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Eagles Desperado Lp Vinyl Vg+ Cover Vg 1973 Asylum As 53008 Netherlands on 2040-motos

US $180
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Location:

Baltimore, Maryland, United States

Baltimore, Maryland, United States
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EAGLES Desperado LP Vinyl VG+ Cover VG 1973 Asylum AS 53008 Netherlands, US $180, image 1

Desperado All photos

EAGLES Desperado LP Vinyl VG+ Cover VG 1973 Asylum AS 53008 Netherlands, US $180, image 2 EAGLES Desperado LP Vinyl VG+ Cover VG 1973 Asylum AS 53008 Netherlands, US $180, image 3 EAGLES Desperado LP Vinyl VG+ Cover VG 1973 Asylum AS 53008 Netherlands, US $180, image 4

Desperado All description

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VINTAGE VINYL LP (33 1/3 rpm) 12”

Please Note:  I try to be conservative in my description as these tend to be 30 to 40+ year old LP’s.  Those with covers not still in the original shrink wrap usually show some signs of wear.  This wear can be scuffs, scratches, peels, rips, corners not squared, labels removed causing rips as well as some writing on the covers and labels. All records are cleaned on a VPI 16.5 professional record cleaning system prior to shipment.  If you have specific questions about the cover, record or any inserts/sleeves, etc. PLEASE email first before bidding or purchasing.  I will always respond to your request and will try to provide additional pictures or information to help answer your questions.


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Thank you for looking!!

Below is our grading system. Please use this as a reference for the grades seen in the product title.

Our LPs are sold with two grades, one for the record and one for the cover. In the event there is only one grade shown, it is because both the Vinyl and the Cover have received the same grade. The records are graded visually (If they have been test played, there will be an indication saying so in the product description). Some defects are easy to see, such as scratches and warps. Others are subtle, such as groove wear from using a cheap or poorly aligned tone arm. It has been our experience that older LPs (1950s to about 1971) tend to play better than they look, and newer LPs (at least until 1989) tend to play worse than they look. We do not grade sleeves or posters, but will include a picture to indicate the condition, in many cases there are slight tears or splits in the seams due to age and wear.

VG++ (“Excellent”)  -- A good description of a VG++ record is it looks like it has minimal to no wear, no scratches but some very slight signs of use.

 

Cover: A VG++ cover is typically free of creases and ring wear and will not have seam splits of any kind. Check photos for signs of wear.

 

NOTE: These are high standards, and they are not on a sliding scale. A record or sleeve from the 1950s must meet the same standards as one from the 1990s or 2000s!

 

Very Good Plus (VG+)
A VG+ record may show some slight signs of wear, including light scuffs or very light scratches or pops that do not affect the listening experience. Slight warps that do not affect the sound are OK. Minor signs of handling are OK, too, such as telltale marks around the center hole, but repeated playing has not mis-shaped the hole. There may be some very light ring wear or discoloration, but it should be barely noticeable.

 

Cover: VG+ covers have minor wear. A VG+ cover might have some very minor seam wear or a split (less than one inch long) at the bottom or top, the most vulnerable locations. Also, a VG+ cover may have some defacing, such as a cut-out marking or a name written on it.

 

Very Good (VG)

Many of the imperfections found on a VG+ record are more obvious on a VG record. That said, VG records are among the biggest bargains in record collecting, because most of the “big money” goes for more perfect copies. For many listeners, a VG record or sleeve will be worth the money.

 

VG records have more obvious flaws than their counterparts in better shape. They lack most of the original gloss found on factory-fresh records. Groove wear is evident on sight, as are light scratches deep enough to feel with a fingernail. When played, a VG record has surface noise, and some scratches may be audible, especially in soft passages and during a song’s intro and ending. But the noise will not overpower the music otherwise.

 

Cover: VG covers will have many signs of human handling. Ring wear in the middle or along the edges of the cover where the edge of a record would reside. More creases visible and seam splitting will be more obvious; it may appear on all three sides. Someone might have written on it or stamped a price tag on it, too.

 

Fair

The record has significant surface noise and groove wear, label is worn, with significant ring wear, heavy writing, or obvious damage caused by someone trying to remove tape or stickers and failing miserably. A Fair cover has ring wear to the point of distraction, has seam splits obvious on sight and may have even heavier writing, such as, for example, huge radio station letters written across the front to deter theft or water damage.


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