- Thread starter
- #801
mrmopar
Member
- Jan 19, 2010
- 6,736
- 5,572
Might as well share this, even though I didn't get what I paid for. Are others being plagued with shipping mistakes as often as me, or am I just real lucky?
Got this today:
. This is what I bid on and paid for: 
See the difference?
I guess I just can't/don't tolerate this kind of mistake. Take a little pride in your work. Pay attention to the details. Jesus, I am tired of having to deal with shipping mistakes.
Here is the fun part and we'll see how this plays out. I won the plate for opening bid of $0.99. S/h was $10.20. Plate came fast and well packaged, but it's WRONG! I messaged seller today, explaining what had happened. I asked how they wanted to coordinate the swap. I have not heard back yet, but I also offered this:
The plate I received was also listed at an opening bid of $0.99 and didn't sell. If I return the wrong plate and get the correct plate, seller is on the hook for both shipping charges. His mistake, his cost. So, I offered to keep the wrong plate, pay the $1 auction fee and save them from having to spend $10+ to ship it back.
Assuming they want their plate back (and there is no profit on s/h), here is how the math works out.
Correct plate purchased $0.99 (Paid by me)
Initial shipping $10.20 (Paid by me)
Return shipping of wrong plate $10.20 (paid by seller)
Shipping of correct plate $10.20 (paid by seller)
I get my plate and spend $11.20. Seller gets my $0.99 (minus fees) and spends $20.40 for shipping (plus the $10.20 I paid them for s/h). They sell 1 plate and lose $19.40 on this transaction.
As painful as it sounds, letting me keep the wrong plate for $0.99 is the most economical way to solve this.
Correct plate purchased $0.99 (Paid by me)
Initial shipping $10.20 (Paid by me)
Keep incorrect plate $0.99 (Paid by me)
Shipping of correct plate &10.20 (paid by seller)
I end up spending $12.20 and get 2 plates (Yes, I win either way). Seller spends $10.20 to correct their mistake, but gets another buck from me. They are now down 2 plates and $9.20 cash.
Either way, I feel a little bad for anyone who screws up a shipment, but then again, it's a mistake that is avoidable.
Got this today:


See the difference?
I guess I just can't/don't tolerate this kind of mistake. Take a little pride in your work. Pay attention to the details. Jesus, I am tired of having to deal with shipping mistakes.
Here is the fun part and we'll see how this plays out. I won the plate for opening bid of $0.99. S/h was $10.20. Plate came fast and well packaged, but it's WRONG! I messaged seller today, explaining what had happened. I asked how they wanted to coordinate the swap. I have not heard back yet, but I also offered this:
The plate I received was also listed at an opening bid of $0.99 and didn't sell. If I return the wrong plate and get the correct plate, seller is on the hook for both shipping charges. His mistake, his cost. So, I offered to keep the wrong plate, pay the $1 auction fee and save them from having to spend $10+ to ship it back.
Assuming they want their plate back (and there is no profit on s/h), here is how the math works out.
Correct plate purchased $0.99 (Paid by me)
Initial shipping $10.20 (Paid by me)
Return shipping of wrong plate $10.20 (paid by seller)
Shipping of correct plate $10.20 (paid by seller)
I get my plate and spend $11.20. Seller gets my $0.99 (minus fees) and spends $20.40 for shipping (plus the $10.20 I paid them for s/h). They sell 1 plate and lose $19.40 on this transaction.
As painful as it sounds, letting me keep the wrong plate for $0.99 is the most economical way to solve this.
Correct plate purchased $0.99 (Paid by me)
Initial shipping $10.20 (Paid by me)
Keep incorrect plate $0.99 (Paid by me)
Shipping of correct plate &10.20 (paid by seller)
I end up spending $12.20 and get 2 plates (Yes, I win either way). Seller spends $10.20 to correct their mistake, but gets another buck from me. They are now down 2 plates and $9.20 cash.
Either way, I feel a little bad for anyone who screws up a shipment, but then again, it's a mistake that is avoidable.