Franc, I find your comment rather stupid and moronic. My conscience is fine. When you trade in a car at a dealership do you personally go around it with the salesman pointing out every little scratch in the paint, stain in the carpet, or tear in the seat just to be certain they know about every blemish? Do you take the wheels off so they can see how much brake pad is left? Do you point out the amount of tread left on the tires? No, you don't and the reason you don't is that the people at the car dealership are supposed to be the experts at their trade. They have the vehicle in their possession and it's their job to figure out the value. You might do some of the above with a private individual, but not the dealership.
In this situation, I handed the gun to someone who was supposed to be an expert, and who at a minimum absolutely has access to people who are experts. I know for a fact Cabelas has people who are a phone call away who serve the company for this very purpose. I didn't tell them how much I wanted for the guns. They took the guns in to their back room, examined them for 30 minutes, and took me in to the office with an offer. Furthermore, if you have ever actually been in a Cabelas gun library then you already know that Cabelas doesn't attach a piece of paper detailing the individual faults in their inventory, either. That's not how they do business with their customers. Fuggem.
When I list an item for sale on a website, I ALWAYS try to go overboard to accurately describe the item. It's a pain in the rear to buy something and then have to return it, if that's even an option, because the seller didn't accurately represent the item. You can't touch something on the internet. Different story when actually walk in to a gun store and hand the damn thing to a licensed dealer.