Is the e-mail sounds like a 'SCAM' ?


I received this e-mail for one of my for sell item.
What do you think ???

hi
1)is this item still available for sale?
2)where are you located?
3)may i know why, you want to sell it?
4)Has this item has any damage before?
5)can i see more picx?
6)do i need to repair?
7)what year is this item manufactured?
8)what is the final price?
9)can you help me determine the weigth?
10)i have a friegth company on my own will be available for pick-up of
the
item? because the operate 7:00am to 7:00pm mon-saturday will you accept
a
certifeid cashiers check or a postal money order,i will like to know
your
full name and address with your phone number so that my secretary can
issue
the payment out to you and i will be glad to read from you soonest..you
can
respond back to this [email protected]

Music Lover/Audiophile
xxxxxxxx
edle
I think that all of the questions are reasonable. The very poor spelling and grammar concerns me a bit because this is typical of scam ads from foreign countries. I have come across this type of thing myself in response to somthing I was selling. Write back to the person and see what type of reply you get. I wrote back to a person who sent me a similar type of e-mail. I received no direct discussion or acknowledgements of the contents of my e-mail; rather, I received an equally garbled e-mail regarding shipping arrangements. I then walked.

It could be that the person just doesn't speak English very well; however, I would be cautious.

I would take the postal money order option and cash it. Only then would I send the equipment. I would be more cautious about a cashier's cheque. I have heard of circumstances where such forged cheques even fooled the bank, who might subsequently try to obtain recompense from you.
It's always a major red flag when someone other than your g/f signs an email xxxxxxxx. i also don't trust the look of his email address.

When someone tries to rush you though a deal it's almost always a scam. this scam seems to be a fake money order and a quick pickup before your bank can notify you.
i think this is the same guy who is managing his uncle's fortune in Uganda and needs your bank account info to help him get the money out.
I have read somewhere that there are authentic looking but fake USPS US$ postal money order around. Even USPS money order is not safe now.
there are fake money orders and certified checks all over the place these days. just google fake money order and you'll have more than enough to read. click on 'images' and you can see what they look like