As an online seller, such statements are vital when it comes to dispute resolution with ebay or gunbroker or other third party. Buyers have unrealistic expectations of the sellers. For an example, I liquidated a very large mechanics estate on ebay, his insurance file had over $120,000 of receipts from Snap-on. Thousands of items. One ratchet that I sold, for about $30, the buyer filed a not as described claim. He said that upon taking apart the ratchet, the teeth of the gear were worn, and a prudent seller would have taken it apart, inspected the internal parts, and described the wear. I had described it as "works as it should", which I had tested to make sure it reversed, didn't skip, and was functioning. I won that dispute based on the fact that I had only described it as working and what the item was. I try to spend less than 5 minutes testing, taking pictures, listing, and shipping an item. No way I'd take it apart and inspect for a $30 sale, of which I profit maybe $5. I would have gladly take the return but the buyer didn't want to return it, he wanted to keep it and still get a refund. I've entirely quit describing my items, and only refer to "see photos for exact item you will receive". I will answer reasonable questions about condition if a potential buyer asks, but if they ask more than 2 times for increasingly detailed descriptions, I ask them not to purchase my item, and in addition, block them from buying any of my items. I have found that those buyers inevitably are dissatisfied. Now, if I sell here in the for sale forum, where I am selling because of a personal interest, not as a primary profit center, I try to describe as well as I can, and will answer questions to the best of my ability, and will make some substantial effort to make sure what I describe is accurate. The difference between a hobby and a business transaction. I find it amusing that Joe D, one of the most knowledgeable sellers on gunbroker, has a disclaimer that he is not an expert, and you need to rely on your own judgement. But, he has the disclaimer for the same reason I list the way I do. The statement in the original post is there for the same reason, to disclaim a detailed inspection, and to state that that a cursory inspection seemed okay. For a lot of resellers, they've had the item in their hands for only a few minutes while photographing it, and have no detailed knowledge of it at all.
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