`Couple of weeks ago a car-park (drive-off) muppet reversed into my miggy`s front number plate and broke it in half; 2 halves actually!

Local motor-factors wanted £28. for a pair (wouldn`t do a 'single').....so went on eBay and found a seller: with good feedback on nearly 10K sales and at good price £13.90 a pair (to be delivered next day).
Seller invoiced and I confirmed details all correct and paid via Paypal.....waited & waited.....1 week passed.....e.mailed, then of course plates arrived that day.
With classic
Debs. bad luck the reg. number had been mis-spelt (Grrrr!).....
I telephoned the number on the Ebay seller`s page (answering machine) left a message and sent an email saying the same thing as the message.
Waited some days for a response but nothing.
Then, I spotted small print buried on the 'Visit My Shop' page: "Plates bubbled/Broken/Mis-spelt
returned to us will be replaced" (no mention of that on the item listing).
So, `packaged them up and returned them; First Class-Recorded (£3.10!)......waited, a further 1 week then passed, emailed again.....waited, then 3 days later the plates arrived: correctly spelt and admittedly really-nice quality.
Now then:
I want to be fair and certainly do
not want a feedback war ....but, I really do want to mention the way this seller treats their mistakes/problems and comms, but do it in a fair/balanced way.
I was always told the measure of a business is the way they react to a problem with a sale not the volume of happy buyers.

Any thoughts guys? [smiley=huh.gif]