thuggins
Member
It always makes me suspicious when somehow a seller apparently fails to spot a decimal point in the wrong place. I have seen a theory that e-bay is open to money laundering. If this is a mistake with the decimal point then that means that the price has the equivalent of 50 cents in a nearly $40,000 price which seems to be a joke. I wonder when cars for sale in the U.S. in this range had a price that ended $0.50
This tends to point towards some other explanation and suggests that there is at the very least that something about this is outside a normal financial transaction. Sellers may get away with quite large premiums over market rates but this size of a premium?
pentaxuser
Prototype is correctly spelled in German, as shown on the box. The seller is from the Netherlands. English may not be the 1st language. I've been known to mistype thing too. And collectors item prices are whatever they are willing to pay, just like anything else.I like how "prototype" is misspelled.
Prototype is correctly spelled in German, as shown on the box. The seller is from the Netherlands. English may not be the 1st language. I've been known to mistype thing too. And collectors item prices are whatever they are willing to pay, just like anything else.
I did not see any misspelled "certificate" in the listing, nor in the ones from Hong Kong that you associated this listing with. It is possible that they read this forum and corrected the listings though.I did consider that, and if all the "certificates", including the ones from the dealer in Hong Kong, weren't universally misspelled as "Ceritificate", and if the listings didn't alternate between "prototype" and "prototyp", and if most of them didn't appear to be near-identical models with different name plates and colored panels, it would be easier to take it seriously.
Having looked through some of the listings more closely, it's entirely possible these are rare, one-off "display" type units sent to dealers-- my Volvo, for example, was a unique combination of materials and options sent to the dealers to announce a new model year. So it *is* possible. But it's still silly, and makes it look rather suspicious.
See post #20 above.This is what happens when your partner who is sick of you buying cameras says "You need to sell one of them at least".
You, with all the smarts, say "Ok, love. Will do. I'll put it up for sale right now."
That price? That screams "I put it up for sale as requested...but I have no intention of selling."![]()
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