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#1
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"gfulton" wrote in message ...
this is the type of thing I constantly hear about Home Depot. If you've got a Lowe's hardware around you, give them a try. And, no, I don't work for them or own their stock. Without a doubt the best company I've seen about returns, but I don't try to abuse their policy. Which you also didn't do at HD. I've had nothing but good experiences with them. Good folks in my opinion. I live near a Lowe's and a Home Depot in NW Phoenix, and the Home Depot has been a lot better than the Lowe's. This Lowe's made pricing mistakes the first four times I shopped there, but I thought it was because of grand opening confusion, but since then they've made a pricing mistake about every 5-6 visits, and their employees still don't seem to be knowledgeable at all. As for returns, I've made only two. One was for a pack of Dremel cutoff wheels that I didn't even open (they were the thick ones, which don't last any longer than the thin ones), but when they opened them to count them they dropped a few and broke or lost some and tried to charge me for them. I asked for a supervisor, but the first employee lied to him and said I had used some of the product. I told him to take a look at the security tape to see that their employee had opened the hermetically sealed package. Another time, I returned some paint that had probably been mixed for someone else because it was yellow instead of the brown I specified (the dab of paint on the lid was brown), but they told me that I couldn't return a custom-mixed color. (???) In each case I finally did get a full refund, but I've never had such bad service, except at Best Buy and CompUSA. |
#2
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![]() "larrymoencurly" wrote in message "gfulton" wrote in message ... this is the type of thing I constantly hear about Home Depot. If you've got a Lowe's hardware around you, give them a try. I live near a Lowe's and a Home Depot in NW Phoenix, and the Home Depot has been a lot better than the Lowe's. I've never had such bad service, except at Best Buy and CompUSA. And the list goes on. It varies from store to store in each chain. Some get a handful of good employees that keep you coming back. Others in the same neighborhood get the morons. In town A, Lowes good, HD, bad. In town B, Lowes bad, HD good. In most any town, local store better than any chain. Ed |
#3
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Similar experinces for me at Lowes in the Atlant metro area . Home
Depot is not great all the time but generally has much better Customer Service . |
#4
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Edwin Pawlowski wrote:
"larrymoencurly" wrote in message "gfulton" wrote in message ... this is the type of thing I constantly hear about Home Depot. If you've got a Lowe's hardware around you, give them a try. I live near a Lowe's and a Home Depot in NW Phoenix, and the Home Depot has been a lot better than the Lowe's. I've never had such bad service, except at Best Buy and CompUSA. And the list goes on. It varies from store to store in each chain. Some get a handful of good employees that keep you coming back. Others in the same neighborhood get the morons. In town A, Lowes good, HD, bad. In town B, Lowes bad, HD good. In most any town, local store better than any chain. I wish that were true, buy I find that many of the local stores are even more incompetent than the megalo marts. |
#5
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I have a friend who supplies vendor support to both chains over an entire
region. His take? If you know exactly what you want and need little or no help/advice, go to Lowes. Great stores, clean and well laid-out, but mediocre to poor customer service and inexperienced (read low paid) help. If you want good advice and excellent customer service, go to HD. Their stores aren't as pretty or as well organized, but they pay better than Lowes and attract older associates who have a lot of experience. BTW , if you've ever wondered by HD aisles aren't numbered....it's so their employees CANNOT refer you to an aisle number, but must take you there instead. I know it doesn't happen 100% of the time, but it's a good indication of where their head is. "Edwin Pawlowski" wrote in message m... "larrymoencurly" wrote in message "gfulton" wrote in message ... this is the type of thing I constantly hear about Home Depot. If you've got a Lowe's hardware around you, give them a try. I live near a Lowe's and a Home Depot in NW Phoenix, and the Home Depot has been a lot better than the Lowe's. I've never had such bad service, except at Best Buy and CompUSA. And the list goes on. It varies from store to store in each chain. Some get a handful of good employees that keep you coming back. Others in the same neighborhood get the morons. In town A, Lowes good, HD, bad. In town B, Lowes bad, HD good. In most any town, local store better than any chain. Ed |
#6
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I've had good experiences with Lowe's and HD. We must have some good
employees in my area of Texas. Never a problem returning anything, opened, used, or even without a receipt. "larrymoencurly" wrote in message om... "gfulton" wrote in message ... this is the type of thing I constantly hear about Home Depot. If you've got a Lowe's hardware around you, give them a try. And, no, I don't work for them or own their stock. Without a doubt the best company I've seen about returns, but I don't try to abuse their policy. Which you also didn't do at HD. I've had nothing but good experiences with them. Good folks in my opinion. I live near a Lowe's and a Home Depot in NW Phoenix, and the Home Depot has been a lot better than the Lowe's. This Lowe's made pricing mistakes the first four times I shopped there, but I thought it was because of grand opening confusion, but since then they've made a pricing mistake about every 5-6 visits, and their employees still don't seem to be knowledgeable at all. As for returns, I've made only two. One was for a pack of Dremel cutoff wheels that I didn't even open (they were the thick ones, which don't last any longer than the thin ones), but when they opened them to count them they dropped a few and broke or lost some and tried to charge me for them. I asked for a supervisor, but the first employee lied to him and said I had used some of the product. I told him to take a look at the security tape to see that their employee had opened the hermetically sealed package. Another time, I returned some paint that had probably been mixed for someone else because it was yellow instead of the brown I specified (the dab of paint on the lid was brown), but they told me that I couldn't return a custom-mixed color. (???) In each case I finally did get a full refund, but I've never had such bad service, except at Best Buy and CompUSA. |
#7
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And chances are it'll go directly to the shelf without passing GO or
collecting the $200.00! I've learned to check rims of cans prior to purchase to avoid "returns" but of course I'm related to Pavlov. Oh where did ethics go? NOT to the box CEOs! On Sun, 15 Aug 2004 11:11:10 -0500, "ADC" wrote: I've had good experiences with Lowe's and HD. We must have some good employees in my area of Texas. Never a problem returning anything, opened, used, or even without a receipt. |
#8
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larrymoencurly wrote:
"gfulton" wrote in message ... .... I live near a Lowe's and a Home Depot in NW Phoenix, and the Home Depot has been a lot better than the Lowe's. This Lowe's made pricing mistakes the first four times I shopped there, but I thought it was because of grand opening confusion, but since then they've made a pricing mistake about every 5-6 visits, and their employees still don't seem to be knowledgeable at all. As for returns, I've made only two. One was for a pack of Dremel cutoff wheels that I didn't even open (they were the thick ones, which don't last any longer than the thin ones), but when they opened them to count them they dropped a few and broke or lost some and tried to charge me for them. I asked for a supervisor, but the first employee lied to him and said I had used some of the product. I told him to take a look at the security tape to see that their employee had opened the hermetically sealed package. Another time, I returned some paint that had probably been mixed for someone else because it was yellow instead of the brown I specified (the dab of paint on the lid was brown), but they told me that I couldn't return a custom-mixed color. (???) In each case I finally did get a full refund, but I've never had such bad service, except at Best Buy and CompUSA. So you continue to shop at large stores who are so driven to keep prices low that they hire people at the lowest cost possible leaving them with those that can't get a job ANYWHERE ELSE that gives them a bit more say in their schedule, pays more than minimum wage* with poor benefits. And then you complain that it's not a good store. Well no ****. I've tried several of the locally owned hardware stores (often franchises, but locally owned which profits mainly staying in my community) until I've found the folks who are knowledgable and helpful. Those invisible tips that make up for paying 10% more include things like: "Oh, well if you're doing THAT, then you don't want galvanized - it won't look good in a couple years. Use these instead and blow the extra $0.30 for brass." Or "try this is the brush and it works a little better. I been painting for 30 years until I retired into workin' here." And recommendations on a carpenter and a plumber. Shall we discuss the lists of nightmare installs done by HD and Lowe's "Contractors" (those willing to low bid and still give HD their vig). *minimum wage: "We'd pay you less, but they'd arrest us." (and yeah, sometimes the job market dictates that they have to pay a little more, but by and large it's the bottom dollar possible." I like that Walmart has passed out handouts for employees teaching them how to apply for food stamps and other state federal services. A House of Representatives report showed that each Walmart job cost the community $2000 in tax paid services. But that lawn chair is only $2.49! |
#9
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chuck yerkes wrote:
larrymoencurly wrote: "gfulton" wrote in message ... ... I live near a Lowe's and a Home Depot in NW Phoenix, and the Home Depot has been a lot better than the Lowe's. This Lowe's made pricing mistakes the first four times I shopped there, but I thought it was because of grand opening confusion, but since then they've made a pricing mistake about every 5-6 visits, and their employees still don't seem to be knowledgeable at all. As for returns, I've made only two. One was for a pack of Dremel cutoff wheels that I didn't even open (they were the thick ones, which don't last any longer than the thin ones), but when they opened them to count them they dropped a few and broke or lost some and tried to charge me for them. I asked for a supervisor, but the first employee lied to him and said I had used some of the product. I told him to take a look at the security tape to see that their employee had opened the hermetically sealed package. Another time, I returned some paint that had probably been mixed for someone else because it was yellow instead of the brown I specified (the dab of paint on the lid was brown), but they told me that I couldn't return a custom-mixed color. (???) In each case I finally did get a full refund, but I've never had such bad service, except at Best Buy and CompUSA. So you continue to shop at large stores who are so driven to keep prices low that they hire people at the lowest cost possible leaving them with those that can't get a job ANYWHERE ELSE that gives them a bit more say in their schedule, pays more than minimum wage* with poor benefits. And then you complain that it's not a good store. Well no ****. I've tried several of the locally owned hardware stores (often franchises, but locally owned which profits mainly staying in my community) until I've found the folks who are knowledgable and helpful. Those invisible tips that make up for paying 10% more include things like: "Oh, well if you're doing THAT, then you don't want galvanized - it won't look good in a couple years. Use these instead and blow the extra $0.30 for brass." Or "try this is the brush and it works a little better. I been painting for 30 years until I retired into workin' here." I've yet to get any better "service" at a mom and pop store. Instead you get less selection, same or less knowledge and crummy returns policy. There is a Home Depot two blocks from my house. I have returned tons of stuff. Once I was there and the guy in front of me returned half a deck worth of lumber, no questions asked. I have used tools and have been able to return them simply because I didn't like how they worked. At "mom and pop" hardware store returning a $2.00 unopened bag of screws is a major ordeal. If you're working on a big project, it's nice to be able to buy and extra couple boxes of screws, nails, I've been able to return paint without any issues, whatever knowing you can return it if you don't use it. The only thing I will not usually do is buy paint at these places. I had a very bad experience with a bad batch of paint. Although they did send me a check for $700, I'm not eager to go through that again. As for the other guy, I don't see what the problem is. Normally they mix the paint right in front of you, open the can and paint a test strip so you can see exactly what the color is before you leave the store (and pay for the paint). The HD near my house was built on a lot full of garbage. As part of the deal, they cleaned up all the gabage, capped the dump and built a park on half the land (to the tune of a couple million dollars) with the store on the other half. |
#10
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Our Lowes had very poor service. Then Home Depot put up a building
across the street and that changed everything. They are now constantly trying to out-do each other. Competition is absolutely wonderful for the customer ! |
#11
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"ADC" wrote in message ...
I've had good experiences with Lowe's and HD. We must have some good employees in my area of Texas. Never a problem returning anything, opened, used, or even without a receipt. "larrymoencurly" wrote in message om... "gfulton" wrote in message ... this is the type of thing I constantly hear about Home Depot. If you've got a Lowe's hardware around you, give them a try. And, no, I don't work for them or own their stock. Without a doubt the best company I've seen about returns, but I don't try to abuse their policy. Which you also didn't do at HD. I've had nothing but good experiences with them. Good folks in my opinion. I live near a Lowe's and a Home Depot in NW Phoenix, and the Home Depot has been a lot better than the Lowe's. This Lowe's made pricing mistakes the first four times I shopped there, but I thought it was because of grand opening confusion, but since then they've made a pricing mistake about every 5-6 visits, and their employees still don't seem to be knowledgeable at all. As for returns, I've made only two. One was for a pack of Dremel cutoff wheels that I didn't even open (they were the thick ones, which don't last any longer than the thin ones), but when they opened them to count them they dropped a few and broke or lost some and tried to charge me for them. I asked for a supervisor, but the first employee lied to him and said I had used some of the product. I told him to take a look at the security tape to see that their employee had opened the hermetically sealed package. Another time, I returned some paint that had probably been mixed for someone else because it was yellow instead of the brown I specified (the dab of paint on the lid was brown), but they told me that I couldn't return a custom-mixed color. (???) In each case I finally did get a full refund, but I've never had such bad service, except at Best Buy and CompUSA. At Lowes here in NJ, when you return something, they just take it back with no questions asked, which is pretty stupid. Home Depot always asks if there is anything wrong with it. I bought a couple of QuikSet locks at Loews. One, the finish was clearly left off part of it at the factory. The other was dented. If they asked what was wrong and put a tag on it, they would return it to the manufacturer. Instead, later someone will do a quick look, miss the defects and put it back on the shelf. Net result, a big waste of everyone's time. And if you follow that procedure long enough, you wind up with mostly bad ones on the shelves. This reminds me of years ago when I was doing a project in college and needed a couple of IC's. So, I go to Ely's Electronics, which sells surplus, used, etc. Old Ely sells me the chips, which I later determine are defective. So, I go back and he rants and raves about how all his chips are high quality, that it's impossible they could be bad. Finally, he gives me two new ones and I watch him through the two I brought back right into the bin with the new ones! |
#12
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![]() "Curmudgeon" wrote in message ... I have a friend who supplies vendor support to both chains over an entire region. His take? If you know exactly what you want and need little or no help/advice, go to Lowes. Great stores, clean and well laid-out, but mediocre to poor customer service and inexperienced (read low paid) help. If you want good advice and excellent customer service, go to HD. Their stores aren't as pretty or as well organized, but they pay better than Lowes and attract older associates who have a lot of experience. BTW , if you've ever wondered by HD aisles aren't numbered....it's so their employees CANNOT refer you to an aisle number, but must take you there instead. I know it doesn't happen 100% of the time, but it's a good indication of where their head is. Every HD I have been in has numbered aisles. |
#13
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On Sun, 15 Aug 2004 19:29:35 GMT, chuck yerkes
wrote: larrymoencurly wrote: "gfulton" wrote in message ... ... I live near a Lowe's and a Home Depot in NW Phoenix, and the Home Depot has been a lot better than the Lowe's. This Lowe's made pricing mistakes the first four times I shopped there, but I thought it was because of grand opening confusion, but since then they've made a pricing mistake about every 5-6 visits, and their employees still don't seem to be knowledgeable at all. As for returns, I've made only two. One was for a pack of Dremel cutoff wheels that I didn't even open (they were the thick ones, which don't last any longer than the thin ones), but when they opened them to count them they dropped a few and broke or lost some and tried to charge me for them. I asked for a supervisor, but the first employee lied to him and said I had used some of the product. I told him to take a look at the security tape to see that their employee had opened the hermetically sealed package. Another time, I returned some paint that had probably been mixed for someone else because it was yellow instead of the brown I specified (the dab of paint on the lid was brown), but they told me that I couldn't return a custom-mixed color. (???) In each case I finally did get a full refund, but I've never had such bad service, except at Best Buy and CompUSA. So you continue to shop at large stores who are so driven to keep prices low that they hire people at the lowest cost possible leaving them with those that can't get a job ANYWHERE ELSE that gives them a bit more say in their schedule, pays more than minimum wage* with poor benefits. And then you complain that it's not a good store. Well no ****. I've tried several of the locally owned hardware stores (often franchises, but locally owned which profits mainly staying in my community) until I've found the folks who are knowledgable and helpful. Those invisible tips that make up for paying 10% more include things like: "Oh, well if you're doing THAT, then you don't want galvanized - it won't look good in a couple years. Use these instead and blow the extra $0.30 for brass." Or "try this is the brush and it works a little better. I been painting for 30 years until I retired into workin' here." And recommendations on a carpenter and a plumber. Shall we discuss the lists of nightmare installs done by HD and Lowe's "Contractors" (those willing to low bid and still give HD their vig). *minimum wage: "We'd pay you less, but they'd arrest us." (and yeah, sometimes the job market dictates that they have to pay a little more, but by and large it's the bottom dollar possible." I like that Walmart has passed out handouts for employees teaching them how to apply for food stamps and other state federal services. A House of Representatives report showed that each Walmart job cost the community $2000 in tax paid services. But that lawn chair is only $2.49! This is American twenty first century retailing! The only people who don't like it are the people working in the Mom and Pop stores they are shutting down! Mom and Pop need to get with the program and use their vast experience working at The Home Depot! If lots of people weren't shopping in Home Depot and Lowes and Wal-mart...they wouldn't stay in business...it's Capitalism man...Capitalism at it's best! Bill |
#14
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![]() "Threeducks" wrote in message I've yet to get any better "service" at a mom and pop store. Instead you get less selection, same or less knowledge and crummy returns policy. There is a Home Depot two blocks from my house. Sorry to h ear that. Not every mom & pop can be forst class, but many are. I have returned tons of stuff. Once I was there and the guy in front of me returned half a deck worth of lumber, no questions asked. And we all pay for that. Many people buy and return tools because they are too cheap to rent them. I have used tools and have been able to return them simply because I didn't like how they worked. A common experience. If you find a good independant store you won't be returning tools. They will carry the better brands that will get the job done the right way. HD and Lowes carry mid line and lower brands. If you lived near Coastal Tool www.coastaltool.com or a similar store you'd get the brands professionals use, good advice, and the supplies that go with them. Most big cities have a similar store. The HD near my house was built on a lot full of garbage. As part of the deal, they cleaned up all the gabage, capped the dump and built a park on half the land (to the tune of a couple million dollars) with the store on the other half. The publicity is good for them. It may be the only way to get into some areas because others don't have the capital to do something like that. The town thinks they got a good deal when what they really got is another giant retailer. We all pay for it too. |
#15
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![]() "George" wrote in message ... "Curmudgeon" wrote in message ... I have a friend who supplies vendor support to both chains over an entire region. His take? If you know exactly what you want and need little or no help/advice, go to Lowes. Great stores, clean and well laid-out, but mediocre to poor customer service and inexperienced (read low paid) help. If you want good advice and excellent customer service, go to HD. Their stores aren't as pretty or as well organized, but they pay better than Lowes and attract older associates who have a lot of experience. BTW , if you've ever wondered by HD aisles aren't numbered....it's so their employees CANNOT refer you to an aisle number, but must take you there instead. I know it doesn't happen 100% of the time, but it's a good indication of where their head is. Every HD I have been in has numbered aisles. I guess this thing has turned into something similar to a Catholic/Protestant, Ford/Chevy type argument. I'm definitely on the side of Lowe's. Never had a bad experience with them whatsoever. I simply prefer them to HD, but I guess it's mainly a subjective thing. In contrast to what others have posted, I've found their employees very knowledgeable, and I ain't no novice in home repair, etc. Garrett Fulton -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =----- |
#16
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chuck yerkes wrote in message news:zQOTc.316083$XM6.44475@attbi_s53...
larrymoencurly wrote: I live near a Lowe's and a Home Depot in NW Phoenix, and the Home Depot has been a lot better than the Lowe's. So you continue to shop at large stores who are so driven to keep prices low that they hire people at the lowest cost possible leaving them with those that can't get a job ANYWHERE ELSE that gives them a bit more say in their schedule, pays more than minimum wage* with poor benefits. And then you complain that it's not a good store. Well no ****. I've tried several of the locally owned hardware stores (often franchises, but locally owned which profits mainly staying in my community) until I've found the folks who are knowledgable and helpful. Those invisible tips that make up for paying 10% more include things like: "Oh, well if you're doing THAT, then you don't want galvanized - it won't look good in a couple years. Use these instead and blow the extra $0.30 for brass." Or "try this is the brush and it works a little better. I been painting for 30 years until I retired into workin' here." The main reasons I went to Lowe's so many times was because they're almost right across the street from me (next to Fry's, which is near Fry's), and Consumer Reports said that their paint was the best. But now CR says that Behr is better, so there's no reason to ever visit Lowe's again. There's a really good Ace Hardware two miles from me, and I use them for about everything but lumber and regular paint, because the service is great (they always greet me within 15 seconds and know everything), they carry about everything (they even had something that the plumbing store in the same shopping center didn't carry), the product quality is better, and the prices are usually about the same or less. I've found that I can get good advice at Home Depot by asking the employees who never smile because they're the ones from the construction trades. |
#17
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Edwin Pawlowski wrote:
"Threeducks" wrote in message I've yet to get any better "service" at a mom and pop store. Instead you get less selection, same or less knowledge and crummy returns policy. There is a Home Depot two blocks from my house. Sorry to h ear that. Not every mom & pop can be forst class, but many are. And many aren't. Just because it's small doesn't mean it's good. I have returned tons of stuff. Once I was there and the guy in front of me returned half a deck worth of lumber, no questions asked. And we all pay for that. Many people buy and return tools because they are too cheap to rent them. I have used tools and have been able to return them simply because I didn't like how they worked. A common experience. If you find a good independant store you won't be returning tools. You mean the one that took my $1,000 and then fed me a line about a saw being "out of stock", but we'll have one on Friday, which turned into "next Friday" and "next Friday", which turned into I had to call the owner of the store to get the issue resolved (total time wasted without a saw was one month). They will carry the better brands that will get the job done the right way. Closed on Sunday. Open until 2pm on Saturday. Close at 5pm during the week. Yeah, that's convenient to someone who actually works for a living. HD and Lowes carry mid line and lower brands. If you lived near Coastal Tool www.coastaltool.com or a similar store you'd get the brands professionals use, good advice, and the supplies that go with them. Most big cities have a similar store. I'm in Detroit, we have plenty of tool stores here. In many cases you're further ahead just to order from amazon.com. The HD near my house was built on a lot full of garbage. As part of the deal, they cleaned up all the gabage, capped the dump and built a park on half the land (to the tune of a couple million dollars) with the store on the other half. The publicity is good for them. It may be the only way to get into some areas because others don't have the capital to do something like that. The town thinks they got a good deal when what they really got is another giant retailer. We all pay for it too. Yeah, we're all paying for the extra tax revenue and jobs created by Home Depot. |
#18
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On Mon, 16 Aug 2004, larrymoencurly wrote:
I've found that I can get good advice at Home Depot by asking the employees who never smile because they're the ones from the construction trades. ....that's *if* you can find such an employee. Or any employee at all, for that matter. Overall employee-to-floorspace ratio sucks at all these big-box chain stores, and that's *including* the useless employees who don't know or care a thing about anything the store sells. I shop at Home Depot and Rona regularly, but most of the time I have to shift for myself and find what I need. |
#19
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![]() Oh, I know. Lowe's and Home Depot are terrible. You have to go and find things by yourself. I would MUCH rather go to Ace or True Value and spend two to three times as much for items like 60w. bulbs, PVC fittings, and paint brushes. It is worth it to have that helpful hardware man or woman lead me to those items, and I have two cuties at the local Ace store that I like to go and take as long as I can and stand close to them and smell their perfume............ but I digress................ I know where the items I need are, having been there before many times, but still love to be pounced upon by them when entering the store and have a personal guide to the VAST areas at ACE. I think the prices at ACE may have something to do with the salaries of the six or eight people who work in that small hardware store. Just a thought. EVIL Lowe's and HD! Steve |
#20
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Threeducks wrote:
Edwin Pawlowski wrote: "Threeducks" wrote in message I've yet to get any better "service" at a mom and pop store. Instead you get less selection, same or less knowledge and crummy returns policy. There is a Home Depot two blocks from my house. Sorry to h ear that. Not every mom & pop can be forst class, but many are. And many aren't. Just because it's small doesn't mean it's good. No, but small and bad often leads to "out of business" Large and bad doesn't. I have returned tons of stuff. Once I was there and the guy in front of me returned half a deck worth of lumber, no questions asked. And we all pay for that. Many people buy and return tools because they are too cheap to rent them. Guy I know did that. Got a bunch of plywood for a project. Couple boards in, realized that... no... it makes no sense , but... the plywood wasn't QUITE 8' tall. 7' 10.5". Perhaps that's why it was cheap. I've also seen 2x4's that were stock size, but still green. Not just wet, still oozing sap. 2x4 is 2" x 4" before it cures. And it shrinks as it cures. We understand. Selling the post-cure size pre-cure is just wrong. But it's how they get cheap lumber (perhaps without know it - they just buy a deal from a mill). They will carry the better brands that will get the job done the right way. Closed on Sunday. Open until 2pm on Saturday. Close at 5pm during the week. Yeah, that's convenient to someone who actually works for a living. Yeah, we have one of those here. Mainly sells to pros (who's living is to build things). Kind of a PITA. So I tend not to get stuff there when it's not a huge project (eg. it can fit in the back of my friend's truck). I go to a different local store. HD and Lowes carry mid line and lower brands. If you lived near Coastal Tool www.coastaltool.com or a similar store you'd get the brands professionals use, good advice, and the supplies that go with them. Most big cities have a similar store. I'm in Detroit, we have plenty of tool stores here. In many cases you're further ahead just to order from amazon.com. They sell top brands too. Just bad versions demanded by their lower cost points. Plastic gearing, thinner fences. Same brand, just an "-HD" model. The HD near my house was built on a lot full of garbage. As part of the deal, they cleaned up all the garbage, capped the dump and built a park on half the land (to the tune of a couple million dollars) with the store on the other half. The publicity is good for them. It may be the only way to get into some areas because others don't have the capital to do something like that. The town thinks they got a good deal when what they really got is another giant retailer. We all pay for it too. Yeah, we're all paying for the extra tax revenue and jobs created by Home Depot. Tax revenue? Quite common (esp with walmart) is tax breaks. And the $16,000/year jobs that then put the employees on medicare and food stamps? Yeah, that's sweet. We can move to well documented Walmart cases, bill: | This is American twenty first century retailing! The only people who | don't like it are the people working in the Mom and Pop stores they | are shutting down! Mom and Pop need to get with the program and use | their vast experience working at The Home Depot! If lots of people | weren't shopping in Home Depot and Lowes and Wal-mart...they wouldn't | stay in business...it's Capitalism man...Capitalism at it's best! Right, if it's based on fair playing fields and competition. Walmart, who refused to pass a resolution that it "not buy products made with slave labor"... admirable. Who pass out tactics to deal with recognizing and stopping any union activity (workers rights, man, it's All American. or do you want to go back to 6 day weeks of 12hrs/day?) Pure capitalism would embrace paying their people just enough to live, put them in Walmart Villages and pay them in WalScrip. As it is, the VAST AMOUNT of money spent at large box stores LEAVES. They don't buy locally, by and large. Displays are shipped preassembled from CheapLabor Central to your community. Lights and supplies are trucked in. Guy who owns the Ace Franchise in town gets his display signs made down the street at the (local) printing shop. The cash he "rakes in" is spent locally. There's a balance of economies. As walmart is repeatedly sited, yet keeps going, it's clean that they need a big ass "wake up" fine. Perhaps they next time they fire a group of employees as a result of meeting at one of the employee's houses (on their own time), fining them 2% of their net worth might pause that practice. No, these "jobs created" often cost your town/county and state MORE tax money. The kids with no insurance get taken to an ER at 2AM when they are sick, rather than to a doctor 3 days before. Guess what an ER visit costs. Guess WHO it costs when the family makes $18k/year? We are not a capitalist gov't. We are a representative democracy whose businesses run on capitalism. Corporations are not people, through the last 2 years has given them more rights that people. Ever seen a board of a corporation go to jail because of their illegal actions? hell, how often do rights of incorporation get revoked? Not uncommon as the robber barons of the 1880s led to the Sherman Anti Trust act. So don't use poor stores. If you have a complaint, talk to the owner. I've gotten my market to carry items that they didn't carry before by chatting with a manager or the owner (and sometimes not). Or stand around and watch your town become a community of service workers working at the strip malls. Sorry, the local plumber had to lower his rates because none of his customers could afford to pay him. He'll put off buying that new truck from another local merchant for a couple years. That washer can be fixed. Cut back a little on food luxuries and building that deck, skip some movies. Fortunately, TV is cheap and we can watch GE and Viacom and Disney tell us how wonderful out lives are and how great things are. Ignorance really IS strength. The race towards mediocrity. |
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![]() || At "mom and pop" hardware store returning a $2.00 unopened ||bag of screws is a major ordeal. That's ture in many small businesses. Trouble is, each transaction is a much larger part of their livelihood. For HD that $2 is literally a throwaway. They can return it to the vendor, or more likely, they got a deeper discount with the condition that they not return anything. They know they will get back 1.4% of the stuff that vendor supplies, so they squeeze him for 2% or more. That is not available to the small businessman, unless he is part of a strong trade alliance. But most good business people will cheerfully handle a return if a) It's in as-sold condition, unopened, ready to go on the shelf b) you are a regular customer c) You ask nicely d) you don't abuse the return privelege Pick any 3 Texas Parts Guy |
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![]() "chuck yerkes" wrote in message .. The race towards mediocrity. Yep, that says it all. |
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I needed a 32-foot extension ladder and Lowes was the only place that
had them. So, I rented a truck and bout the ladder along with several sheets of ply to stock up. I had to pick up the ladder in the back of the store where a store worker loaded it into the truck for me. I unloaded the truck back home and returned the truck to the rental agency. The next day I decided to use the ladder to see how it works and found out it was a 28-foot extension ladder! I examined the receipt, and it stated a 32-foot ladder. I called Lowes and explained what happened and asked them to pick up the ladder and deliver what I paid for. They did. After they left, I discovered the one of the bottom feet of the ladder was cracked. Again they came out swapped ladders and left. I carefully examined the ladder and found several rivets were missing! I called and spoke with the store manager about the situation and we agreed that I would come out to the store, inspect a ladder, tag it, and deliver the inspected ladder. They did. It was a frustrating experience I'll never forget, but Lowes did treat me with respect and dealt with the situation until I was completely satisfied. |
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On Mon, 16 Aug 2004, y_p_w wrote:
As for local stores, there's an Ace store in my hometown that's been around forever. It's known for excellent service. In order to get service, you take a number and wait. It seems a bit more fair than having to flag down an orange apron employee getting bombarded by five people. ....and trying to hide from all five of them. |
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![]() "Phisherman" wrote in message They did. It was a frustrating experience I'll never forget, but Lowes did treat me with respect and dealt with the situation until I was completely satisfied. And it only took them four tries to get it right. It shows that they employ people that are not very competent and sell merchandise that is not top quality. Did you ever wonder what the outcome would have been if you bought the same material at a store that offered delivery? |
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chuck yerkes wrote on 15 Aug 2004:
And recommendations on a carpenter and a plumber. Shall we discuss the lists of nightmare installs done by HD and Lowe's "Contractors" (those willing to low bid and still give HD their vig). I had a friend who was a carpet layer who started doing installs for Home Depot. They made him adhere to what he considered were very strict standards, and he had always done excellent work before. Why would a contractor do these installs? Maybe because he or she was tired of driving all over town to do estimates for those people who had gotten the idea that they needed three estimates for every job, even $200 ones. Let's not forget the customer who wants the rock-bottom price, even when the contractor can't make a living at that level without cutting major corners. Estimating can chew up a ton of time, and if the contractor doesn't get the job, all that time is wasted. With the big box, they bring your jobs to the contractor, and he/she doesn't have to worry about being stiffed by the customer. For a lot of different reasons, there's lots of bad work out there. You're as likely to get bad work from an independent as you are from one of a big box's contractors. -- Doug Boulter To reply by e-mail, remove the obvious word from the e-mail address |
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![]() "Doug Boulter" wrote in message 7.142... For a lot of different reasons, there's lots of bad work out there. You're as likely to get bad work from an independent as you are from one of a big box's contractors. I agree with this totally. The big difference with these HD jobs is that more times than nought the buyers are cheap. You might get a great job of laying carpet done, but the carpet is crap and wears out in 10 years. But this isn't a reflection on the contractor, it's a reflection on the customer. Ted |
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"Ted Mittelstaedt" wrote in message ...
"Doug Boulter" wrote in message 7.142... For a lot of different reasons, there's lots of bad work out there. You're as likely to get bad work from an independent as you are from one of a big box's contractors. I agree with this totally. The big difference with these HD jobs is that more times than nought the buyers are cheap. You might get a great job of laying carpet done, but the carpet is crap and wears out in 10 years. But this isn't a reflection on the contractor, it's a reflection on the customer. The last time Consumer Reports tested carpet, Aug. 1998, they found that HD's own ratings for durability matched their own test results well, and regardless of the manufacturer or seller, there was a lot more variation in stain resistance than in durability. |
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Here in Fla they are giving out FREE supplies to ppl that need to repair
their homes after Hurricane Charley......So stop your whining and be thankful for what you have, A FULL REFUND for your can of paint. Some ppl here have lost EVERYTHING!!!!!! |
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