Sell LP's: No visible scuffs. Let buyer remove static if needed?


I will be selling more LPs on eBay. My objective is to make space, and I enjoy finding someone who wants them.

I have been cleaning, listening, photos, listing, selling, shipping. Time consuming, cost of cleaning fluids, wear on stylus.

A few  bring decent $, many/most go for starting price $4.50. Money is nice, but not much after all the work, involved costs and fees. 
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I am thinking of selling based only on my visual inspection, letting buyer deal with any static, and keep my unconditional refund if buyer discovers a problem, i.e. a skip I didn't see. 

I view them, look Very Darn Good (no scuffs) or Darn Good (very minor scuffs): 1 photo, 1 link from wiki, a few specific words, done.

No hesitation on refunds whatsoever.
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So, what do you think, will people buy, trusting they only need to deal with static? People already trust my unconditional refund, nobody has asked for a refund based on anything but USPO destruction. What's different is they have to deal with static.
elliottbnewcombjr

arizonabob

thanks for the advice.

would you post a link to one of your eBay listings?

thanks, Elliott
Arizona, I notice you seem to grade the LP itself and it’s jacket as one. Very often I find a mint LP inside a jacket that is way short of mint condition. Or vice-versa, a horrible condition LP in a mint sleeve. How do you deal with that in the context of your rating system?
I avoid buying records on ebay and much prefer Discogs.  I don't trust sellers to properly grade their records on ebay.  Discogs has some stinkers once in a while, but with the feedback system and the focus strictly on music, getting what you want is much more likely.  I think most sellers grade visually.  The biggest issue I have with Discogs is sellers not packaging their records well.  Please use a Whiplash or similar mailer that protects the corners.  Nothing worse than paying a lot for a NM- record and having it show up with the corner(s) all banged up.