Hello all,
I've thought about responding on this subject for some weeks now, procrastinating as usual. However, the continuing contacts that I have received from scammers coming through the club's website makes me think that maybe I have a responsibility to speak up. Here's my tale:
With the restoration of my 300E coming along nicely, on 27 June of this year I joined the club. I was immediately favorably impressed with the "in house" technical discussions, and parts sales and suppliers sourcing that I saw happening on the almost daily "listserver" emails that I received.
As soon as I joined, I placed an ad in the "Parts Wanted" section of the club's website for a few 300E parts that I still needed (power antenna, map light lenses, horn pad).
On 29 June, immediately after joining the club, an email came across the listserver (to all of us) stating that a member was breaking up a 300E for parts. Hey, the fish were jumping in the boat!
To make a long story short, the guy had a great story and seemed perfectly legit, but I lost some money to a scam. At that stage, I just couldn't bring myself to believe that scammers would be active in such a narrowly focused sphere as we 300 guys live in. Bob Merrit and Gloria Moon were very helpful and I still really enjoy, every day, reading the club members' back and forth comments on such a wide variety of subjects.
However, scammers operating inside the listserver email chain were not the only issue. Twice since, I have been contacted by scammers responding to my "Parts Wanted" ad. By now, I hope I'm wary enough to smoke out a scam, but folks, it's not just Facebook that has the problem. There's trouble here in River City.
I guess my net comment is, of course, to beware.
And, oh yeah, I'm still looking for those map light lenses and I really need a power antenna assembly (or at least the chrome bezel that sits on top of the front fender).
Wish I could have attended the recent California event. Sounded great.
Colin Campbell
Salt Lake City, Utah