money every time a buyer makes a purchase. They want happy buyers who trust in their marketplace. They want buyers with loads of cash. They really couldn't care less if someone can't sell his camera because the competition is such that someone else with a similar camera will come along and the buyer with the cash will buy.
In fact, things tend to sell for what they are worth, especially on auctions. There are only occasional "bargains" on eBay.
This is what I would do:
File an eBay buyer protection case for an "item not as described". Have all your documentation ready including screenshots, emails, etc. Now the ball is in his court. Perhaps he will offer to make things right. If he doesn't. and you proceed to have eBay settle the dispute one of two things will happen. Either you win and get your money back plus the cost of return shipping, or you lose. If you lose, you are exactly where you are today. If you win, buy from a more accommodating seller with a reasonable return policy.
What I would NOT do:
Do not, under any circumstances, threaten to leave negative or neutral feedback in any way. It could hurt your case, and also it would be grounds to have that feedback removed, thus preventing other buyers from knowing about this transaction.
A little more about feedback. I have very rarely left so much as a neutral. Even in a bad transaction, if it ends well, I might say nothing, or find something nice to say in the context of a positive. People can see the feedback you leave and people can cancel your bids and blacklist you if you are a frequent complainer. I've left one neutral and zero negatives in the last five years or so. The neutral was well deserved. The seller changed shipping methods (from UPS Ground as stated in the listing, to UPS Mail Innovations, a slower, cheaper service), he lied about the actual shipping date to keep his Top Rated Seller standing and discount (they get 20% off final value fees but must ship by next business day), he was evasive when I asked about the fact that the tracking number was not yet in the system, and he generally was a creep.