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-   -   <><> Circuit City ? <><> (http://www.homecinemabanter.com/showthread.php?t=6629)

Al Hill May 17th 04 11:34 PM

<><> Circuit City ? <><>
 
Is it good to buy from Circuit City ? Are they good at
service & handling ? I`ve heard that Bestbuy is not good at
all...........Al


Curmudgeon May 18th 04 04:29 AM

And neither will work on your equipment once the warranty is expired....you
are then on your own.
People who buy only on price get exactly what they deserve.

"Al Hill" wrote in message
...
Is it good to buy from Circuit City ? Are they good at
service & handling ? I`ve heard that Bestbuy is not good at
all...........Al




HDTV-slingr May 18th 04 07:47 AM

On Mon, 17 May 2004 14:34:49 -0700, (Al Hill)
wrote:

Is it good to buy from Circuit City ? Are they good at
service & handling ? I`ve heard that Bestbuy is not good at
all...........Al


Consider the source: I sell TV's for Sears. That said, Circuit City
is pretty good. They've got competitive prices, in general they care
beyond the point of sale for a reasonable time frame, and they seem to
lean toward earning repeat business to an extent.

Best Buy sucks. I don't say that as a competitor, I say that as a
consumer who cut up a BB card with a very generous credit limit a
couple of years ago due to the fact that they DIDN'T seem to give much
of a crap beyond the point of the sale on a screwed up laptop I
purchased. I'll never buy from there again.

With both companies, it's hard to say one way or the other what the
service is like since neither organization has it's own service techs
like Sears does (*shameless* plug g). When you buy from either
retailer (CC or BB, or any other major retailer), just who's gonna
take the screwdriver to your set for warranty work can vary from store
to store.

As far as the major, Fortune 500 coast-to-coast retailers go, knowing
what I know now as both a consumer and a salesman, I'd not make a
high-end electronics purchase from anybody but Sears or Circuit City,
but that's just me. CC's advantage is it's almost always in stock and
you can almost always take it home with you in minutes. Sears'
advantage is that guys wearing Sears name tags perform the warranty
work, so if the product breaks down under warranty, you deal with
Sears and ONLY Sears. Both will pricematch 'til the cows come home so
there's no difference there.

Sears has knowledgeable sales staff on straight commission, CC doesn't
pay commission so there's no pressure but overall, less knowledgeable
staff. At CC, you have no pressure but good luck finding a
knowlegeable salesperson. At Sears, you have to deal with a
commission salesman but the guy or gal probably studies the trends and
technology into the week hours so he/she knows alot more than the
*average* consumer. At the other Fortune 500's, GOOD LUCK if your
product fails under warranty.

Just my own personal opinion, your mileagle may vary....


Cymbal Man Freq. May 18th 04 08:45 AM

I've had good luck getting vcr's replaced at CC when they go bad.
They used to fix them, then they went into replacement mode and I could get a
good upgrade in the process.
Lately, all the vcr's they have on the shelves are nothing I'd buy. They went
cheapo with the stock choices.
If I want to buy a $200 model vcr, they only have up to $150 models.

I see Mitsubishi is making D-VHS vcr's now. Where can they be found?



Eric Houkal May 18th 04 03:44 PM

OK, I have to ask, as this is basically what made me cut up my BB
card.... I bought a CD changer, had a 12/12 warranty, did not purchase
extended, two months old it quit, BB says I have to give them 25 bucks
to deal with the warranty, they only do it for thirty days. I paid 75
dollars for the changer, (pos, I know) they wanted IIRC 50 for the
warranty, now 25 for warranty repairs. I pointed out that if i wanted
to be cut loose after purchase, I could have bought on line for
considerably less, but they were adamant, and I wound up sending the
changer back to the manufacturer. How would Sears have handled this?
Eric
Consider the source: I sell TV's for Sears. That said, Circuit City
is pretty good. They've got competitive prices, in general they care
beyond the point of sale for a reasonable time frame, and they seem to
lean toward earning repeat business to an extent.

Best Buy sucks. I don't say that as a competitor, I say that as a
consumer who cut up a BB card with a very generous credit limit a
couple of years ago due to the fact that they DIDN'T seem to give much
of a crap beyond the point of the sale on a screwed up laptop I
purchased. I'll never buy from there again.

With both companies, it's hard to say one way or the other what the
service is like since neither organization has it's own service techs
like Sears does (*shameless* plug g). When you buy from either
retailer (CC or BB, or any other major retailer), just who's gonna
take the screwdriver to your set for warranty work can vary from store
to store.

As far as the major, Fortune 500 coast-to-coast retailers go, knowing
what I know now as both a consumer and a salesman, I'd not make a
high-end electronics purchase from anybody but Sears or Circuit City,
but that's just me. CC's advantage is it's almost always in stock and
you can almost always take it home with you in minutes. Sears'
advantage is that guys wearing Sears name tags perform the warranty
work, so if the product breaks down under warranty, you deal with
Sears and ONLY Sears. Both will pricematch 'til the cows come home so
there's no difference there.

Sears has knowledgeable sales staff on straight commission, CC doesn't
pay commission so there's no pressure but overall, less knowledgeable
staff. At CC, you have no pressure but good luck finding a
knowlegeable salesperson. At Sears, you have to deal with a
commission salesman but the guy or gal probably studies the trends and
technology into the week hours so he/she knows alot more than the
*average* consumer. At the other Fortune 500's, GOOD LUCK if your
product fails under warranty.

Just my own personal opinion, your mileagle may vary....



Michael J. Sherman May 18th 04 08:34 PM


I'm just curious, why did you not just call up the manufacturer? I
had a Samsung TV that died two months after I bought it from Best Buy,
but I sure didn't even consider calling BB. I just called Samsung.

So why even deal with BB? Just call the company who built the CD
changer. The year warranty is through them, not BB. I'm siding with
BB here. You didn't buy their extended warranty, and you're past the
30-day return, so why should BB mediate between you and the manufacturer?


Eric Houkal wrote:
OK, I have to ask, as this is basically what made me cut up my BB
card.... I bought a CD changer, had a 12/12 warranty, did not purchase
extended, two months old it quit, BB says I have to give them 25 bucks
to deal with the warranty, they only do it for thirty days. I paid 75
dollars for the changer, (pos, I know) they wanted IIRC 50 for the
warranty, now 25 for warranty repairs. I pointed out that if i wanted
to be cut loose after purchase, I could have bought on line for
considerably less, but they were adamant, and I wound up sending the
changer back to the manufacturer. How would Sears have handled this?
Eric

Consider the source: I sell TV's for Sears. That said, Circuit City
is pretty good. They've got competitive prices, in general they care
beyond the point of sale for a reasonable time frame, and they seem to
lean toward earning repeat business to an extent.

Best Buy sucks. I don't say that as a competitor, I say that as a
consumer who cut up a BB card with a very generous credit limit a
couple of years ago due to the fact that they DIDN'T seem to give much
of a crap beyond the point of the sale on a screwed up laptop I
purchased. I'll never buy from there again.

With both companies, it's hard to say one way or the other what the
service is like since neither organization has it's own service techs
like Sears does (*shameless* plug g). When you buy from either
retailer (CC or BB, or any other major retailer), just who's gonna
take the screwdriver to your set for warranty work can vary from store
to store.

As far as the major, Fortune 500 coast-to-coast retailers go, knowing
what I know now as both a consumer and a salesman, I'd not make a
high-end electronics purchase from anybody but Sears or Circuit City,
but that's just me. CC's advantage is it's almost always in stock and
you can almost always take it home with you in minutes. Sears'
advantage is that guys wearing Sears name tags perform the warranty
work, so if the product breaks down under warranty, you deal with
Sears and ONLY Sears. Both will pricematch 'til the cows come home so
there's no difference there.

Sears has knowledgeable sales staff on straight commission, CC doesn't
pay commission so there's no pressure but overall, less knowledgeable
staff. At CC, you have no pressure but good luck finding a
knowlegeable salesperson. At Sears, you have to deal with a
commission salesman but the guy or gal probably studies the trends and
technology into the week hours so he/she knows alot more than the
*average* consumer. At the other Fortune 500's, GOOD LUCK if your
product fails under warranty.

Just my own personal opinion, your mileagle may vary....




Cymbal Man Freq. May 18th 04 09:03 PM

I had an S-VHS vcr I bought at Sears in late-1999, and I suspected that I had a
problem with it during the last month of warranty. So I took it to a Sears store
(50 miles away from where I live) and they sent it to their repair place 300
miles away. I got it back with cleaning done and a little adjustment, but my
stated problem turned out to be not with the vcr, but with a Radio Shack
Multi-Input/Single Output S-Video connector box that had gone bad and caused
colors to oversaturate. The vcr was fine after I retired the R.S. box. However,
the repair shop had gotten to work on it after the warranty had expired and they
charged me some money for working on it outside of warranty. So I had to bring
this to the attention of someone at the Sears back office and they tried calling
the repair place long-distance several times while I waited. My argument was
that I brought the vcr into the store BEFORE the warranty had expired, but the
repair place was saying they hadn't begun working on the vcr until AFTER the
warranty had expired and that they had to charge me. Two sides to this story.
The guy at the store made the decision after pondering these two conflicting
views and gave me the benefit of the doubt, so I didn't have to pay. The vcr box
that it came back in, not the original box, was in horrible shape though.
Fortunately there was enough bubble wrap to protect it. I only brought in the
vcr without a box; Sears dealt with the shipping aspects.



HDTV-slingr May 18th 04 10:26 PM

On Tue, 18 May 2004 08:44:38 -0500, Eric Houkal
wrote:

OK, I have to ask, as this is basically what made me cut up my BB
card.... I bought a CD changer, had a 12/12 warranty, did not purchase
extended, two months old it quit, BB says I have to give them 25 bucks
to deal with the warranty, they only do it for thirty days. I paid 75
dollars for the changer, (pos, I know) they wanted IIRC 50 for the
warranty, now 25 for warranty repairs. I pointed out that if i wanted
to be cut loose after purchase, I could have bought on line for
considerably less, but they were adamant, and I wound up sending the
changer back to the manufacturer. How would Sears have handled this?
Eric


Eric, you would have either been directed to call 1-800-4-my-home (the
Sears warranty department) or taken it to your nearest Sears repair
center. If there wasn't a repair center nearby, the Sears store would
have sent it off for you.

Once at the repair center, whatever rights you had under the fine
print of the manufacturer's warranty would have been honored directly
by Sears. If both parts & labor were covered still, then it would
have been a free fix or replacement for you. If only parts were
covered, or only labor, etc., etc., then Sears would honor that.

Basically, if it was a Sony CD Changer (for example), just substitute
the word "Sony" and/or "manufacturer" with the word "Sears" in the
fine print of your warranty. Again, this is probably the BIGGEST
benefit of making big-ticket purchases from Sears if Sears carries the
item... a benefit most people don't even know about.

Sears' CEO, Alan Lacy should be fired for failing to make the world
well aware of this fact because it would probably turn the company's
falling around if Sears would just make it a priority to advertise
this particular benefit of buying from Sears.


John Hall May 18th 04 10:45 PM

I'd like to plug local non big box retailers. Where I live there are
several local electronic stores that have built a reputation over the years
for service, particularly after purchase service. Every town has these
retailers; stores run by local businessmen who value their reputation and
depend on repeat business to stay alive. When I decided to buy my HD RPTV I
did my research on the net in newgroups like this one and visited
manufacturers websites to compare the various brands and models. Then I
went to my local retailer. The first thing I noticed was that he carried
only two brands of RPTV, Sony and Hitachi and his service department was
certified to service both brands. So I knew that whatever I bought, he was
the guy I would call if I had any problems. The sales rep explained that
the reason they carried those brands is that they were, in their experience,
the most reliable and most likely to result in customer satisfaction.
Reliability also meant that cost to the retailer in after sales service was
kept as low as possible. So both the customer and the retailer is happy. I
bought an Hitachi 46F500 RPTV and have been extremely happy with it. So far
I have had no need to call the store for service, and knock on wood, I don't
expect to have to call them. But I know they are there for me if I need to.

As for the big box stores, what I buy there generally are electronic
products that will be replaced if anything goes wrong since service is just
too expensive or impractical. So stuff I can take back and exchange like
camera's, hard drivers, printers and the like are what I buy at BB or Future
Shop here in Canada.

JK

"Cymbal Man Freq." Don't g wrote in
message .. .
I had an S-VHS vcr I bought at Sears in late-1999, and I suspected that I

had a
problem with it during the last month of warranty. So I took it to a Sears

store
(50 miles away from where I live) and they sent it to their repair place

300
miles away. I got it back with cleaning done and a little adjustment, but

my
stated problem turned out to be not with the vcr, but with a Radio Shack
Multi-Input/Single Output S-Video connector box that had gone bad and

caused
colors to oversaturate. The vcr was fine after I retired the R.S. box.

However,
the repair shop had gotten to work on it after the warranty had expired

and they
charged me some money for working on it outside of warranty. So I had to

bring
this to the attention of someone at the Sears back office and they tried

calling
the repair place long-distance several times while I waited. My argument

was
that I brought the vcr into the store BEFORE the warranty had expired, but

the
repair place was saying they hadn't begun working on the vcr until AFTER

the
warranty had expired and that they had to charge me. Two sides to this

story.
The guy at the store made the decision after pondering these two

conflicting
views and gave me the benefit of the doubt, so I didn't have to pay. The

vcr box
that it came back in, not the original box, was in horrible shape though.
Fortunately there was enough bubble wrap to protect it. I only brought in

the
vcr without a box; Sears dealt with the shipping aspects.





GGA May 19th 04 02:23 AM

Not all Sears stores perform their own warranty work. Maybe the one you work
at does, but I know for a fact not all. The reason I know this is the
company I work for does service work for BB, CC, some of Sears and some of
Tweeter. The company I work for is a dept store chain. In fact they are the
biggest privately owned dept store in the US.

You make some very valid points about commissioned salesman, the draw back
you didnt come up with is that a lot of commissioned salesman push product
or the customer to something they really dont want or need. But yes in
general most commissioned salespeople are more knowledgeable, not all
though. I have run into some very dumb commissioned salespeople who were
veterans by decades of sales experience who doesnt know what the difference
from their left and right hand.

Scott


With both companies, it's hard to say one way or the other what the
service is like since neither organization has it's own service techs
like Sears does (*shameless* plug g). When you buy from either
retailer (CC or BB, or any other major retailer), just who's gonna
take the screwdriver to your set for warranty work can vary from store
to store.

Sears'
advantage is that guys wearing Sears name tags perform the warranty
work, so if the product breaks down under warranty, you deal with
Sears and ONLY Sears. Both will pricematch 'til the cows come home so
there's no difference there.

Sears has knowledgeable sales staff on straight commission, CC doesn't
pay commission so there's no pressure but overall, less knowledgeable
staff. At CC, you have no pressure but good luck finding a
knowlegeable salesperson. At Sears, you have to deal with a
commission salesman but the guy or gal probably studies the trends and
technology into the week hours so he/she knows alot more than the
*average* consumer. At the other Fortune 500's, GOOD LUCK if your
product fails under warranty.






HDTV-slingr May 19th 04 06:55 AM

On Tue, 18 May 2004 20:45:13 GMT, "John Hall"
wrote:

I'd like to plug local non big box retailers.


Jon, I agree with you - they deserve worthy mention for sure. Most
just assume they are a dying breed but every metro area still has one
or two who meet your description and supporting small businesses never
hurts in the long run. We have a local Sony dealer, a family-operated
business in our area who also performs all warranty work theirselves
just like Sears does. They have a huge selection of Sony products,
including the XBR's and many other models that Sears simply does not
carry, so I love to drop by once in awhile to put my hand on the
newest super-high end Sony's.

These people know I work at Sears as their competitor and they still
treat me like gold everytime I walk in and I appreciate their
friendliness. They ask how biz is going for me and they tell me how
biz is going for them. They love to talk "Sony" and to demo their
"latest and greatest" models to me. I send people who want to see a
better selection of stands and enclosures their way because they've
got 'em. The customers who come in while I'm there just dearly love
these people and I can tell they'd never shop anywhere else.

The ONLY drawback to doing business with one of these small businesses
is the fact that they just simply do not have the margins to compete
with me. I can sell the same TV for hundreds less on a pricematch
against another big-box retailer and they simply cannot and won't even
try. On the other hand, unlike even Sears, where you at least know
the logo's gonna be a Sears logo on a Sears uniform... with a mom &
pop, you know the warranty tech's actual name and how many kids he's
got. There's something to be said for that.



HDTV-slingr May 19th 04 07:14 AM

On Tue, 18 May 2004 20:23:15 -0400, "GGA"
wrote:

Not all Sears stores perform their own warranty work. Maybe the one you work
at does, but I know for a fact not all. The reason I know this is the
company I work for does service work for BB, CC, some of Sears and some of
Tweeter. The company I work for is a dept store chain. In fact they are the
biggest privately owned dept store in the US.

You make some very valid points about commissioned salesman, the draw back
you didnt come up with is that a lot of commissioned salesman push product
or the customer to something they really dont want or need. But yes in
general most commissioned salespeople are more knowledgeable, not all
though. I have run into some very dumb commissioned salespeople who were
veterans by decades of sales experience who doesnt know what the difference
from their left and right hand.

Scott


Great points, Scott. The Sears stores you are referring to that do
outsource the warranty work are the privately-owned dealer stores and
I should have drawn that distinction. While some are like other mom &
pop electronics stores who perform their own warranty work, many
others must outsource to the nearest Sony, Hitachi, etc., servicer.
Of course, all corporately-owned and operated big-box Sears stores
offer the advantage of dealing with Sears and Sears ONLY when it comes
to warranty work.

As for what you say about commissioned salespeople, I agree also with
your points there. The only thing I can counter with is that the
commissioned salespeople I know are trying to build a clientele so
they can make a REAL living. Selling a 73" Hitachi to somebody who
sits 6 feet away from the screen, or selling a 60" plasma to somebody
who's ready to spend their life's savings to better enjoy their
PlayStation II on a big screen is a great way to get your ass kicked
and an even better way to damned sure not get referrals - the
lifeblood of any big ticket salesperson's career.

The beauty of it is the fact that the system itself keeps a revolving
door available for the greedy folks who live for today only. I can
tell you from my own experience, the people I work with despise these
clowns as much as anybody else does because of the reflection it makes
upon the rest of us.

A great test is to ask the commission salesperson a couple of very
difficult questions you know the answer to. If the salesperson knows
the answers, you are talking to an expert. If the salesperson doesn't
know the answer and lies to you, find another. If the salesperson
doesn't know the answer but admits to you that he/she doesn't know the
answer but asks you if you have a few moments for him/her to see if
he/she can find the answer for you, you may want to buy your TV from
this person if the price is right.

This is coming from the "consumer side" of me, BTW... remember, I am
also a consumer/buyer... I buy far more product than I sell when it
gets down to it and like yourselves, I also do my research before a
large purchase :-)






Harry Dugan May 19th 04 11:43 AM

I recommend shopping for your best price at Circuit City, Best Buy, and
6st Ave Electronics...

...then go to PC Richards and let them beat the price.

Harry
Admin of http://www.hdtvforum.com


Thumper May 19th 04 01:07 PM

On Wed, 19 May 2004 05:43:18 -0400, (Harry
Dugan) wrote:

I recommend shopping for your best price at Circuit City, Best Buy, and
6st Ave Electronics...

..then go to PC Richards and let them beat the price.


That'll be the day I give somebody my business for price matching.
Thumper
Harry
Admin of
http://www.hdtvforum.com


Dan P. May 19th 04 01:43 PM


"HDTV-slingr" wrote in message
...
A great test is to ask the commission salesperson a couple of very
difficult questions you know the answer to. If the salesperson knows
the answers, you are talking to an expert. If the salesperson doesn't
know the answer and lies to you, find another. If the salesperson
doesn't know the answer but admits to you that he/she doesn't know the
answer but asks you if you have a few moments for him/her to see if
he/she can find the answer for you, you may want to buy your TV from
this person if the price is right.



I don't have the same mentality. I could care less if the salesperson I buy
from knows anything. I don't depend on them to help me make a decision. I
do all the research at home beforehand, and then I go to the store and know
exactly what I want to buy.

I bought my Panasonic 47" HDTV from Sears and I'm sure the salesperson was
happy with me, because I didn't ask him any questions...I just bought it.
What was nice about shopping at Sears back then was they actually price
matched online prices. But from what I read back then in the newsgroups and
forums, it was a 50/50 chance whether you'd get a store which would actually
do it "no questions asked". Some stores would apparently have to call the
place and verify the shipping costs (since they're supposed to add this to
the price). And some places would flat out refuse to match the price unless
they were on a specific store list.

But luckily the salesperson at my Sears location didn't even flinch, and
just accepted the web printout I showed him, which by the way showed a S&H
of $0.00. The particular web site I printed from showed no shipping charge,
but in reality if you go to the checkout screen, the true shipping charge
would be shown. So I lucked out big time!


Dan







GGA May 19th 04 02:35 PM

Actually mom and pop stores usually do not have the overhead that a big
chain has, including Sears. That means they can have there prices lower if
they want to and have more room to negotiate.

Scott

"HDTV-slingr" wrote in message
...
On Tue, 18 May 2004 20:45:13 GMT, "John Hall"
wrote:

I'd like to plug local non big box retailers.


Jon, I agree with you - they deserve worthy mention for sure. Most
just assume they are a dying breed but every metro area still has one
or two who meet your description and supporting small businesses never
hurts in the long run. We have a local Sony dealer, a family-operated
business in our area who also performs all warranty work theirselves
just like Sears does. They have a huge selection of Sony products,
including the XBR's and many other models that Sears simply does not
carry, so I love to drop by once in awhile to put my hand on the
newest super-high end Sony's.

These people know I work at Sears as their competitor and they still
treat me like gold everytime I walk in and I appreciate their
friendliness. They ask how biz is going for me and they tell me how
biz is going for them. They love to talk "Sony" and to demo their
"latest and greatest" models to me. I send people who want to see a
better selection of stands and enclosures their way because they've
got 'em. The customers who come in while I'm there just dearly love
these people and I can tell they'd never shop anywhere else.

The ONLY drawback to doing business with one of these small businesses
is the fact that they just simply do not have the margins to compete
with me. I can sell the same TV for hundreds less on a pricematch
against another big-box retailer and they simply cannot and won't even
try. On the other hand, unlike even Sears, where you at least know
the logo's gonna be a Sears logo on a Sears uniform... with a mom &
pop, you know the warranty tech's actual name and how many kids he's
got. There's something to be said for that.





GGA May 19th 04 02:38 PM

So you lied to the store to get a better deal. Wow, you're a stand up moral
guy.

Scott

"Dan P." wrote in message
om...

"HDTV-slingr" wrote in message
...
A great test is to ask the commission salesperson a couple of very
difficult questions you know the answer to. If the salesperson knows
the answers, you are talking to an expert. If the salesperson doesn't
know the answer and lies to you, find another. If the salesperson
doesn't know the answer but admits to you that he/she doesn't know the
answer but asks you if you have a few moments for him/her to see if
he/she can find the answer for you, you may want to buy your TV from
this person if the price is right.



I don't have the same mentality. I could care less if the salesperson I

buy
from knows anything. I don't depend on them to help me make a decision.

I
do all the research at home beforehand, and then I go to the store and

know
exactly what I want to buy.

I bought my Panasonic 47" HDTV from Sears and I'm sure the salesperson was
happy with me, because I didn't ask him any questions...I just bought it.
What was nice about shopping at Sears back then was they actually price
matched online prices. But from what I read back then in the newsgroups

and
forums, it was a 50/50 chance whether you'd get a store which would

actually
do it "no questions asked". Some stores would apparently have to call the
place and verify the shipping costs (since they're supposed to add this to
the price). And some places would flat out refuse to match the price

unless
they were on a specific store list.

But luckily the salesperson at my Sears location didn't even flinch, and
just accepted the web printout I showed him, which by the way showed a S&H
of $0.00. The particular web site I printed from showed no shipping

charge,
but in reality if you go to the checkout screen, the true shipping charge
would be shown. So I lucked out big time!


Dan









HDTV-slingr May 19th 04 05:59 PM

On Wed, 19 May 2004 08:35:03 -0400, "GGA"
wrote:

Actually mom and pop stores usually do not have the overhead that a big
chain has, including Sears. That means they can have there prices lower if
they want to and have more room to negotiate.

Scott


Hi Scott,

I'm just going by what this particular local mom & pop told me about
their margins and why they won't pricematch. With them, it's list
price only, take it or leave it. YMMV :-)


poldy May 19th 04 11:43 PM

In article ,
(Al Hill) wrote:

Is it good to buy from Circuit City ? Are they good at
service & handling ? I`ve heard that Bestbuy is not good at
all...........Al


I got a great deal on my XBR from CC. BB doesn't even carry XBRs.

Plus they gave me no flack for not buying an extended warranty because I
would be dealing with Sony anyways, which provides 2-year in home on
XBRs.

They also delivered free of charge.

The other thing is, they have no hassle returns on anything, digicams,
laptops. BB has a restocking fee on those items.

GGA May 20th 04 04:55 AM

Last time I checked, CC does have a restocking fee. A fellow coworking was
charged fees for a return.
Also was the delivery fully free, or was it free after rebate? I never heard
of any of the big box stores doing a full free delivery without a rebate.

Scott

"poldy" wrote in message
...
In article ,
(Al Hill) wrote:

Is it good to buy from Circuit City ? Are they good at
service & handling ? I`ve heard that Bestbuy is not good at
all...........Al


I got a great deal on my XBR from CC. BB doesn't even carry XBRs.

Plus they gave me no flack for not buying an extended warranty because I
would be dealing with Sony anyways, which provides 2-year in home on
XBRs.

They also delivered free of charge.

The other thing is, they have no hassle returns on anything, digicams,
laptops. BB has a restocking fee on those items.




Rich May 20th 04 01:33 PM

"GGA" wrote in message ...
Also was the delivery fully free, or was it free after rebate? I never heard
of any of the big box stores doing a full free delivery without a rebate.

I just had a TV delivered by Best Buy and the delivery was free, no
rebate. It was also quick and on time.

R. Makul May 20th 04 04:51 PM

On Mon, 17 May 2004 14:34:49 -0700, (Al Hill)
wrote:

Is it good to buy from Circuit City ? Are they good at
service & handling ? I`ve heard that Bestbuy is not good at
all...........Al


==============
I read a couple of days ago, in the Newark Star Ledger, that BB paid a
fine to the State of NJ to resolve numerous consumer complaints and
issues that the State was investigating.

I have heard better things about Circuit City.



GGA May 20th 04 11:48 PM

Then maybe it depends on the locale. The BB around here charges for delivery
and states so in there ad. $35 I think, then a $35 mail-in rebate. But I
thought BB had the same add basically across the country. I'll have to call
BB and dig.

Thanks,
Scott

"Rich" wrote in message
om...
"GGA" wrote in message

...
Also was the delivery fully free, or was it free after rebate? I never

heard
of any of the big box stores doing a full free delivery without a

rebate.

I just had a TV delivered by Best Buy and the delivery was free, no
rebate. It was also quick and on time.




poldy May 21st 04 12:47 AM

In article ,
"GGA" wrote:

Last time I checked, CC does have a restocking fee. A fellow coworking was
charged fees for a return.
Also was the delivery fully free, or was it free after rebate? I never heard
of any of the big box stores doing a full free delivery without a rebate.

Scott


Fully free. Second TV I got from them that was free. If you show
you're serious about buying and let them know the delivery fee would be
an obstacle, they will make the deal. They will mark down the price of
the set on the receipt and put in the fee so that the overall price
includes "free" delivery.

John Hall May 22nd 04 05:13 AM

Well, I gotta tell you that the mom and pop shop that I bought my set from
had the same regular price as Future Shop and Best Buy. Thing is with the
big box stores is that they constantly have sales where they knock a couple
of hundred bucks off select sets to get you into the store, and it seems
that its always the same brands that are on sale. Their flyers display the
sets that are on sale with sets that are not on sale, and everything looks
like its on sale but its not. After doing research for a while I
discovered, at least here in Canada, that Hitachi RPTV's don't go on sale
that often. When they are reduced in price, the reduction is permanent.
Today, the set I bought in August 2003 for $2700 is selling for $2100.
Geez, there is never a good time to buy electronics, tomorrow everything is
always cheaper and better.

JK

"HDTV-slingr" wrote in message
...
On Tue, 18 May 2004 20:45:13 GMT, "John Hall"
wrote:

I'd like to plug local non big box retailers.


Jon, I agree with you - they deserve worthy mention for sure. Most
just assume they are a dying breed but every metro area still has one
or two who meet your description and supporting small businesses never
hurts in the long run. We have a local Sony dealer, a family-operated
business in our area who also performs all warranty work theirselves
just like Sears does. They have a huge selection of Sony products,
including the XBR's and many other models that Sears simply does not
carry, so I love to drop by once in awhile to put my hand on the
newest super-high end Sony's.

These people know I work at Sears as their competitor and they still
treat me like gold everytime I walk in and I appreciate their
friendliness. They ask how biz is going for me and they tell me how
biz is going for them. They love to talk "Sony" and to demo their
"latest and greatest" models to me. I send people who want to see a
better selection of stands and enclosures their way because they've
got 'em. The customers who come in while I'm there just dearly love
these people and I can tell they'd never shop anywhere else.

The ONLY drawback to doing business with one of these small businesses
is the fact that they just simply do not have the margins to compete
with me. I can sell the same TV for hundreds less on a pricematch
against another big-box retailer and they simply cannot and won't even
try. On the other hand, unlike even Sears, where you at least know
the logo's gonna be a Sears logo on a Sears uniform... with a mom &
pop, you know the warranty tech's actual name and how many kids he's
got. There's something to be said for that.






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