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Customer smashes SIX display TVs in shop
"Kay Robinson" wrote in message ... On Tue, 20 May 2008 23:15:44 +0100, "D Mac" sharpened a new quill and scratched: After paying 360quid insurance for the set This seems rather excessive. Why-oh-why do people pay this much My next door neighbour went to Richer Sounds on Saturday for new TV extended warranty was 10% extra. Also the TV was £70 less than the retail sheds. -- Regards, David Please reply to News Group |
Customer smashes SIX display TVs in shop
"David" wrote in message ... | | | "Kay Robinson" wrote in message | ... | On Tue, 20 May 2008 23:15:44 +0100, "D Mac" | sharpened a new quill and scratched: | | After paying 360quid insurance for the set | | This seems rather excessive. Why-oh-why do people pay this much | | My next door neighbour went to Richer Sounds on Saturday for new TV extended | warranty was 10% extra. | Also the TV was £70 less than the retail sheds. why buy extended warranty when you are covered by the sale of goods act for up to 6 years? |
Customer smashes SIX display TVs in shop
"Angela" wrote in message ... "David" wrote in message ... | | | "Kay Robinson" wrote in message | ... | On Tue, 20 May 2008 23:15:44 +0100, "D Mac" | sharpened a new quill and scratched: | | After paying 360quid insurance for the set | | This seems rather excessive. Why-oh-why do people pay this much | | My next door neighbour went to Richer Sounds on Saturday for new TV extended | warranty was 10% extra. | Also the TV was £70 less than the retail sheds. why buy extended warranty when you are covered by the sale of goods act for up to 6 years? But not without hassle and ambiguity, (show me hardly anyone who's even aware of it) far better to have legislation in place that states that a piece of electrical equipment I have doled out £500 for is guaranteed for at least a minimum of three to five years, I mean, if a manufacturer isn't prepared to give that sort of guarantee on a piece of of expensive equipment, then frankly imv they shouldn't be in business. I've just purchased a stainless steel electric rice cooker steamer from Lidl for the paltry sum of £9.99, yet despite its cheap price it still carries an automatic three year warranty.. likewise a cheap large screen LCD TV bought from an Aldi store also comes with a three year warranty. |
Customer smashes SIX display TVs in shop
In message , Kay Robinson
wrote I agree, it's far to expensive. I have recently purchased a fridge-freezer from Comet, cost, just over £400. I did take insurance out, covering failure, for repair and replacement of foodstuffs. That cost only £120 and given that I recently lost over £60 of frozen food when my existing freezer went on the blink, it may be worth it. But - Frozen food loss is often covered in your basic house contents insurance so possibly no benefit here. A fridge or freezer is likely to be one of the most reliable of electrical items in your house because they have so few working parts. The chances of you claiming is statistically small. How old was your previous freezer when it failed? The salesman and store took most of your £120 as commission so the true cost of providing the cover was more like £30. For instance, Argos only charge around £60 for an extra 4 years for the same cover and they also are getting a large commission from that. Electrical goods often fail very quickly or after a long life (the classic bath tub failure curve). In the first case you are already covered with at least a one year's manufactures warranty. In the second case it un-insurable. Earlier posts regarding pushy staff at Comet amazed me though. I find it hard to find anyone to help or advise at my nearest Comet, and that's a mega-store. They are not pushy when you are looking - they are pushy when you are parting with your money and they sell you overpriced insurance, as you have now found to your cost :) If you didn't go into the shop actually wanting to pay £520 for a £400 fridge then the salesman has worked a bit of sales trickery on you. Did he at any time mention how unreliable a combined fridge-freezer was or how much any repairs may cost? -- Alan news2006 {at} amac {dot} f2s {dot} com |
Customer smashes SIX display TVs in shop
"Ivan" wrote in message
... "Angela" wrote in message ... "David" wrote in message ... | "Kay Robinson" wrote in message | ... | On Tue, 20 May 2008 23:15:44 +0100, "D Mac" snip I've just purchased a stainless steel electric rice cooker steamer from Lidl for the paltry sum of £9.99, yet despite its cheap price it still carries an automatic three year warranty.. likewise a cheap large screen LCD TV bought from an Aldi store also comes with a three year warranty. About 3 years ago the EU adopted a 2 year minimum warranty, but Tony B-liar got an opt out for the UK I'm sure that his friends like retailer Lord Sainsbury had no influence over his decision for our common good Steve Terry |
Customer smashes SIX display TVs in shop
"Steve Terry" wrote in message ... "Ivan" wrote in message ... snip I've just purchased a stainless steel electric rice cooker steamer from Lidl for the paltry sum of £9.99, yet despite its cheap price it still carries an automatic three year warranty.. likewise a cheap large screen LCD TV bought from an Aldi store also comes with a three year warranty. About 3 years ago the EU adopted a 2 year minimum warranty, but Tony B-liar got an opt out for the UK I'm sure that his friends like retailer Lord Sainsbury had no influence over his decision for our common good Well said Steve I was going to add something similar, didn't I recall him saying something about it imposing too much of a liability onto manufacturers? |
Customer smashes SIX display TVs in shop
"Ivan" wrote in message
... "Steve Terry" wrote in message ... "Ivan" wrote in message ... snip I've just purchased a stainless steel electric rice cooker steamer from Lidl for the paltry sum of £9.99, yet despite its cheap price it still carries an automatic three year warranty.. likewise a cheap large screen LCD TV bought from an Aldi store also comes with a three year warranty. About 3 years ago the EU adopted a 2 year minimum warranty, but Tony B-liar got an opt out for the UK I'm sure that his friends like retailer Lord Sainsbury had no influence over his decision for our common good Well said Steve I was going to add something similar, didn't I recall him saying something about it imposing too much of a liability onto manufacturers? The liability and costs are always on the retailer to effect the warranty, which they then can take up with the manufacture to try and recover. Lord Sainsbury seeing millions of quid flying out of the window had no effect at all. One way to regain your lost longer warranty and rights, is to join the quarter of a million Brits who are now migrating every single year. UK PLC the new Sim City game, vote with your feet. Steve Terry |
Customer smashes SIX display TVs in shop
In article , Mike Henry wrote:
Richer Sounds extended warranties are in a different league from most of the high street rip-offs and so deserve special praise. You can claim back the entire cost of the extended warranty at the end of the period if you haven't used it! (That used to be the case anyway) That company's entire trading ethos deserves special praise. They really do seem to try to provide the customer with what they want with no nonsense, and to live up to any promises they make. (As any company should, of course). At one time they offered an optional "buy-back" guarantee, valid up to three years from purchase, whereby provided the item was in good condition and you'd kept the packaging, they'd give you half its original price against the purchase of something new. I did rather well out of this because I happened to buy a DVD player just before prices plummetted from hi-fi to supermarket level, so by the time I decided to change it, the half price refund was more than the full price of an equivalent new machine, so I bought a much more advanced new machine for about a tenner. Not surprisingly, they'd stopped doing this particular buy-back deal by then, probably realising that they were making a loss with it, but they honoured the deal they'd already made with me without any hesitation. Top marks. Rod. -- Virtual Access V6.3 free usenet/email software from http://sourceforge.net/projects/virtual-access/ |
Customer smashes SIX display TVs in shop
"Steve Terry" wrote in message ... "Ivan" wrote in message One way to regain your lost longer warranty and rights, is to join the quarter of a million Brits who are now migrating every single year. This is one factor. Here's another. Given the higher birthrate of some immigrant groups compared to the indigenous population, and given the reluctance of some members of the same groups to integrate and become part of British society, it seems that we will have a great deal of civil strife in the years to come. I do wish we could all get on and live happily together, but I fear a Northern Ireland-type situation on the UK mainland within thirty years. I can see the resentment of the indigenous population (including the Poles who settles here in 1946!) reaching levels where trouble will break out. The white working classes are already rife with race hatred and tales of anti-white discrimination by the authorities. Please tell me my fears are unjustified. Bill |
Customer smashes SIX display TVs in shop
On Tue, 26 Aug 2008 01:10:28 +0100, "Bill Wright"
wrote: "Steve Terry" wrote in message ... "Ivan" wrote in message One way to regain your lost longer warranty and rights, is to join the quarter of a million Brits who are now migrating every single year. This is one factor. Here's another. Given the higher birthrate of some immigrant groups compared to the indigenous population, and given the reluctance of some members of the same groups to integrate and become part of British society, it seems that we will have a great deal of civil strife in the years to come. I do wish we could all get on and live happily together, but I fear a Northern Ireland-type situation on the UK mainland within thirty years. I can see the resentment of the indigenous population (including the Poles who settles here in 1946!) reaching levels where trouble will break out. The white working classes are already rife with race hatred and tales of anti-white discrimination by the authorities. Please tell me my fears are unjustified. Bill, I live in Northern Ireland and I can tell you that about twenty years ago a few people here were looking at Britain and expressing those same fears. They could see this division occurring and could see the risks based on their own experience. They didn't speak up because they knew that no one would listen. What many decent people do not understand is that sometimes dangerous divisions can arise even when everyone on all sides is benign and well-intentioned. Anyway, back to watching the sleepers in the BB house! |
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