Maybe the seller
could be bothered after you've placed a nice deposit in escrow?
dtuuri
If the Selller is going to "negotiate" with multiple Buyers during the listing and selling of the plane, why doesn't the Seller just take 20 minutes on Day 1 of listing and scan the log books?
Get it done, just like washing the plane, and vacuuming the carpet. Then you are equal to other Sellers.
Scanning logbooks is a 1-time activity, and you could then share with MANY buyers.
Let's be honest here, go scroll thru TradeAPlane and look at how many sellers only put 1 or 2 pictures up on their listing. If you are trying to sell something, provide the most amount of information, it makes buyers more likely to buy.
I travelled to a plane, met the nicest gentleman, had a spotless hangar full of his motor home, hobbies, and a 182. He said he couldn't scan the logbooks, so I looked at them in his hangar.
In 1979 was an entry "Installed Wings". No signature.
No reason why.
In 2014 there was an entry "Installed Sportsmanship Leading edge on wing" signed by an Ap.
The paint on the leading edge was 15+ years old.
Turns out, for some reason, not disclosed, the plane had to get new wings.
They installed newer 182 wings with the different leading edge.
The mechanic, getting the plane ready to sell, decided the easiest fix was to say he installed the Sportsman Leading Edge so that the wing would "match" what was on the plane.
If I had prior access to log books, I could have questioned the sudden " installed wings" for no reason entry in 1979, then the recent " work" without any actual physical effort, or paint.
Turns out the guy had sold the plane before, and he told me he "got it back". Yeah, he got it back when a Judge told him to refund the money on a previous sale when a Buyer, somehow, used the logs/wings to rescind the previous transaction. ( not sure how that worked, but it filled in some gaps in the timeline).
Bottom line, he wasted my time traveling to see his plane, I wasted his time looking and asking questions to fill in gaps that the logbooks hinted at.