There is risk in life, you can’t be afraid of everything, besides it’s probably a much bigger risk driving your automobile.
Local pickup for speakers - should I let the buyer in the house or use the the garage?
I got someone coming from out of town to buy some Focal tower speakers I have for sale. They are going to pay cash. I had the ad on usaudiomart (the buyer is a guest so no ratings). The guy sounds like a good guy (spoke to him on the phone). But I am new to this... should I demo the speakers (just to show they work) in my garage or is it safe to demo them in the house? Wasn’t sure the best practice for this.
What do most do when having local pickup?
- ...
- 111 posts total
If you can't get a friend to be there, and you can't pay an off duty cop to be there, and you're not able to get an ID, and you're not able to talk on the phone, and you don't trust yourself…
Take a 25% deposit by Zelle which links to a bank account and they can pay the rest in cash if you are trusting them to come in your home, they are trusting you to not steal their money
Trust works both ways so if they don't trust you to give you a deposit then they are not trustworthy |
Exactly. I was going to say the same thing. Treat him as you would want to be treated. He’s coming from out of town, supposing he has to use the rest room as soon as he gets there?
I’ve been buying and selling used gear for 40 years and never had a bad experience. I do my due diligence, if I’m selling speakers, I want to know what the prospective buyer will be using so that I know it will be a good match for him. Through our conversation, I will either get a feeling of comfort about the buyer, or not. Having said that and reading through this thread, there’s a whole lot of paranoia, albeit, some very justified. It actually made me think of a funny situation as a buyer several years back where I felt very uncomfortable and threatened until I got the heck outta there seconds later. I’ll elaborate in a separate post.
Lastly, remember the good old days of Covid equipment auditions. You rang the door bell, the door opened and the seller had the speakers playing right by the front door or outside on the porch. @dman777 - how did the transaction go?
|
About 10 years ago, I was looking to buy a pair of KEF C55 bookshelf speakers from CL. They were located an hour away, not in a particularly great neighborhood or city. I didn’t get a great vibe from the seller but I went anyway.
He brought one speaker into his home, and being the helpful person I am, l carried the other speaker into his home so I could finally get a closer look at his system. He stood at the doorway (thank G-d he didn’t shut the door) and said to me, “I thought I told you not to come into the house!”
”Please don’t kill me!” Was my first thought. I somehow managed to apologize while quickly sneaking by him as I exited the front door and said I was late for my next appointments as I quickly skidaddled out of the enclosed porch and down his front steps. Boy that was scary and weird , I thought. Imagine if he had shut the front door while I was in the house? Meanwhile, over the next couple of years, I had seen several more of his CL ads, always with a picture of his front porch and the gear was always in mint condition and competitively priced. I went back about a year later and bought a mint pair of AudioSource speakers for like $40. This time he had them playing outside the house, outside of his enclosed porch. The audition lasted about 2 seconds, I handed over the money, took the speakers, and GTFOOT! |
Some people are just weird, so you do have to allow for that random factor. But: (1) Don't judge a book by its cover. I never dress "up" for an in-person used audio purchase. I think it helps if I need to negotiate the price down. Plus I drive my pickup as some things are hard to haul. (2) I'm sure it's not a bulletproof method, but I have found it is very easy to tell the con-people from the actual audio lovers with just a little bit of conversation. You have to go beyond "non-smoker first owner" and just ask what kind of amp are they using with those speakers...that type of thing. I've met some extremely nice people. One time in buying a McIntosh piece I met the guy who ended up custom-wiring a lake house I was building. Caution and awareness are very recommended. Paranoia and rudeness may rob you of a good potential experience, however.
|
- 111 posts total

