

I've seen so many people learn this lesson that I no longer pay for pre-production items anymore.
HAL 9000 REPLICA FOR SALE WORKING HOW TO
I think that in some cases, it's not intentional at first, but then they realize money can be gotten for nothing if you know how to play it. When you see the same players over and over again doing it, the reason becomes clear.

The problem here is that, you never know if this was something that got out of hand or was intentional. Nobody can say I shafted them, and that's because I never set myself up for failure.

But I never took money for something I didn't have one hand to ship (or could make in a few days). It's the primary reason I quit making stuff for the WW2 re-enacting community, because it got annoying to get emails asking when I'd start making something specific again. But in the end, that is not the buyer's problem. It's easy to fall behind when you make stuff yourself or are at the mercy of small company suppliers. Each time, I'm left baffled as to how the seller should think the buyer should care about any of that? It speaks for the burning want for something, that people will trust someone with a lot of coin on the promise of delivering someday.Įven with the best intentions, you hear stories of these sellers having all kinds of personal issues and then getting mad at the "Dude, where's my stuff?" contacts. There's an excellent thread where collectors have been sharing info about Master Replicas Group on the RPF forum.įrankly, I've never understood all this. But even if I get my money back, they still got $1000 from me, which is so upsetting. I'm still expecting them to refuse it after this long, but there's a bit of hope. It's been over a year, but my bank did allow me to file a dispute on the charge, which is a good sign. As far as we can tell, not a single model was ever produced. In the initial bankruptcy filing, they claimed that the company had absolutely no money left, which seems impossible. So that could put it closer to $5,000,000.Īnd they were allowed to declare Chapter 7 bankruptcy, which is even worse, because it totally wipes their slate clean.

They also sold an even larger edition of the regular version. And that's just for the Command Console version. So the actual amount they took in was between $2,000,000 and $2,500,000. They sold out their entire run of 2,001 Command Consoles, which were $1250 each (or $1000 on a sale). After that, they continued to sell them on the website. That $650,475 was only from the initial crowdfunding campaign. Thanks so much for your reply! It's very helpful. No, but some friends of mine are, for other things they ordered and never got. I hope none of you are in the same situation! I've read that Master Replicas had $650,475 in pre-sale money from various items. This has angered a lot of sci-fi fans who also lost out. Once they declared bankruptcy (no clue if chapter 11 or 13), your order vanished from the universe. I hope none of you are in the same situation!Ĭontacting the credit card company is your only recourse. $1000 is a huge amount of money for me, so I'm really crushed by this. Does anyone know if I have even the slightest chance of a refund? I don't think VISA will honor a chargeback request after 18 months. However, I ordered mine from their official site. This HAL project originally started on a crowdfunding site, and all of those backers are completely out of luck. It was supposed to ship by winter 2019, but there were massive delays, and I just learned that the company has declared bankruptcy and will not be producing the items. I love their Apollo 11 bootprint replica, their blueprints, and their models.Īfter attending the screening of "2001: A Space Odyssey" at Spacefest 2019, I decided to preorder their $1000 replica of HAL 9000. Over the years, Master Replicas Group has been a great company for space memorabilia. Profile | register | preferences | faq | search Master Replicas Group bankruptcy - collectSPACE: Messages
