View Full Version : warranty work
ceb58
05-31-2008, 11:24 PM
Reading another thread and seeing a recall on square d web site on recall of disconnect switches got me wondering. Has any one ran into a situation where something you installed was recalled by the mfg. and did the mfg. pay you for replacing the defective item? When I read about the disconnect recall I said to self " o crap" I had installed about 12 sq.d disconnects for welders in a building about 6 mo. ago, luckily for me mine were not on the recall list.
Buck Parrish
05-31-2008, 11:42 PM
I haven't yet. I can't imagine a distributor paying to have it re-installed though I suppose it is posible.
I didn't know Raeford was big enough to need twelve welders at one time.
ceb58
05-31-2008, 11:57 PM
I didn't know Raeford was big enough to need twelve welders at one time.
Something gotta hold it together
LarryFine
06-01-2008, 01:29 AM
Something gotta hold it together
Termites holding hands?
Pullnwire
06-01-2008, 03:54 AM
I just had Universal lighting technologies pay me 35$ to replace t5ho ballasts that they knew were bad but shipped anyway. the fixtures worked for two months. :mad:
Huevos
06-01-2008, 05:25 AM
I just had Universal lighting technologies pay me 35$ to replace t5ho ballasts that they knew were bad but shipped anyway. the fixtures worked for two months. :mad:
$35 per ballast or total?
Rampage_Rick
06-01-2008, 06:40 AM
I just had Universal lighting technologies pay me 35$ to replace t5ho ballasts that they knew were bad but shipped anyway. the fixtures worked for two months. :mad:At least they didn't stick you with the "30 minutes or 30 feet" warranty.
I use the L.E.F.T.C.T.C warranty. ( long enough for the check to clear ):D
mdshunk
06-01-2008, 11:48 AM
Once the customer owns the item, I really don't see it as my duty to go and check to see if something I installed there might or might not be a recalled item. I did put in two transformers maybe 5 years ago that were in fact recalled. The customer found that out on their own, and Square D contracted another electrician to replace many such transformers in many locations en masse.
Warranty work is a different story. The item just summarily gets replaced, and I'll try to hash it out with the manufacturer or supply house later. That's just what I feel I need to do. I try to make that end of the process totally invisible to the customer; painless for them. This is where having a good supply house on your side pays off. A certain amount of warranty labor is part of the overhead calculation anyhow.
brian john
06-01-2008, 12:03 PM
I had a transformer that was bad from day one, I had to buy a new one return the old one to Eaton, and if my supplier had not stayed on top of them I never would have received credit. I ate the labor.
I stand behind my installations PERIOD, and defects from quality of work is FIXED I do not care how long ago I did the work. defective equipment is manufactures warranty.
Though I have only had a few issues with quality of work by far manufacturer's defects are more common.
bradleyelectric
06-01-2008, 12:06 PM
I just had Universal lighting technologies pay me 35$ to replace t5ho ballasts that they knew were bad but shipped anyway. the fixtures worked for two months. :mad:
Did they give you new ballasts and an additional $35./ ballast for labor? I had a string of fixtures with universal T5 ballasts that a lot were bad and I needed to fix quick so I found a local distributor and bought them. I still have the old ballasts and haven't gone through the warrenty bs they want me to jump through yet.
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