Sold Date:
January 26, 2021
Start Date:
January 24, 2021
Final Price:
$36.99
(USD)
Seller Feedback:
719
Buyer Feedback:
0
The Mars Volta – Televators
Label: Erika Records - ER-2002-19
Format: Vinyl, 12", 45 RPM, Limited Edition, Numbered, Picture Disc
Country: US
Released: 2003
Genre: Rock
Style: Prog Rock, Indie Rock
cover:
NM, looks new
disc:
NEVER PLAYED, I DON’T PLAY PICTURE DISCS, I only removed the record to photograph it, I did not clean it or play-grade it (in my experience picture discs never sound good so I stopped playing them years ago)
#1615 of 5000
this item sold on January 11th but the buyer decided not to pay me so it’s up for sale again.
important shipping information (I use USPS MEDIA MAIL for all LPs) in description below*
Please check out my other listings. I have more sealed, unplayed, and pre-owned LPs. I upload a handful a week. I still have 12” singles, some private pressings, and some rare stuff.
If there’s something you’re looking for shoot a message my way and I’ll see if I have it.
a quick note on the photos:
The item(s) pictured are/is the item(s) you will receive. Taking photos of LPs with shrink wrap is like photographing a mirror. I take some of the photos outside (on a slight angle) because natural sunlight is best for accurate color reproduction - usually but full sunlight can make every detail pop which can exaggerate flaws. The photos I take indoors I need to take at a more extreme angle (sometimes) to avoid flash reflection - I’m sure I’ll set up a better way to do it before I shoot the last ones.
Some photos contain a vertical white line (a pixel wide) - I use an old camera and it isn’t perfect - it’s more pronounced in low-light shots. Some photos have a brown band - different old camera.
>>> I never lay the record flat on a dirty surface. All discs are photographed on a small riser. <<<
I play grade about 97% of what I sell unless its sealed or obviously unplayed. If I’m selling a big lot of cheap records I’ll give them a visual inspection only. Many eBay sellers don’t take the time to wash their albums and only give them a visual grade, not me. BUT, I’m only human and many of the records are OLD. If I think Side 1 of a record from 1969 sounds EX and you think it’s only VG+ sorry - I’m trying my best here. If a record sounds incredible but has one rough patch I’ll drop the grading and usually make note that it’s a NM side except for whatever. Even SEALED albums can sound terrible.
If you like records then prepare to hear surface noise, the occasional pop, and some stuff an MP3 doesn’t have.
If the album is in a small lot or sold separately rest assured I have washed and rinsed the disc using my lazy-susan / vacuum set-up or in my two “Spin Clean”s. I use “The Groovinator” record cleaning solution in distilled water for bath #1 and straight distilled water in bath #2 to rinse the disc. I wipe down the discs with soft 100% cotton clothes. All discs are placed in thin round-bottom poly inner sleeves - sometimes something else but never straight paper unless it’s a cheapo going into a big lot. All, but the cheapos, are placed into 2 or 3mil poly outer sleeves. I’ll give some of the covers a light cleaning if they need it. I try my best to eliminate dirt and/or mold.
By “cheap or cheapo record(s)” I mean less desirable music. If a record is inexpensive due to its condition I won’t sell it. A very, very scratched up Led Zeppelin album has no place in my eBay listings or apartment. A “M-“ album by some unknown band from the early 80’s that belongs in a dollar bin might make it into a lot. Just because it sells for dirt cheap doesn’t mean someone out there wouldn’t want a pristine album in their collection.
Vinyl Grading System:
Mint (M) : Absolutely perfect in every way. Never been played and usually sealed
Near Mint (NM) : The record has been on a shelf between other records. The vinyl looks glossy and clearly has only been played a few times. There are no marks on the vinyl and the whole package is complete.
Excellent (EX) : Same but I’d tolerate very light marks where the vinyl has been in and out of the inner sleeve a few times, or tiny signs of use generally.
Very Good Plus (VG+) : A few further faults are acceptable, but nothing that really compromises the record visually or audibly. A little rub, light inaudible marks, a little background crackle.
Very Good (VG) : It’s seen a bit of life, but is still usable. Light pops and clicks, maybe an edge split, light visible scratches. You can still listen to it and enjoy looking at it, but it is visually and audibly USED.
Good (G) : To be honest you’re making trouble for yourself here, as Good means Bad. I’d only be selling something really desirable in this condition, with a bargain price and a full, no holds barred description to match.
Poor (P), Fair (F) : Attempting to listen will be a disturbing experience. Expect major noise issues, skipping or repeating. The record itself is cracked, badly warped and has deep scratches. The cover is also approaching death.
I’ll also use M-, NM+, NM-, EX+, EX-, VG-, etc. record grading is kinda tricky and NM might be too high but EX isn’t doing it justice, hence, EX+ or maybe NM-
I TEST-PLAY MY RECORDS LOUD.
All records sound quiet and clean if you can barely hear them. I crank up the volume so I (and you) can hear the defects - scratches, cracks, dirt, pressing flaws, etc.
If the record is worth $25, $40, $50+ I won’t step away from it when I’m grading it. The cheaper the album the more likely I’ll get up to go to the kitchen or whatever. But, like i said, I play the records loud so not to miss the pops and stuff. Remember, most eBayers only visually grade their albums. A shiny clean album may look like it sounds nice only to find out it’s a hot mess. I’ve found this out the hard way on more than one occasion.
I use LP mailers. If I can, I’ll place two, three… up to six LPs into a mailer so as to lessen the chance of one getting lost. Most single discs are placed outside of the outer sleeve/cover to avoid splitting the cover unless the album is sealed but I found packing multiple LPs into one sleeve makes it virtually impossible for them to move around and cause cover splitting or damage to the vinyl. If the album is dirt cheap it will probably not be placed into an outer poly sleeve. I received a big lot recently in a pizza box - the thing was thick and clean so I might use something like that for a big lot but usually not.
> ALL SALES ARE FINAL. NO REFUNDS. NO RETURNS. <
items are sold “AS IS”
I do my best to describe the item but, for example, if a sealed LP has flaws I have no way of knowing
eBay has updated payment options - hopefully, there's no issues :^)
No International sales unless you have a U.S. mailing address
*PLEASE READ! > Things (right now) have gotten somewhat better (and worse in some states) but we’re still dealing with a global pandemic so…
What might normally take 4 to 5 days might take closer to 6 to 12 (or more) days to be delivered. Media Mail isn’t fast (about the same as First Class I was told at the post office) but it keeps the price down. (CDs, LPs, 8-tracks, books, VHS tapes, reel-to-reels, and a few other items are media.) I always use USPS MEDIA MAIL for shipping vinyl records (unless it’s over $100 - I’ll use Priority Mail) - Recently, I started selecting “free shipping” when creating my listings - if something other than Media Mail is advertised on your end it is inaccurate and a mistake in the listing and, know full well, I’m not trying to bait-and-switch as I have had a buyer suggest. I don’t sell on eBay full-time and I’m learning as I go.
Once an item is purchased I do not consider it to be my item any longer and I do my best to move it along to its proper owner as quickly as I can. I mail out items as soon as I am able. Sometimes items go to the post office in less than 30 minutes from payments received, other times I have to wait until Monday morning or after a holiday to ship.
Once the item is dropped off at my local post office it’s “out of my hands” and I can not make the item appear at your doorstep any faster than the USPS can.
Please do not ask for refunds or replacements when I have clearly mailed your item (I will always add the tracking number the USPS provides me with.)
If after reading this you don’t want to buy from me than please don’t. If you purchase an item from someone else and wonder why it’s taking so long to receive your item remember I warned you. We’re still living through a pandemic and not everything is going to go the “usual” way.
Be patient, be safe.
you may be asking yourself - why so much information in this listing? Because eBay buyers can be picky and record buyers are always picky (I know I am) so I try to cover all of the information. It takes longer than jotting down “the record looks good” but it is worth it for me and, I believe, the buyer(s).
PLEASE LEAVE POSITIVE FEEDBACK - IT REALLY HELPS, THANK YOU!
I have around a 99.6%* positive feedback for purchases and sales since 2004
*I had a buyer just looking for trouble and they left negative feedback the first moment they could - don’t be like that buyer, please
I buy a lot on eBay so I know how I want items to arrive (fast and as described) and I’m just an email away if you have a question or two.
Thanks for looking!