If you see many returns, you might want to burn a bootable memory test disk (downloads are at the bottom of Memtest86+ - Advanced Memory Diagnostic Tool). It's a very thorough test of your memory. It might save you some headaches in the future.
If you see many returns, you might want to burn a bootable memory test disk (downloads are at the bottom of Memtest86+ - Advanced Memory Diagnostic Tool). It's a very thorough test of your memory. It might save you some headaches in the future.
the individual messaged me back. it was an error on their part. they forgot to latch the sides onto the stick.
George Beale - Founder & President - info@viprecyclingjunkremoval.com
VIP Recycling Junk Removal LLC - Premier Scrap Metal, Junk, & Electronic Recyclers!
http://www.viprecyclingjunkremoval.com
I buy and sell all types of scrap and escrap. I buy specialty and hard to sell escrap. I buy resale items. PM me or contact me at jghilino@hotmail.com
I AM ACTIVELY BUYING ESCRAP OF ALL TYPES. BOARDS, RAM, CPUS AND MUCH MORE
George, 1st off, the OS, generally, could care less if the Ram came from XP. The capabilities of the motherboard are far more important.
As we don't know the precise info on the ram you sold this person, OR the precise info as to motherboard make or PC maker's name and model number that the buyer put the Ram into, makes it virtually impossible to give a definitive answer.
Compatiblity could be a major issue at the buyer's end. I've seen mobos that uneducated users have tried VERY hard to insert PC100/133 sticks into a DDR slot and vice versa, then wonder why it doesn't go "snap" or the retaining clips break :confused: Not saying your buyer tried this tho, lol.
If you plan to persue the issue with the buyer, get more details from them with regard to mobo and or PC maker's info and ask them to define "doesn't work". i.e. Did they use just your stick of ram by itself or was it added to an available empty slot? The size of ram (MB). EEC or non-EEC, they have and the MB that you sent them?
Too many variables/possibilites here.
Cheers, Ed
dont feel bad about returns, i average about 2 per week
I did not know that you can block specific eBay users from bidding. Good to know. I am curious: what does a potential buyer see when they try to bid and get rejected because they are on seller's black list? Can they retaliate in any way for being blocked like this?
I'm pretty much on board with jghilino. When I sell on ebay it's just easier to refund the money and move on. They can file a dispute with ebay, paypal, their credit card, they will get the money back anyways. Feedback does matter. When I buy it does influence my decision. I'd rather lose a few dollars and keep my feedback good so I will make more sales down the road.
That being said, I sell things I have very little money in. While some of this stuff goes for 100+, if there was a problem along the way, I have very little if any money in the items. I'm very selective in what I sell on ebay. I think you should have these losses "built into" the items you sell.
How much did you really pay for the RAM you sold? It takes a long time to build a good reputation and only a few seconds to damage it. While this time it was resolved, if you continue to sell on ebay it will happen over and over.
Memtest86 hammers the memory with various patterns in multiple ways to identify any problems. The different algorithms are listed here:
Memtest86 - Memory Diagnostic Page
I dont get where you are getting $2 from, unless your referring to the fees that you pay.
It's no hassle in my eyes. Just because it is ebay, is no different, then if I owned a local computer shop in my town. If I sell you some ram, and you come back in, or call me and say
"hey this doesn't work"...find, give me back my merchandise and I will give you, your money back. Simple.
If everyone who sold on ebay operated like that (just keep it and I will give you, your money back), all the buyers would get product for FREE, as they just have to say "it doesn't work"
" Might have missed my post last night. It was resolved"
Yep, sorry, I was busy writing my epistle, lol. Don't you just love people who make boo-boos then claim item is bad.
Glad they admitted their faux pas.
If it makes you feel any better, I just hit for a $200 return tonight. Bench tested item that I've sold tons of times before. Worked when shipped, seller is claiming DOA, already opened a case on me, etc. Not the end of the world because eBay makes me 1500-3000 a month on this and a couple other items, but still hurts when it happens.
I would rather not say what the item is and give away my niche. He's already shipping it back and sent me return tracking info. It's completely possible that it broke in transit, but is much more likely that he's swapping my good one out with his bad one. It really is a cost of doing business, I have never had a return on one these though, so it makes me kinda scratch my head.
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