BigDumbDinosaur wrote:
If I have paid for a genuine whatchamaycallit—never mind the price, I expect to receive a genuine whatchamaycallit....
As do I. I'm not sure how this is relevant when I'm well aware that I'm (probably)
not buying a genuine watchamaycallit, though.
Quote:
If you go to the Rolls-Royce dealer and are sold a Bentley that has been rebadged with the Rolls-Royce name and insignia, would that be a fair deal? Would that be acceptable to you?
It would be just as unacceptable as if I bought a WDC W65C02 from Digikey or Mouser and didn't get exactly that. But the proper analogy here is that you meet a guy in a back alley who offers, with a wink, to sell you a specific model of Rolls Royce for less than one tenth of the price at a dealership, and you went in knowing you were likely to get a used, older-model Bentley with a Rolls Royce badge on it. You might decide to pass on the purchase, but telling someone who can't afford the dealership price to go without a car, even though he's willing to take the risk (and can always buy two or three more if need be) seems uncharitable at best.
1024MAK wrote:
I think the bigger problem being that there is a real risk that what you get may not work at all, or may only be partially functional.
It's a problem only if you're unaware of this before you buy the part. Otherwise you just have a decision to make. And in retrocomputing, understanding this is pretty much a necessity. If you want to replace something as simple as the 6526 for your C64, you're not going to find a new, warrantied part. Welcome to hobby electronics!
And anyway, this is an issue for system designers even buying current production parts. No competent engineer should be putting parts from any vendor into his device without qualifying them first, and continuing to test them from time to time. Electronic device manufacturers have entire departments devoted to this kind of thing. (The
hardware threads from Jed Margolin's
Atari e-mail archives provide interesting reading on this. Try
this one for a typical example; I'll leave it to you whether you want to call that Fujitsu 4116 DRAM "fake" or not.)
1024MAK wrote:
Also these are normally sold as ‘new’, but they are actually tarted up used / secondhand / preowned “pulls”. So that alone is fraud.
Well, being sold as new certainly would be fraud, but I'm not sure you're correct that they're "normally" sold that way. I just checked the first eight results for each of "6502" and "R65C02" searches on AliExpress, and not one of them claimed that the parts were new.