andy_art_trigg

Forum Replies Created

Viewing 15 posts - 136 through 150 (of 825 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • in reply to: You want to charge me HOW MUCH! #329931
    andy_art_trigg
    Participant

    Re: You want to charge me HOW MUCH!

    A1engineer wrote:was at a freezer last week needing a new drawer, returned today and fitted, charged £40 + parts and was told no way am i paying £40 for that all you did was slide in a F***ing drawer i tried to explain my time, diesel etc for 2 visits deserved paying but basically got laughed at 🙁

    only after 20 minutes of arguing did i finally get my money with a passing comment as i left saying “we’ll not be having you back ya conman” 😛

    How much would it have cost I wonder for him to get a taxi to go and order the part and a taxi back home, then a taxi to pick up the part and back to his house to “shove” the drawer in? More than £40 I’d guess.

    in reply to: Distant selling laws #321280
    andy_art_trigg
    Participant

    Re: Distant selling laws

    The distance selling regs are there to give customers the same facilities when ordering goods from a distance that they would have in a shop. So for example, if they see a pic of a 3 piece suite online and order it only to find in real life it’s a different colour than the photo on their computer monitor or a magazine showed they can return it.

    I don’t think they were designed to make distant selling so difficult as to sabotage legitimate business and give an unfair advantage to people selling in shops so I agree with what K says.

    in reply to: famous customers? #330860
    andy_art_trigg
    Participant

    Re: famous customers?

    Good topic. Surprised it hasn’t been done before.

    Repaired Charlie Williams’ dryer in the late 70s but only saw the dryer as it came into the workshop.

    Used to repair Marti Caine’s vacuum cleaner & dishwasher. She was a very nice woman. Also used to repair Chris Waddle’s washer & Dryer. He always seemed rather subdued but his wife was lovely.

    Also Richard Hawley was a customer of mine and we used to chat about music (I’m a musician meself) I gave him a cd of my latest stuff and he gave me a copy of his début solo album. I wish I’d got him to sign it for me now as he went on to have great success.

    in reply to: WTA / UKW SEPTEMBER 2010 MEETING #323118
    andy_art_trigg
    Participant

    Re: WTA / UKW SEPTEMBER 2010 MEETING

    Andy Trigg – Washerhelp

    Thurs & Fri. Keep me off the spirits 😉

    in reply to: When did the ISE10 become obsolete? #330358
    andy_art_trigg
    Participant

    Re: When did the ISE10 become obsolete?

    kwatt wrote:Our slot for production is in week 42 but that may slip a little as some Italian mob messed up on the tooling.
    K.

    No wonder you are having big problems with the Mafia involved 😉

    in reply to: When did the ISE10 become obsolete? #330356
    andy_art_trigg
    Participant

    Re: When did the ISE10 become obsolete?

    Cheers K. What was wrong with the old specs?

    in reply to: When did the ISE10 become obsolete? #330353
    andy_art_trigg
    Participant

    Re: When did the ISE10 become obsolete?

    I agree Mark. Can anyone tell me how this situation has arisen? Why have we lost the best ISE washing machine ever with no replacement? I presume Asko have pulled it and ISE can’t buy them any more?

    I’ve still got promotional adverts pushing the ISE10 and had no idea they only went to a dead end until customers started emailing me. And before someone says I should read these forums, I don’t have time, and it’s not a very efficient way of promoting a product when the people selling them have to make sure they read a forum to find out the product they are promoting is no longer available.

    in reply to: When did the ISE10 become obsolete? #330351
    andy_art_trigg
    Participant

    Re: When did the ISE10 become obsolete?

    Cheers. I trawled through the forum posts before posting but couldn’t see anything. The title of that post doesn’t give any clue as to its contents so I didn’t pay it any attention.

    in reply to: repairs@ #329685
    andy_art_trigg
    Participant

    Re: repairs@

    Having to fix 10 dishwashers would be a nightmare for me – never could stand working on ’em 🙂

    Good earner though hopefully?

    in reply to: How should i deal with this? #320510
    andy_art_trigg
    Participant

    Re: How should i deal with this?

    You’re doing it again K. Attributing words to me I haven’t said despite me clearly saying things very different all the way through. I’m not advocating that there’s a security blanket for customers in law to do whatever they like and then get compensated because it doesn’t go their way. Nothing I’ve said could possibly imply that (please show me). I’ve only advocated that if a major household appliance like a washing machine is scrap after 2 or 3 years the consumer should be entitled to compensation under the SOGA because the product has not lasted a reasonable time. You’ve kept going off on tangents and dealing with other issues I haven’t raised.

    Of course retailers should have rights too but they aren’t covered in the SOGA. I’ve criticised the fact that the act puts unfair onus on retailers myself who (unless they are big and powerful) can’t get redress from the manufacturers or even the wholesalers. That’s wrong, but no concern of consumers unfortunately.

    And no, it’s not the responsibility of the consumer to choose and buy the correct product for their needs if it means many products are crap and the onus is on the customer to work out which. If it was there’d be no need for a SOGA. Customers buy cheap budget washing machines and expect them to be noisier, shake about more, have far less features, be less sophisticated, even be less environmentally friendly and use more energy etc – but they don’t expect them to last only 18 months – ever. They expect them to last a reasonable time. If they can’t make cheap washing machines last at least 5 years they aren’t a viable product IMO and shouldn’t be created.

    Of course I assert that the manufacturer has an obligation to know how the machine will be used. Of course they should! They are designing a product to do a specific job, how could they not take into account it might be used by Mr and Mrs Smith and her 3 kids? They should also know it might break down after 2 years and make sure it’s repairable – like the ISE ironically.

    And of course they should build every single product to a minimum standard – that’s exactly what the SOGA is saying. They should be designed to work as expected and last a reasonable time. It’s childlike simple.

    I agree that this would mean price rises but it does not cost an extra £500 to turn a budget washing machine into one that can last longer than 2 or 3 years or even 5 years. They would not go up anywhere near that much. Budget machines are always needed but they shouldn’t cost the poor more by trapping them into a never ceasing circle of constant replacement and expensive insurance which cost them a lot more than if they could afford a good machine in the first place.

    No one’s asking for machines that don’t break down, only ones that don’t break down and can’t be repaired within a few years. Don’t confuse me with unreasonable customers you’ve dealt with who might think that.

    I wrote an article several months back where I say that consumers don’t have a blanket guarantee under the SOGA and that it’s not unreasonable for appliances to break down.

    http://www.whitegoodshelp.co.uk/wordpre … ppliances/

    In it I quote the relevant section of the SOGA

    The government’s guidelines say:

    “Goods are of satisfactory quality if they reach the standard that a reasonable person would regard as satisfactory, taking into account the price and any description.”

    A reasonable person K – not the manufacturer, and not the retailer.

    Yep, I totally agree that fit for purpose means NOT that it will not break down but I’ve never even mentioned fit for purpose have I? Only lasting a reasonable time which is different.

    Of course the SOGA offers no guidance on how long a product should last beyond “reasonable”. No you can’t define “reasonable” as it will vary according to opinion and circumstance coupled with the product. But “reasonable” is all we’ve got and if a consumer doesn’t think 18 months is reasonable for the life of a washing machine I’d stake my life on the fact that most “reasonable persons” as described by the SOGA would agree with him. It’s just fortunate that most of them would not have the confidence or stomach for the fight they’d need to get involved in to get their rights.

    People do reluctantly accept small appliances like toasters and kettles because they are so cheap. They are quite different to large essential appliances costing £300+ You can buy a washing machine for as much as £500 and it could potentially be BER after a few years. That’s never going to be acceptable.

    Anyway I’ve said too much as usual 🙂 We can’t just keep going on over the same ground. I only keep coming back because you totally misconstrue what I say probably through lack of time to really digest it. The prosecution rests. 😉

    in reply to: How should i deal with this? #320508
    andy_art_trigg
    Participant

    Re: How should i deal with this?

    We are going round in circles K and you aren’t taking in what I say and seem to be assuming all sorts of things. You are way too busy to be arguing anyway 😉 I’ve never said they shouldn’t ever break down, and a couple of times I’ve actually said so. It’s the “lasting a reasonable time” section I’ve talked about all the way through, and I only refer to breakdowns that render a product BER causing it to “not last”.

    Consumers have got up to 6 years to make a claim. That means inevitably and obviously you can make a claim for products up to 6 years old. It doesn’t mean you have a just claim for any breakdowns up to 6 years (I would only advocate a claim if it’s BER) or very expensive major part) and it doesn’t mean they will succeed. I’ve never implied that. But if a fault develops that makes an appliance BER under 6 years old you can make a claim. A judge would decide if it succeeds or not. I don’t assume any claim would automatically succeed, but I think many would especially if BER at 2 – 3 years.

    The fact that the product suffers from a failure and needs a repair is coincidental and not a reason for a replacement or a statement on the quality of the goods.

    That makes no sense to me. The fact that it’s broken down has everything to do with its quality.

    If a product fails within 6 months, by law it’s grounds for a replacement or money back. After 6 months and up to 6 years it’s up to small claims court to decide. You can’t get around the 6 years bit because if the SOGA meant anything different it would say something like you can only claim against products up to (say) 2 years but you just have up to 6 years to make delayed claims. It simply says you can make a claim up to 6 years after purchase so obviously you can make a claim if a product is up to 6 years old.

    The fact that the failure is “catastrophic” is just bad luck they will argue and that there are numerous methods in place for the customer to negate taking that risk, such as insurance products. If the customer chose to accept that risk themselves, it’s on them.

    I find that comment bizarre. Just bad luck? And they should have thought about paying out for expensive insurance to negate the risk? I’ll give a previous example again, if you bought a cheap fire extinguisher and it failed to work when you needed it with serious consequences would it be valid for whoever sold it or made it to say it’s just bad luck? Or it serves you right for buying a cheap one? Customers should be able to assume trusted retailers wouldn’t sell something that was not fit for its purpose or that may be fit for purpose but only for a short time.

    Where you can prove that the fault has existed since new, you may win.

    If certain parts are not designed and built well enough to last a reasonable time under normal usage then quite clearly the parts were like that from the start, from the minute they were purchased. Inherent faults sometimes take several years to manifest.

    I’ve seen judgements giving compensation to Hotpoint washing machine owner for cost of repair who’s drum bearings failed well out of the 12 month guarantee because it was judged it hadn’t lasted a reasonable time. The parts that failed were inherently faulty by design if they can fail causing BER so quickly. The guy I mentioned with the HP laptop would never have got a new one after nearly 3 and a half years if it hadn’t been judged to have not lasted a reasonable time and HP aren’t a premium quality product. If you buy a brand new product you should expect it to last longer than 3 and a half years. If it had failed with a minor fault that could be fixed for £50 or even a bit more I doubt he would have claimed. Most people will accept reasonable repairs. it’s when the product is designed specifically so it cannot be repaired economically that claims are totally justified.

    What you appear to argue for is a free for all for manufacturers to con consumers into buying more and more products, and a complete throwaway society where we constantly replace all our products and rarely if ever repair any. You seem to be arguing that consumers are thick and get what they deserve, and that poor people who can ill afford more than £300 for a washing machine should negate themselves (and conveniently the retailers and manufacturers) from risk by also paying for expensive insurance which will not give them the cover they think they are buying anyway.

    in reply to: How should i deal with this? #320506
    andy_art_trigg
    Participant

    Re: How should i deal with this?

    It’s so hard to stop a discussion like this innit? I’m not trying to get last word honest.

    kwatt wrote:The fact is that they are not designed to last as long as people think, end of chat.

    Not so much end of chat, but beginning of small claims court. 😉 That’s the whole point K, people expect they should be made to a certain standard, so does government. When they aren’t, the sale of goods act lets consumers pursue compensation. Manufacturers can’t dictate how long our products should last. They create products and compete with each other for our business. Crap ones are supposed to fall to the wayside as customers ultimately favour better ones. What happens when almost all manufacturer’s are producing the same quality and all not lasting as long as they reasonably should? Consumers have nowhere to go but up hundreds of pounds (most can’t afford) to high quality niche versions, or try to seek redress through SOGA.

    They can be repaired, the fact is that the repairs (parts?) are so expensive as to render them effectively scrap as it’s not economical, not that it cannot be done. If people aren’t prepared to pay for those failures that’s got nothing to do with the SoGA or any other legislation as things currently stand.

    That’s just a verbose way of saying “they can’t be repaired”. Being repairable is an integral part of lasting a reasonable time for a washing machine.

    in reply to: How should i deal with this? #320504
    andy_art_trigg
    Participant

    Re: How should i deal with this?

    I’ll try and make this my last post or at least the last argumentative one 😉 as we are just repeating ourselves a bit too much 🙂

    I used to think if customers are stupid enough to buy cheap they get what they deserve myself and to an extent I say as much over and over on Washerhelp. But now I also think crap products shouldn’t be made in the first place. The inherent fault issue is still relevant if drum bearings fail at 3 or 4 years. If the seal leaks and lets water into them it was an inherently bad design. If a pcb board – arguably the most reliable parts in washing machines fail at 3 or 4 years they simply shouldn’t, and if proper components were used they wouldn’t. Therefore they had an inherent fault because they were made using unreliable components.

    I think it boils down to two sides of an argument, one that says products should all be made reasonably well, even cheap ones, and last a reasonable time, verses one that says anything goes as long as the finished product is cheap enough and that products should be as crap and unrepairable as manufacturer’s dare to make them – let the buyer beware. However, if that’s what the government believed they wouldn’t create a sale of goods act – there’d be no need, all they’d need to do is repeat the mantra let the buyer beware. 🙂

    in reply to: How should i deal with this? #320503
    andy_art_trigg
    Participant

    Re: How should i deal with this?

    But you’re only placing your values on the premise of what you consider to be “reasonable”. Not that which the facts dictate.

    You are also trying to make the “consumer rights” something which that are not in your argument. For the six year rule to come into effect the goods MUST have been faulty since new, it cannot be a fault or failure that develops through wear and tear. The SoGA nor any other legislation covers that.

    K.

    I’m not imposing my opinion on what is reasonable, it’s the SOGA that says they should last a reasonable time, and as I’ve quoted several times they say that by reasonable they mean what most people would define as reasonable – not the seller or the manufacturer.

    As a retailer/manufacturer you are saying you know some of these machines are crap so it’s reasonable that they should need throwing away after 3 years sometimes, but consumers and small claims court judges think if they’ve bought a brand new washing machine it’s not reasonable that they have to scrap it after 3 years.

    They say if a product fails within 6 months it will be treated as having an inherent fault but after 6 months the seller has a right to see if any misuse or excessive wear like using one in a pub for example has caused the problem.

    If the washing machine is used normally for a normal family who don’t abuse it and it goes BER after 3 years there’s no way that’s fair wear and tear IMO. Your only excuse for this is that you know they are shoddily built and they are relatively cheap so that’s what consumers should expect. My argument is based entirely on BER issues. It’s one thing if drum bearings fail after 4 years heavy use on a cheap machine but it shouldn’t render it scrap.

    We need to oppose this throwaway washing machine culture, which is damaging the environment, putting repair people out of work and costing consumers a fortune as well as a lot of stress and hassle. The only ones profiting from it are retailers manufacturers and insurance companies and arguably even they aren’t profiting that much. You used to oppose it vehemently yourself K.

    in reply to: How should i deal with this? #320500
    andy_art_trigg
    Participant

    Re: How should i deal with this?

    kwatt wrote:
    A mini in the 1960’s cost £400. A Mini today costs over £13,000. A washing machine in the 1960’s cost £3-400. A washing machine today costs £2-1200. The bulk under £500.

    Cars are far more affordable to ordinary people than they ever were in the 60s and the cheapest cars are far more reliable than the cheapest cars were in the past and don’t need scrapping because they rust to bits. If you buy one of the cheapest cars no one says you shouldn’t complain if it is scrap after 18 months or 3 or 4 years.

    £13000 was equivalent to £759.79 in 1960 and the mini in those days was extremely basic. The Mini is a premium niche product these days and overpriced, if they souped it up to current levels in the 60s I reckon it would have cost more like £759 which is roughly what it costs now ( source http://www.thisismoney.co.uk/historic-i … calculator )

    Televisions and consumer electronics are an unfair comparison as…

    All irrelevant K. I was merely trying to show that price reductions don’t automatically mean less reliable to consumers. Brown goods are subject to the same issues with them being unrepairable and BER too soon so the same issues re the sale of goods act also apply.

    So we end up where we are today with appliances. Cost engineering. Built to a price, not a standard. Now you can argue all day long about consumer rights and they “should last this” or “should last that” but it really is irrelevant as most mass market appliances are, well, crap really or very close to it.

    Sale of gods act says they should last a reasonable time. It’s quite simple really. The fact they are deliberately made crap is a lame excuse for denying consumers their rights.

    Until consumers wise up and demand decent quality machines and continue to think that they can get good on the cheap, it’s unlikely to change.

    Until then, they should be able to claim compensation when the product they bought needed scrapping after only 3 years or so. They can be forgiven for naively thinking if a washing machine was so crap it wouldn’t last very long out of it’s 12 month guarantee and couldn’t cope with a large family wash then then they wouldn’t be in the shops in the first place.

Viewing 15 posts - 136 through 150 (of 825 total)