fujisst said:
I paid with Paypal (owned by eBay), and they offer no such "insurance". I speculate eBay refunded your money because of the low cost of your item and as a customer service 'gesture'. But, yeah, bad on me for buying a Chinese eBay frame in the first place because they do eventually explode into tiny pieces. LOL!
Maybe your bad, maybe not ... here's my earlier post and link:
"When I'm bombing down a descent at 80km/h+ I have complete faith that my Colnago frame ain't going to fail. If I was on a Chinarello or some other no-name Chinese frame, not so much.
Before some noob or know-nothing says "they all come out of the same factory blah blah blah", have a read of this from well respected Cyclingtips.com.au
http://www.cyclingtips.com.au/2011/08/are-all-carbon-bikes-created-equal/
"... I spoke with a gentleman named Raoul Luescher about this topic to find out his views. If there’s anything you want to know about composite materials, Raoul is the man to ask. He owns Luescherteknik has been involved with composite materials for nearly 20 years. He’s worked with Boeing Aerospace, Defence, the AIS and is the designer of the Malvern Star Oppy.
When I asked Raoul about the difference between brand name and no-name bikes, his first response was “You just don’t know…”
You don’t know the quality system behind it, you don’t know the engineering behind it, you don’t know the materials it was built with, you don’t know anything. It could be good, it could be rubbish. How do you know? From an engineering point of view that’s a concern. Fiber type, strength tolerances, bonding, each tube’s structural design are all considerations.
From Raoul’s point of view coming from an aerospace background, you want to know everything about an airplane before you fly it. Same thing on a bike. If you’re ripping down a descent at 80km/hr, you don’t want the thing to break. You want a good degree of confidence that your bike has been engineered properly and quality tested to comply with standards. There are plenty of people out there who have bought one of these inexpensive no-name bikes and haven’t had any problems with them, but you simply don’t know what process they’ve gone through and there is no way to find it out. ..." (The full article is well worth the read)