FrankHarveyHiFi said:psurquhart said:FrankHarvey HiFi please also note - I would welcome your knowledge too. And if Prof Hat is reading - yours too. in fact the more the merrier from all of you forum posters please.
What is it you're wanting to know?
Larry said:Well, it don´t sound like Frankie is providing that service, if you read between the lines.
But under consumer law it has to last a reasonable amount of time, for an M-DAC this would be a minimum of 2 years, but this falls to the responsibility of the retailer and not the manufacturer. So what would your stance be as a retailer if the unit had been sold on and the new owner had proof of purchase etc. ?FrankHarveyHiFi said:Presuming a lot there. I'm merely stating what is said in this particular manufacturer's terms and conditions, as it is with most manufacturers.
FrankHarveyHiFi said:John Duncan said:Could making warranties non-transferable be classed as a bit miserable?
You'd have to take that up with manufacturers 🙂
John Duncan said:FrankHarveyHiFi said:John Duncan said:Could making warranties non-transferable be classed as a bit miserable?
You'd have to take that up with manufacturers 🙂
But my contract is with the dealer...;-)
'' SHAFT ! John shaft ..... hush,shut your mouth'' :rofl:FrankHarveyHiFi said:John Duncan said:FrankHarveyHiFi said:John Duncan said:Could making warranties non-transferable be classed as a bit miserable?
You'd have to take that up with manufacturers 🙂
But my contract is with the dealer...;-)
Unfortunately I can't go into the reasoning of their warranty terms, you'd have to take it up with the manufacturer about the wording of their warranty.
I'm bowing out of this one now because as usual, I give info, then get dragged into a conversation making me look bad. I'm merely providing info.
Andrew Everard said:Musicraft. Although that's not to say this is the only retailer with stock, just the only one who let us know it has.
eggontoast said:But surely the retailer can play a part in this.
This is directed at FrankHarveyHiFi but other retailers can voice an opinion also. Manufacturers warranties aside, if you purchase goods from a shop it has to last a reasonable amount of time under the consumer act. Now if the original purchaser sells the unit on and the second owner returns to your shop would you refuse to rectify the unit even if was under 2 years old ?
Dr Lodge said:If a second owner took a < 2 years old unit back to the shop would I refuse the rectify the work? I surely would, since they are not the person I had the contract of sale with and I owe them nothing.
Dr Lodge said:(I don't own a shop by the way)
matthaskell said:Im sure the customer would appreciate that and shop elsewhere