I just post a question (maybe in the wrong thread),,, just wanna know if there could be some better place to get certain vintage cards other than ebay?
Other than eBay, you could try auction houses that hold special auctions, you could try flea markets, garage sales, estate sales, and of course, there's always the 52 Plus Joker Annual Convention.
with aviators, is there a timeframe where they switched from prefaced congress cards to the aviators we see today? ive been looking for early 2000s aviators for a while now(which is almost impossible for me to find for some reason) but from that i got into collecting aviators in general and i have some from just about every decade since the 40s to 80s and i noticed something, from the 80s on back, theyre prefaced. i havent really seen legit aviators with the real faces until you get later into the ohio era
Hmm... prefaced Congress cards? I've personally never spotted Congress cards in an Aviator pack, though that has a lot to do with Congress cards not having been in a poker size for some time now, just bridge, while Aviators stopped making bridge-sized cards years ago as well, only coming in poker size.
What I have spotted is Aviator cards being used as filler for the more "generic brand" boxes like Mohawk, Torpedo, etc. as filler to use up the boxes. I'm told that at one time, those boxes were used to hold whatever leftover stock USPC had lying around that they needed to get rid of at discounted prices just to get it out of inventory. In my age, though, it was Aviator decks more often than not that was the filler material for those decks. It probably had to do with Aviator being the cheapest deck they made at the time, assuming those boxes were filled before 1987, which is when USPC acquired Arrco and all their brands - today, the cheapest brand that they personally make is Streamline and the cheapest brand they sell is Maverick, which is printed for them by a third-party contractor in China.
None of the Aviator decks I've discovered were ever pre-faced - Congress is the only deck I've seen them pre-face, and only because they used to offer a wider variety of card backs which changed with buying trends and fashion. Pre-printing the faces allowed them to be faster and more flexible in getting the cards made and out the door with whatever the back design of choice was at the time and allowed them to change designs swiftly as needed when sales of a particular pattern started to waver.
I think the burning question I have is "How old is the Aviator deck you have, that has pre-faced, poker-sized Congress cards in the box? Or are they bridge-sized?"