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Thread: Do I Dob em in
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1st November 2007, 11:59 PM #16
I'd say it would depend on whether the price is advertised along with the guarantee.
If there's no footnotes, then it should be unconditional.
A bit off topic, but an interesting tale of ethics:
I'm a member of another computer forum, and news got out that a big PC company had made a typo on the price of their hard drives. Their on line ordering system automatically billed your credit card, and confirmed your order. The thread went crazy and it was the fastest growing thread on the forums, with some people ordering bulk (hundreds) numbers of hard drives at about five bucks a pop from memory. There was a lot of debate about ethics in the thread as well, with the community divided over it. Greed had well and truly set in, and the company lost a fortune honouring their commitments under threat of legal action, but they got away without honouring multiple orders by arguing that it was obvious to the purchaser that they were taking advantage of a mistake. No one in the market for hundreds of hard drives would actually think that the price was genuine. It was so ridiculously low.
Everyone who ordered got a single hard drive though.
Most unfortunate since the company had no intention of baiting the public. It was an honest mistake, but the vultures pounced on it.
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1st November 2007, 11:59 PM #17
whats the web site i wanna see
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2nd November 2007, 12:21 AM #18
If he's going to name them publicly, then he'd better be certain of this statement:
I deem their publicly advertised information to be misleading and /or deceptive compared to what is written on the guarantee cetificiate. I see their public site still states the 10 years.
It could be a bit of a minefield with no reward for rod except perhaps satisfaction, or it could all turn pear shaped.
I'd just go to the authorities if you feel strongly about it.
If you hadn't made that statement, then you may have been able to ask opinions without making accusations, but the cat is out of the bag now.
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2nd November 2007, 02:32 AM #19
Ask the company to change their Web statement. You say you didn't tell them what source you got the warranty information from and it just might be an oversight. Give them the opportunity to correct what they may have simply overlooked.
Lets face it most warranties have so many out clauses these days they don't cover much anyway. I read my car waranty recently and they do not cover gaskets. Does that mean a $2k bill if a head gasket blows? Who knows and I hope I don't have to answer that one.Cheers,
Rod
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5th November 2007, 12:16 AM #20
I agree with you on this one Rod.
RE: Gaskets
Back in the 1980s I bought a 7 year old used car with a 6 month extended warranty (not on gaskets). About a week later the air conditioner compressor seized which cause a shirt load of other problems, alternator, water pump, warped head and the kitchen sink, something even went wacky with the power steering. Total cost for the repair was around $1000 but I had to pay for all the gaskets including the head gasket.
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5th November 2007, 01:41 AM #21
Bob, that would have hurt. Well it looks like new car warranties aren't worth the paper they are written on if gaskets are not covered. You sort of expect this sort of thing with used vehicles but not new cars. Sorry and typical of me I have steered this away from you thread.
Cheers,
Rod
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5th November 2007, 03:27 AM #22
My daughter had a problem with a well known motor company and gaskets,
they tried to duck from a $2000 claim but relented in the end but I think she only had to pay for some paper gaskets (gearbox areas)
referring to the UKwoody U.K.
"Common looking people are the best in the world: that is the reason the Lord makes so many of them." ~ Abraham Lincoln
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11th November 2007, 01:46 PM #23
If you thought it was worth the trouble you could send them a note pointing out that the 10 year warranty was still advertised on their website and had they overlooked this fact, or had they now started offering the full 10 year warranty. If nothing were done after this, then I feel you would be justified in reporting it.
donna
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12th November 2007, 09:24 AM #24
Thanks Donna, but I don't think it is up to me, the customer, to tell a business how to run their business. And ya know the ironic part is they have a large poster on their office wall which has a muilti pointed red star with 10 year warranty stated in it, and there is no mention of the additional cost. So its right under their noses every day of the week.
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12th November 2007, 10:36 AM #25
I had sort of the same thing happen to me with a second hand car that I bought a while back. They advertised a years warranty, so I took it to the NRMA just before the time was up and they identified some engine problems. I took it back and they fixed it up, but when I went to pick it up, they gave me some BS about how the engine and drive train was only covered for three months, read the fine print. Then they gave me a bill for over a grand. I said "Who reads the fine print? You've got a big sign advertising a years warranty on all of your cars, and I would have gotten it checked out sooner if I'd known"
They kept arguing, so I jumped in the car and drove off.
Two days later it broke down because they did a shonky job of repairing it. I had the NRMA tow it to their yard, they identified the problems, and it sat there whilst I rang up the car yard and abused them. I told them that there'd be big trouble for them if they didn't fix my car properly for free, and I that I had the NRMA backing me up.
They fixed up my car for free.
edit, footnote: The car was a bucket of bolts and I'll never buy another one like it.
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12th November 2007, 12:19 PM #26
Sorry to get off track again but I'm amazed that no one wants to be seen to be a "dobber". The reason grubs get away with breaking into your homes, stealing your cars, bashing your kids for their MP3 players, is because no one is prepared to come forward to the police and say, "he did it" I'm sorry but I have no time for grubs and if someone I knew was a thief, a drug dealer etc, I wouldn't want to know em anyway and if they callled me "dobber", then that's a badge I'll wear. If you came home and someone had brokrn into your shed or house and stripped it bare and the next door neighbour said "I know who did it but I'm not dobbing", I think you'd have a different view. I reckon the ethos, don't be a dobber is something schoolyard bully's enforce when we're young for their own protection and it sticks
Last edited by notenoughtoys; 12th November 2007 at 12:19 PM. Reason: spelling mistake
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A closed mouth gathers no feet. Anon 2009
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12th November 2008, 09:20 PM #27
That pretty much sums up my take on 'dobbing' too. I have been burgled, my car has been broken into, my son was beaten. I think if someone like their parents had done some 'dobbing' much earlier, we wouldn't have been victimised.
Kym
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