There's ways to get a very good idea if it is still sealed. Shake the tin is a pretty reliable way.I wouldn’t be happy but I wouldn’t expect compensation. It’s a 20 year old tin. Nobody can guarantee that a tin that old will be dry or not.
That doesn’t sound very hypothetical to me.Relatively simple hypothetical...
You trade a 20 year old rare tin for another 20 year old rare tin. Both are sealed.
The one YOU get was compromised and dried out.
Are you happy?
Should you expect compensation?
Comes with the territory. I will be disappointed, but it's the chance I took.Relatively simple hypothetical...
You trade a 20 year old rare tin for another 20 year old rare tin. Both are sealed.
The one YOU get was compromised and dried out.
Are you happy?
Should you expect compensation?
^^^^^ ThisComes with the territory. I will be disappointed, but it's the chance I took.
If you going to play in this sandbox, know what you're getting into. With "vintage" tobacco the possibility that the container has been compromised is always there.
Aged tins are always a gamble. If you play the game enough, you’re gonna get some that are compromised.
It always sucks, but its just part of the gamble.
How would you know? There would be no way to know whether or not another person originally suspected the tin was compromised.I wouldn’t expect it unless the other guys intentionally deceived me.
The tin was sealed. How could the other bloke have known the tobacco was useless? Unless he opened it and has a resealing machine. Or maybe he has an MRI machine lying around in the garage and he uses that to scan old tobaccos, keeping the good and unloading the bad. I think you're being a bit cynical, there is no way he could know the tobacco was bad. It was just bad luck, every poster so far has said so.I'm not sure that I agree with your comparison. I go to a casino, I expect to loose money. They're not in the business of making an equal trade with you.
I honestly don't think that the other person in my "hypothetical" had any true malice intended, but they also aren't owning their end of the deal, and there is no way to know for sure that they didn't intend to let go of a questionable tin.
In my mind what it comes down to is this, if people in the pipe community can't trust one another, then let's all just go ahead and drop the "brother" of the leaf act.