I bought another Class D amp and didn't get what I paid for!


A little while back I went on a pleasant drive to purchase a Wyred 4 Sound Class D (ST500) amp rated at 250 watts per channel. When I arrived, I immediately noticed he lived in a small but very nice home on a lake. Anyway he demonstrated that the amp worked fine and I then decided to purchase.
He pulled the amp out and we tried to fit it in its original carton but strangely it wouldn't fit properly. Got it home, plugged it in my second room, sounded pretty good but very powerful. Anyway I decided to try a different set of interconnects on it and that's when I noticed it was the more expensive ST 1000 ( 500 watts per channel), both amps looked identical from the front. But being honest, I call him back and told him you gave me the more expensive ST 1000. This is what he said, Paul I wouldn't of noticed for three months that this occurred and you could of easily kept it with no problems. But since you called me back the same day, we can now make arrangements to exchange it and we did. For a brief moment I thought I could of kept the more expensive amp if I kept my mouth shut but then I quickly realized I did the right thing.

Anyone else have any interesting stories to tell in regards to purchases?
phd
ya ,  you never do Big Stick spend over 15 k  then you might see some  magic  
While perusing Craigslist one day I noticed someone selling a pair of "room dividers" for $25.00CDN.The room dividers were a pair of older Magneplaner's.I will admit that it did cross my mind to buy them, but instead I called her and explained what she was actually selling.
tony1954, I could easily see how a non audiophile would mistake those speakers for room dividers and I think it was admirable of you to point out what she was really selling and their value,.

On the other side of the coin a young lady was selling a set of components that were high-end on the cheap, she knew their value. When I arrived to her residence I noticed the components were pushed out to the street. I asked her what the story was on them. She replied they belong to my ex-boyfriend, I got tired of the partying, him, and his friends. I felt unsettled about the deal but made the purchase anyway.


In the late 1990s, my wife and I were in the Catskills for leaf-peeping season and our wedding anniversary.

We spent an afternoon in Woodstock doing some window shopping that evolved into real shopping as often happens. I saw a small copy of the Woodstock poster in a hippie tshatshke shop towards the western end of Tinker Street, the main drag, and ask the store owner if she had a bigger one. She went into the back and produced one that was rolled up and about 2 x 3 ft. She said it was her mom’s but she had passed away. I asked her if it was her mom’s, she might want to keep it? I could tell that she was a little down on her luck. But she said she never used it and I ended up paying $40 and leaving with it.

As I work in the graphic arts myself and I was able to immediately ascertain that the paper the poster was printed on was of a certain vintage, I took it to an appraiser at a large poster shop in Chelsea in NYC where I buy my collectible movie posters and asked if it was an original and if so, what it was worth. He said indeed it was and as it was in minty-mint condition, it was worth about $300 to $350.

We went back to the Catskills on Halloween to go to the Headless Horseman amusement in the town of Ulster. We went to stop at the hippie tshatshke shop in Woodstock on the way - well, OK, to those of you who may know, it was not on the way, it was almost an hour detour - and there she was and we gave her the $300.

The stunned look on her face was to die for. I think I have never received such a crushing, suffocating hug before or since. 

A couple years later, the store had closed.