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<p>[QUOTE="Just Carl, post: 515528, member: 4552"]Another problem with stories or reports about a certain dealer is a time frame. By that I mean a dealer could start out bad and become great over time. Or in reverse, start out great and sink to a horror story. </p><p>An example of there was a new cleaners not far from me. I tried them out on shirts since I like mine looking great for work. For practically pennies they came back clean, pressed, on hangers and in plastic bags. Slowly thier buisness grew, they hired more and less caring personal. Slowly thier prices rose and their output became horrible. Eventually they went out of buisness and probably never knew why. </p><p>This sort of thing could and probably does happen to all types of buisnesses and that includes coins. </p><p>In the downtown area of Chicago there was a coin store and I can't remember the name. They too were great for prices, friendly, good products and anything else you could want. Eventually they were bought by someone else. Prices went up, almost all cleaned coins, no participation in local coin shows, rude and ignorant personal. </p><p>So that is my idea of why you just can't say a coin dealer is good, bad, great or horrible. People change and so do buisnesses.[/QUOTE]</p><p><br /></p>
[QUOTE="Just Carl, post: 515528, member: 4552"]Another problem with stories or reports about a certain dealer is a time frame. By that I mean a dealer could start out bad and become great over time. Or in reverse, start out great and sink to a horror story. An example of there was a new cleaners not far from me. I tried them out on shirts since I like mine looking great for work. For practically pennies they came back clean, pressed, on hangers and in plastic bags. Slowly thier buisness grew, they hired more and less caring personal. Slowly thier prices rose and their output became horrible. Eventually they went out of buisness and probably never knew why. This sort of thing could and probably does happen to all types of buisnesses and that includes coins. In the downtown area of Chicago there was a coin store and I can't remember the name. They too were great for prices, friendly, good products and anything else you could want. Eventually they were bought by someone else. Prices went up, almost all cleaned coins, no participation in local coin shows, rude and ignorant personal. So that is my idea of why you just can't say a coin dealer is good, bad, great or horrible. People change and so do buisnesses.[/QUOTE]
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