Starfire One wrote: Sound like a con job or fudging on the rules by a vendor using JIT inventory.
Definitely not buying anything else through fix_my_toys IE aka TMC Marketing.
Just the name itself would have been my first clue. along with descriptions (how well they are written) and photos - It is easy enough to tell when a vendor is just a "copy an paste our ad to an ebay listing and you make $x on every sale and we ship the product for you" kind of seller...
That is how all those chinese companies move their products - by way of alibaba and gullible sellers like that - most of the stuff is counterfeit junk or grey market (stolen from chinese factory QC rejects pile or stolen outright from facility, for example)
What I look for if I need to buy parts or pieces on ebay is
1) check vendor feedback (typically can overlook "product review" feedback, but look carefully when you see "out of stock," or "never got it" or similar negative commentary regarding the seller's customer service)
2) does the product image look stock, the price too low to be reasonable?
3) do you find a crap ton if almost identical listings with the same image and same details?
4) if not a copy/pasted product listing, does description make sense and sound like someone who actually knows their product (or admits they don't) which can often indicates a) former dealer inventory or b) current dealer inventory and finally - does the quantity available make sense (seriously is some dealer going to have over 10 units available of a small engine short block??)
and 5) explore ALL of their listings - for example, if it just seems to be a wide array of very dis-similar product category items, they are most likely a drop-shipper that has no actual physical inventory (and thus no control of whether you get the right part on time) but if it all seems to be in related categories (or branding) then they most likely have some direct experience in that business.
How poor are they who have not patience. What wound did ever heal, but by degrees? - Iago (Othello Act II, Scene 3)