Are you seeing more 9/10s?


In my recent round of upgrade fever I had what was for me a new experience: shameless Audiogon condition rating inflation. Maybe once as an Audiogon seller have I rated an item 9/10. But three pieces I purchased recently were rated 9/10. Two of the pieces were nearly ten years old. One seller told me in correspondence that "for its age it's a true 9/10!" 9/10 means (1) less than a year old, (2) very light use, and (3) physically indistinguishable from new. None of the three met these base requirements. I eventually purchased them because they were priced appropriately and through much private conversation I verified their true condition (7/10 and 8/10). I remember when it seemed that all sellers went to great pains to rate conservatively and fully describe flaws. It frustrates me to have to approach listings from a default of skepticism and become Mr. Buyer Detective. Is this new? Am I seeing phantoms? Overreacting?
chuckjonez
No different than buying old records --where "very good" means precisely the opposite. Grading inflation.
Stories of this nature do smack of 'truthiness', as the seller hopes to recoup as much of his investment in the item in question.  Buying a 'pre-owned' anything of late seems to require hi-rez photos of all surfaces and details in order to not feel 'screwed' in some fashion.  And even then one hopes that the pics were of the item to be received....

The stakes of the crap-shoot have seemed to have gone up....and 'buyer beware' gets more imperative...
The Vintage musical instrument business (the drum sector, at any rate) is even worse. Absolute junk and trash described as near-mint. Add poor packing and shipping cartons, and what you receive is often un-restorable. One ends up buying only from those having proven themselves trustworthy.
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