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Don't think the bulb of a DLP is included in these contracts anyhow. When
the bulb goes, it is considered a consumable, and not a manufacturing defect
(just like printer cartridges). Regular wear and tear.
I never take these service contracts anyhow. Just like when just under 3
years ago, the salesman tried to sell me a service contract for a DVD
burner.. Burner back then was something like $120, and the service contract
was $30... And now (3 years later) new burners (4 times faster) can be had
for $50.. Definately not worth it. In my case, I got lucky that the
unit died on me 10 months after I bought it, and the manufacturer actually
arranged to have it picked up by Fedex, and was then sent a replacement free
of charge (not even shipping) and a nice upgrade (went from a 2X burner to
thier latest 16X burner at the time). Hey I definately got my money's
worth., nd the unit has been working like a charm...
Due to competition, they work with very low markups on the hardware, and try
to make up for it, by selling you these contracts, accessories, monster
cables, power conditioners, etc. which have huge markups..
Within the first year, you have the manufacturer's warranty usually anyhow,
and if all is good for first year, usually the odds are it will last at
least 5 years before anything goes wrong, which at that point the contract
is expired. And in most cases, the repir will be less than or around $400
if you are unlucky.

Good Luck.


"Bruce Esquibel" wrote in message
...
Al wrote:
: I'm considering buying a 50" Samsung HDTV (HLR5067W). Should I also
: purchase the service contract they sell with it? (Cost: about $400.)

: The salesmen at the stores that sell large-screen TVs all warn me that
: replacing the main bulb in this machine costs $400 or so just for the
: bulb, and that I'll need to have a service technician do that repair.

: What's your recommendation on service policies on such units?

Generally those service contracts are just money makers for the stores

that
sell them and don't work in your favor for the most part.

If you want to rest easy, stick the $400 into a bank account and use it
towards the repair if the set breaks down.

The set you are looking at (it's a DLP) does use a bulb which will burn

out
at some point, but these days it'll probably croak long after that repair
contract runs out.

So when that happens, you are out the $400 for the contract and will have

to
cough up another $400 to replace it on a set that is a few years old and
cost around $2000.

Doesn't make sense, does it?

-bruce