|
| >Well, with Fry's, whenever I've returned something, even unopened, they
open
| >it, check that all the stuff is there and then slap a returned sticker on
it
| >and that generally winds up back on the shelf at a discounted price.
|
| I once bought a rather pricey video card that had been returned.
Well, that's your first mistake isn't it? I never buy returned stuff from
Fry's unless it's all that's available and I'm desperate. The one time I can
recall doing that, I opened it up in the store to make sure the right items
were all there.
I
| had no way to inspect the contents at the store.
Sorry, I'd insist on doing it at the cash register on such an item.
When I arrived home,
| instead of the expensive video card, a cheap junk commodity video card
| had been substituted. The previous buyer of the card had done the
| swap, and the expert Fry's staff could not recognize the difference
| between the pricey card and the cheap junk commodity card when it was
| returned. Caveat Emptor.
|
| I've also bought returns where something important was missing. For
| example, an ATI All-in-Wonder card, that included a fancy cable the
| connector box. The card was present and accounted for, but not the
| cable. The Fry's employee that accepted the return could have looked
| at the contents listed on the outside of the box, but I suspect that
| would have been asking to much.
|
| In both cases, complaining to Fry's produced sympathy, and nothing
| else.
So they claim you made the switch when you returned it?
| I have other Fry's horror stories, both first and 2nd hand, but you
| can find those all over the web. The above are simply two problems
| I've experienced with repackaged merchandise.
That's why you should avoid returned stuff. BTW, I've never had a problem
returning stuff to Fry's and I do it fairly frequently.
|
| >At
| >least you can tell if it's been returned. I recently returned a set of
noise
| >cancelling earphones that were defective - they accepted what I said and
put
| >a return to vendor sticker on the package.
|
| Most large electronics stores and online vendors have enough clout to
| force the manufacturer to accept all returns. Costco and Best Buy
| both do that. When something is returned by the customer, it goes
| back to the manufacturer or distributor. However, this is only
| functional with high priced hardware, where the exercise is
| financially worth the effort. You can usually find the returns marked
| as "remanufactured", "reconditioned", or "refurbished". Dealing with
| and reselling the returns has turned into a rather substantial
| industry. It's a large enough business that most computah
| manufactories have their own online outlet stores:
| <
http://www.delloutlet.com>
| <
www.shopping.hp.com/outlet>
| <
http://www.toshibadirect.com/td/b2c/bstorelist.to?coid=-29405>
|
<
http://www.sonystyle.com/webapp/wcs...N=4294961692&catalogId=10551&categoryId=16160>
| etc.
|
| --
| Jeff Liebermann
[email protected]
| 150 Felker St #D
http://www.LearnByDestroying.com
| Santa Cruz CA 95060
http://802.11junk.com
| Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558