oh i thought you had. my mistake. i am not much of a warranty person myself but what i paid for it i really dont need one
I think you missed the point completely. The lifetime warranty might have helped to justify your asking price for the card. The discussion about it was not to inform you about the warrantiability of the card for your own reasons. Throw in the fact that the company no longer honors its warranties (for obvious reasons) this become a moot point.
Whether or not the price you ask is fair is also not what is being debated, it's the way you come across yourself. In one thread, you're bragging about how cheap you got the card ($40). In another thread, you're asking $125 for it, claiming the reasons for you selling it (and making $85 off of the deal) is because the card won't work with your system as-is, and because it would be too much of a pain to modify it to make it work.
I'm sorry, but that just sounds sheisty to me. Kind of like a guy trying to sell a car on craigslist 'cheap' and claiming that all it needs to run is a $4 part that takes ten minutes to put in. "I'm selling it at this awesome deal because I don't want to spend ten minutes and $4 to fix it!" you know really means "it needs thousands of dollars worth of work but I'm looking for a sucker to take it off of my hands".
And in your case, it's not even that great of a deal!
Basically, when people want to get rid of something the sake of convenience, they typically don't try to make a lot of money off of the deal. When someone DOES want to sell something to make a decent profit, they usually don't go bragging about how cheap they bought it for in the first place. You somehow managed to fail with both scenarios.
Of course we're going to flame you!
Regardless, I'm happy you got it working for you... just take this as a life lesson learned and move on...