
Gave me a laugh!hat's the point of this posting?
Haha now I will doubt every Ebay sell... That's a funny story!Gave me a laugh!
My first introduction to eBay - I was working for DoD and we had three enterprising airmen getting free stuff from the National Cryptologic Museum and selling it on eBay with a fluffed up narrative that made it sound like it had been misappropriated from the vaults of CIA and NSA.
Do we give them a promotion for ingenuity or an Article 15?
In the end we told them there was a lifetime limit on free stuff for each visitor and congratulated them on their short run as eBay oligarchs.
I remember when I used to think, and tell my wife, that I was one tool away from greatness... She stopped believing me after a few gouges, she caught on kind of fast...<Begin Rant>
381.33 or 144.95, regular price, there is no difference to me realitively. Both prices are out of line.
I bought most of my tools 20 years ago when most turning tools were m2 costing between 20-60 dollars. Today the prices in our niche market are absolutely out of control. I find it difficult to offer guidance to newbies.
It is also hard to find value, for example, in a steel rod with a piece of carbide attached costing 135 bucks. Without guidance, a newbie may feel the need to purchase 3 shapes and 3 sizes.
So buyer beware of your unscrupulous Ebay vendors and your friendly woodturning catalogues.
<End Rant>
I hope you feel better now after getting that off your chest, Dennis. Twenty years ago is a long time.I was still working and my hobby was flat woodworking. Making round stuff on a lathe wasn't even on my radar. Funny how things evolve.
I actually do feel better. Back then, I bought a lot of tools cause I loved to buy and collect them. It kept me interested in a hobby I had little or no time for. Retired, I no longer can keep up the collecting. . I now enjoy making a lot of the tools I would have bought. So yes, funny how things evolve.I hope you feel better now after getting that off your chest, Dennis. Twenty years ago is a long time.I was still working and my hobby was flat woodworking. Making round stuff on a lathe wasn't even on my radar. Funny how things evolve.