Well, a factory AC equipped car can be fixed, whereas one that never had AC would be more difficult to add AC to. But I see your point as well. I agree 100% on e-bay. When it started they were as careful about protecting a buyer as a seller, maybe even more so for the buyer. Now you can't even leave decent feedback if a sell goes bad -- "not as advertised, guy is a crook" is about the best you can do. Used to be able to write a short paragraph and explain a bit. They are just to big now to care. Any time you buy something you are taking some risk, and you WILL lose/get cheated on occasion. For me even the recent (possible) $130 loss is more than balanced by the good deals I've won and being able to get some things I just couldn't get locally. On June 2, 2005 Michael K wrote: > Two items I bought on ebay went bad: a '71 Javelin and > a '70 Hornet. The first wasn't represented right > (what does AC matter if it doesn't work) and the > seller refused to fix the problems. The second used a > buddy of his to bid up the price, and I had > unequivocal proof of this. Both of these were denied > by ebay and dismissed. > > I have yet to actually "buy" a car on ebay, and unless > you have some kind of protection (credit card with > enough available credit, or better yet, a second user > ID for just that purchase), you're better off using > ebay for smaller purchases you can insure. > > > Michael Kelly > > > > __________________________________ > Discover Yahoo! > Get on-the-go sports scores, stock quotes, news and more. Check it out! > > http://discover.yahoo.com/mobile.html > > > > . ============================================================= Posted by wixList Archiver -- http://www.amxfiles.com/wixlist