avaloncourt
Member
- Joined
- Jun 10, 2011
- Messages
- 167
I used to work at Amazon. I would NEVER **EVER** recommend going through Amazon warehouse deals. These are returned items and the occasional discovery of a packaging-damaged item in warehouse stock. Almost all of it is returns. First, NEVER accept the condition description to be anything remotely close to accurate. I once spoke to a manager about how much time they actually spend verifying the condition and that everything is included that is supposed to be there. Yeah, not so much. She said that the people who process the returned items for Warehouse consideration have such a volume of products to go through that they maybe get 20-30 seconds per item.Recently discovered Amazon warehouse deals. Returned items that might not be in their original packaging but are otherwise LNIB. So, I was excited to find the BCD325P2 for about $250. It delivered today and I got to work programming on proscan. But the software kept telling me the scanner does not match the proscan scanner. I uninstalled, reinstalled back and forth. Then after powering off and back on the scanner, I see it right there on the screen: BCD125AT. The radios are identical. Someone replaced the sticker on the front and even the sticker on the back beneath the belt clip. I requested my return through amazon and already dropped it off at UPS. It felt a little light, a little cheap relative to what I was expecting for the 325P2.
So, be on the lookout for scam models from amazon. My search continues.
Most of the time, they have no clue what it is that they're looking at and if it what it's supposed to be, if they look at all. Often, they just look at the product package and if there's tears, scratches, etc. they note that. Back before I worked for Amazon I bought a couple Warehouse items and, in both cases, they were missing parts.
A friend of mine bought a gun scope and, when he looked in the package, there was a flashlight inside. That's a big scam for Warehouse. Customers return something that's not even the item, as you found out, and the Warehouse processing people never actually check the item to know it. The scammer makes out REAL well and the Warehouse buyer gets shafted and has to return the item. Stuff that doesn't go to Warehouse often gets palleted and those go off to pallet sales without ever being checked. Pallet buyers often get ripped off because of the percentage of this happening.
So, there you go... my word of caution about Amazon Warehouse.