Some random Monday morning thoughts from an old chipper:
Buy only what you really like and can afford, and pass on those chips that you don't really like and can't really afford. And because your tastes and budget will change over time, you will find both of those to be moving targets. Enjoy the ride -- it's a marathon, not a sprint.
Buy from folks that don't want the chips as badly as you do. Sell to folks who want the chips more than you do. Rinse, repeat. Be civil to your fellow chippers.
Make friends along the way and do favors when appropriate if you can. Returned favors and chip karma are very real, if you fully buy into the chip community concept. If you are here to take advantage of others, expect the same in return.
One way to experience a lot of variety over time in this hobby is to consider yourself to be merely renting the high-end chips (for roughly the cost of shipping, eventually reselling them at cost).
Generally speaking, the less expensive the chips, the more they will cost you to own in the long-term -- high-end chips tend to hold value, while low-end chips do not (and tend to be viewed more as a disposible item/expense).
Spending $100 on various chip samples to get first-hand impressions is much wiser than spending $100 on a low-cost set based on just pictures and misleading hype. You will be able to recoup most (if not all) of your samples costs; not so with the cheap set purchase.
Buy only what you really like and can afford, and pass on those chips that you don't really like and can't really afford. And because your tastes and budget will change over time, you will find both of those to be moving targets. Enjoy the ride -- it's a marathon, not a sprint.
Buy from folks that don't want the chips as badly as you do. Sell to folks who want the chips more than you do. Rinse, repeat. Be civil to your fellow chippers.
Make friends along the way and do favors when appropriate if you can. Returned favors and chip karma are very real, if you fully buy into the chip community concept. If you are here to take advantage of others, expect the same in return.
One way to experience a lot of variety over time in this hobby is to consider yourself to be merely renting the high-end chips (for roughly the cost of shipping, eventually reselling them at cost).
Generally speaking, the less expensive the chips, the more they will cost you to own in the long-term -- high-end chips tend to hold value, while low-end chips do not (and tend to be viewed more as a disposible item/expense).
Spending $100 on various chip samples to get first-hand impressions is much wiser than spending $100 on a low-cost set based on just pictures and misleading hype. You will be able to recoup most (if not all) of your samples costs; not so with the cheap set purchase.