View Poll Results: Is it OK to buy something when you fully intend to return it under warranty.
- Voters
- 106. You may not vote on this poll
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I have no opinion either way
0 0% -
Yes, if they are stupid enough to allow it.
1 0.94% -
Sure, why not, it doesn't cost me anything that way?
1 0.94% -
No.
25 23.58% -
No, it increases the prices, like shoplifting does.
7 6.60% -
No, it is fraudulent, costs everyone extra and is dishonest
72 67.92%
Thread: Ethics - is it OK?
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18th August 2006, 02:21 PM #61
You lot don't reckon the gurus at GMC weren't aware that there were people out there that would take advantage did you?
C'mon, these blokes are smart, real smart. They knew exactly what they were doing, how to do it, why to do it, and when to stop doing it.Boring signature time again!
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18th August 2006, 03:20 PM #62Chief Muck-a-Rounder
- Join Date
- Feb 2006
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- Central QLD
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- 61
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Returning goods
I have been to an auction where they sell faulty/returned goods back to the retailers, all be it, I have only been to one.
The prices received for these goods at this auction, were generally 40-60% of the retail prices as far as I could tell.
I believe the manufacturers are not losing all that much if these prices are the norm.
Cheers.
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18th August 2006, 09:56 PM #63
No way
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19th August 2006, 03:37 PM #64Senior Member
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- Dec 2004
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- Perth
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I've got to be honest here and say that I inadvertently did this the other day.
I bought one of their framing guns for a one off job I was doing. The way I saw it was that it would get the job done ( I included the price of the gun in the quote to the customer) and then hang around in the shed waiting for the next job.
As it turned out, the safety lockout often didn't reset after firing the nail and removing the gun from the timber. Sometimes the nose needed to be pushed into the timber 4 or 5 times to get it to fire. It was also pretty stiff even after oiling so it made skew nailing a pain in the ####.
I persevered with it for a few days and got the job done and went back to bunnings with it. After explaining the problem they offered me a new gun or a refund.
I thought about it and then said bugger it and asked for the refund.
If it had worked faultlessly I wouldn't have been back in Bunnings with it but given the circumstances I didn't feel too bad about getting a refund for it even though it had been used on the job.
The cash did however go towards a new Hitachi NT65 C bradder (such a nice tool ) that will get a heap more use than the framing gun would have.
Edit: As for the members sending reddies and calling me a crook for this post, surely this is what the 30 day satisfaction guarantee is all about. It's not about taking it home and looking at it in the box for a month. It's about taking the tool, using it and deciding if it's up to scratch. It wasn't... I took them up on their guarantee. Simple as that.
If you are going to call me a crook, do it in the forum where everyone can see it and we can argue about it in the public forum.
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19th August 2006, 07:09 PM #65Banned
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- Aug 2005
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- South Australia
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Originally Posted by Groggy
OK now I will do as you suggest, ignore this thread and move on.
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19th August 2006, 07:25 PM #66
You waste your share of electrons too.
Please close the door on your way outIf at first you don't succeed, give something else a go. Life is far too short to waste time trying.
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19th August 2006, 07:28 PM #67Deceased
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- Jun 2003
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Originally Posted by dalejw
Clearly defective and dangerous. Needed to be returned for your own safety.
Peter.
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19th August 2006, 07:33 PM #68
MMMM Bought a GMC Compressor the other day and was casually informed verbally that bunnings dont do warranty returns on gmc stuff any more.
On the packaging writ large is the 30 day satifaction / 2 yr replacement jargon plus "return it to the place of purchase".
Under the trade practises act they could not refuse to take it back.
Any one who buys or has bought a tool with the intent of returning it after a weekends work has done all of us a disservice and stuffed up a great consumer oriented sales policy. A policy that got many of us into tools we would normally not have purchased at a price hitherto unavailable.
To all those who have done it
!@$#$#@!#$%$%$%$^&$$#&%$&**(_(
In future I will be looking at whether it is worth getting into a major hassle with gmc plus the risk of getting stuck with a piece of crap tool. In other words I would be looking at paying more for a tool that has good reputation for quality instead of taking a punt on the cheapie. It was good while it lasted.
I have acually noticed things arent quite as friendly at bunnies lately and also noted that a few things they used to sell are no longer avalable.
IE CMT router Bits and brad point drill bits to mention just two. I have found myself at the local Mitre 10 and total tools a lot lately.ray c
dunno what's more fun, buyin' the tools or usin' em'
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19th August 2006, 07:39 PM #69Originally Posted by dalejw
Had your intent from the start been to return it under all circumstances for a refund then my comments would have been somewhat different.______________
Mark
They only call it a rort if they're not in on it
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19th August 2006, 08:13 PM #70Senior Member
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- Dec 2004
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- Perth
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- 0
Originally Posted by Markw
Other things I do put me in that catagory but I keep them to myself
If there is one tool you definately want to be sure when it's going to work and when it's not it's something firing 90mm nails
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19th August 2006, 09:04 PM #71
Dalejw,
The nail gun problems, especially with the safety feature, sound like a warranty return, so with or without the satisfaction guarantee you would have to return it as the faults clearly make it an unsafe and unsuitable product.
I have returned tools to Bunnings, a crappy ozito stapler (what was I thinking:eek: ) and a terrible ozito belt sander that the tool guy convinced me to buy instead of the makita; it was a piece of s$$t, the plate was not flat, so I got my money back and went to trade tools instead (what was I thinking:eek: :eek: )
For the record my answer is NO!
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19th August 2006, 09:28 PM #72
Whilst this is, at best, only peripheral to this thred, I'd like to put things in perspective, at least from my view.
I have, or had had, the following GMC tools, all bought on 'special', as is my wont:
Big 235 circular saw - Ripper
Jack Hammer Drill - Only used 3 times, lug driving the bit in hammer mode sheared, returned full refund. Product now discontinued.
1200 watt router - Ripper
Powered router table - POS, nuff said
Dowel joiner - Average, but works
Steel cut off saw - Ripper
9" angle grinder - Absolutely ripper
Tile cutting saw bench - Sort of OK
Compressor - works as to specs (shoudl've got a bigger one)
I would not have bought the above without the 3 yr warranty. The 30 day return helped too, but it was the warranty that was most operant. Trade Practices says you may return goods that do not do what they are sold to do.Bodgy
"Is it not enough simply to be able to appreciate the beauty of the garden without it being necessary to believe that there are faeries at the bottom of it? " Douglas Adams
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19th August 2006, 09:38 PM #73
gmc tools I bought:
Tiny Portable compressor - ripper used it for 18 months stilll goes
1200 watt router - good tool use it heaps
Jig saw - works fine no complaints
Drill press [small one] - POS had it replaced got a refund on #2
18 watt drill - damn good tool
table saw - crappy and downright dangerous - took it back
40 litre compressor - just got it seems to work fine.
and i am pretty fussy about tools....
bought 7 tools by gmc and kept 5.
The keepers are great tools for the price but the returns were totally POSray c
dunno what's more fun, buyin' the tools or usin' em'
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19th August 2006, 09:46 PM #74
Well, the thread seems to have pretty much run its course by now. Some interesting comments throughout.
The question never related specifically to GMC, it was very general in nature and was meant to cover those people who deliberately buy something and intend (before even arriving at the store to buy) to return an item for a refund even if it performs well and has no flaws. In short, a free hire.
I know there are some who have no qualms whatsoever doing this, stating the retailer or manufacturer know what is going on and if they don't like it they should not offer such a warranty.
Others, myself included, see the warranty as there only to be used if the tool does not perform to spec, is damaged or does not meet the stated role it is built for.
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19th August 2006, 10:53 PM #75Originally Posted by old_pickerDont waste your breath trying to explain the rules of chess to a pawn
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