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#1
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My 10 month old 7x16 ft segmented garage door has developed a series
of small buckled areas up the center of the outside skin of the door, and it sags down slightly when open. When closed the bow is still visible. I called the local dealer and the service guy checked it out and the first thing he said was, "What did you do to that door!?" He told me that the door is very stout and he has "never seen one bend that wasn't hit by a car." He seems to think I bumped it and am not willing to admit it. To the best of my knowledge there has never been an incident like this and there are no marks on the outsdie of the door. I supose someone could have bumped it when I wasn't home, but visitors always park at the curb. I was _really_ ticked by his attitude, but I don't know what to do as a next step, other than to call my insurance company and pay the deductible to get it fixed and repainted. I think the door guy's attitude sucked. Maybe I should write to the door company's president? I have always thought that the customer should be given the benefit of a doubt in cases where the cause of a prodsuct failure can't be determined.... The cost to repair it would be about $800 not including the paintwork. New it is about $1200. Comments? John John Davies TLCA 14732 http://home.comcast.net/~johnedavies/ '96 Lexus LX450 '00 Audi A4 1.8T quattro Spokane WA USA |
#2
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On Sun, 26 Sep 2004 07:46:21 -0700, someone wrote:
I have always thought that the customer should be given the benefit of a doubt in cases where the cause of a prodsuct failure can't be determined.... The cost to repair it would be about $800 not including the paintwork. New it is about $1200. Comments? My comment is, that it is just soooo easy for YOU to say that, when its THEIR $800 to $1200 of money that you are spending. Businesses get ripped off all the time by 'customers' who scam them. People who buy a generator from Sears, use it for their project, and then bring it back a week later for a refund saying they are not satisfied, wear an expensive dress to a party and then bring it back, etc. etc. Where someone draws the line between all out customer satisfaction, and being an easy mark for ripoffs, is a judgement call. I wasn't there when this exchange took place, maybe the door guy was telling the truth from his experience, and you just didn't like not getting a free door. BTW, if its 10 mos. old, it isn't "new" either. "New" to me would be the first few days or maybe a week for something like this. Doors take a beating in service. If you really think its defective, I suppose you could try to convince a judge. -v. |
#3
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John Davies wrote in message . ..
My 10 month old 7x16 ft segmented garage door has developed a series of small buckled areas up the center of the outside skin of the door, and it sags down slightly when open. When closed the bow is still visible. I called the local dealer and the service guy checked it out and the first thing he said was, "What did you do to that door!?" He told me that the door is very stout and he has "never seen one bend that wasn't hit by a car." He seems to think I bumped it and am not willing to admit it. To the best of my knowledge there has never been an incident like this and there are no marks on the outsdie of the door. I supose someone could have bumped it when I wasn't home, but visitors always park at the curb. I was _really_ ticked by his attitude, but I don't know what to do as a next step, other than to call my insurance company and pay the deductible to get it fixed and repainted. I think the door guy's attitude sucked. Maybe I should write to the door company's president? Maybe your kids ran into it playing football or basketball. That would not leave car type marks and they might not have even noticed it when it happened. I have always thought that the customer should be given the benefit of a doubt in cases where the cause of a prodsuct failure can't be determined.... The cost to repair it would be about $800 not including the paintwork. New it is about $1200. Comments? John John Davies TLCA 14732 http://home.comcast.net/~johnedavies/ '96 Lexus LX450 '00 Audi A4 1.8T quattro Spokane WA USA |
#4
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John Davies wrote:
My 10 month old 7x16 ft segmented garage door has developed a series of small buckled areas up the center of the outside skin of the door, and it sags down slightly when open. When closed the bow is still visible. I called the local dealer and the service guy checked it out and the first thing he said was, "What did you do to that door!?" He told me that the door is very stout and he has "never seen one bend that wasn't hit by a car." He seems to think I bumped it and am not willing to admit it. To the best of my knowledge there has never been an incident like this and there are no marks on the outsdie of the door. I supose someone could have bumped it when I wasn't home, but visitors always park at the curb. I was _really_ ticked by his attitude, but I don't know what to do as a next step, other than to call my insurance company and pay the deductible to get it fixed and repainted. I think the door guy's attitude sucked. Maybe I should write to the door company's president? I have always thought that the customer should be given the benefit of a doubt in cases where the cause of a prodsuct failure can't be determined.... The cost to repair it would be about $800 not including the paintwork. New it is about $1200. Comments? So, did he refuse warranty service on the door or not? Absent proof that the door was abused, the door section should be replaced under warranty (that's assuming it *is* under warranty, although I've yet to see a decent door with 10yr warranty). Without seeing pictures, it's hard for any of us to guess at the possible failure mode. |
#5
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On Tue, 28 Sep 2004 09:06:51 -0600, Andy Hill
wrote: So, did he refuse warranty service on the door or not? Absent proof that the door was abused, the door section should be replaced under warranty (that's assuming it *is* under warranty, although I've yet to see a decent door with 10yr warranty). Without seeing pictures, it's hard for any of us to guess at the possible failure mode. The door has a 1 year warranty - it has been 10 months since we moved into the new house. The contractor was willing to "work with us" on the insurance deductible, but he was not going to repair it under warranty. The door is 5 sections, and the lowest 4 (which have no lateral bracing like the top section) have small double creases in the outside center. It looks as itf the door has bowed, stretching the inner metal skin and creasing the outer skin. The bow is small - maybe a couple of inches - but it's detectible when the door is closed. When it is hanging open the bow is larger and quite obvious. My main complaints a His attitude that I was trying to rip him off. His first statement was "What did you do to it?" That is _really_ bad PR, and it immediately put me on the defensive. I am 99.9% sure that the door has never been hit hard enough to tweak the metal skin. Of course there is no way anyone can be completely certain. My kids are young and don't play in the driveway, and visitors and delivery people always park in the street. His statement that "we have never replaced a door like that that wasn't hit". How many other owners has he used that excuse on? I think the door is faulty and it has bowed under its own weight while open. Regardless, what is the point of a warranty if the dealer blows the customer off? I totally agree with your statement that in the absence of any sign of abuse, the door should be repaired under warranty. John, still steamed by this John Davies TLCA 14732 http://home.comcast.net/~johnedavies/ '96 Lexus LX450 '00 Audi A4 1.8T quattro Spokane WA USA |
#6
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John Davies wrote:
On Tue, 28 Sep 2004 09:06:51 -0600, Andy Hill wrote: So, did he refuse warranty service on the door or not? Absent proof that the door was abused, the door section should be replaced under warranty (that's assuming it *is* under warranty, although I've yet to see a decent door with 10yr warranty). Without seeing pictures, it's hard for any of us to guess at the possible failure mode. The door has a 1 year warranty - it has been 10 months since we moved into the new house. The contractor was willing to "work with us" on the insurance deductible, but he was not going to repair it under warranty. The door is 5 sections, and the lowest 4 (which have no lateral bracing like the top section) have small double creases in the outside center. It looks as itf the door has bowed, stretching the inner metal skin and creasing the outer skin. The bow is small - maybe a couple of inches - but it's detectible when the door is closed. When it is hanging open the bow is larger and quite obvious. My main complaints a His attitude that I was trying to rip him off. His first statement was "What did you do to it?" That is _really_ bad PR, and it immediately put me on the defensive. I am 99.9% sure that the door has never been hit hard enough to tweak the metal skin. Of course there is no way anyone can be completely certain. My kids are young and don't play in the driveway, and visitors and delivery people always park in the street. His statement that "we have never replaced a door like that that wasn't hit". How many other owners has he used that excuse on? I think the door is faulty and it has bowed under its own weight while open. Regardless, what is the point of a warranty if the dealer blows the customer off? I totally agree with your statement that in the absence of any sign of abuse, the door should be repaired under warranty. John, still steamed by this Four of the five sections bow when trying to support their own weight? Whoa, that's crap. Yeah, I'd be plenty ****ed too...to the tune of taking it to small claims court if the dealer didn't back his product. No way no how are kids going cause enough damage to cause a door to bow (dents and dings, yeah, but a hanging bow? Ha!) I'd also expect car damage to leave a lot more than crinkle down the middle. Have you tried contacting the head office of the door brand? If it's a reputable brand, I'd hope they'd put a bit of pressure on the dealer to back his door. OTOH, what brand of door is it? Like I said, most doors I've run across have warranties of 10yrs for the cheapies, and Lifetime for the higher-end stuff. A one year warranty on the door makes me imagine something made out of styrofoam wrapped in aluminum foil. |
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