Tuesday, 19 February 2008

getting ipod repaired outside of



Getting an iPod repaired outside of warranty

I bought a fourth generation 40Gb iPod sixteen or so months ago. I've

been very happy with it and regard it as an excellent purchase. I have

suffered none of the battery problems that seem to have afflicted so

many users and have not been overly upset by Apple's DRM technology

(although if I had thought deeply about it, I'm sure I would have

been).

However, my days of happiness were brought to an abrupt halt in

February when my iPod developed a fault: it would no longer

synchronise with iTunes and various tracks would refuse to play. The

culprit (as identified by a rather unpleasant clicking noise) was the

hard drive.

I had chosen not to invest in "Apple Care" and so was resigned to the

possibility of having either to buy a new one or pay �166.29 to have

it repaired since I was outside the 12 month warranty period.

However, 16 months does seem an extraordinarily short time for an

expensive electrical item to last so I thought I'd check out my

rights. Interestingly, the Sale of Goods Act has something to say. So

I thought I'd give it a go.

I bought the iPod from Micro Anvika on Tottenham Court Road so my

contract was with them (and not Apple, one should remember). I must

admit that I was expecting some resistance to my request for a free

(or discounted) repair so I took along a letter.

Here's what I wrote:

21 February 2006

Micro Anvika

245 Tottenham Court Road

LONDON

W1T 7QW

Your Neference: xxxx

Invoice Number: xxxx

Dear Sir,

I purchased an iPod and an iPod mini from your store on 10 October

2004 (sixteen months ago).

The iPod has recently developed a fault which prevents synchronisation

with my PC. I have tested on two separate computers and believe the

fault is due to a defective hard drive on the iPod; it makes an

unpleasant clicking noise when I plug it into any computer.

The Sale of Goods act requires that goods sold are of satisfactory

quality. An aspect of quality is durability. Sixteen months is

unsatisfactory for a product as expensive as this.

I enclose the original receipt and the faulty iPod. Please can you

repair the iPod.

Please note that I have moved house since purchasing these items; the

address on the invoice is out of date. My current address is as above.

Yours faithfully,

Richard G Brown

The guy at the repair desk sounded sceptical but said they'd take it

in and let the manager decide what to do. To my amazement, they called

back the next day and said that, in the light of what I'd written,

Apple would repair (or replace) it for free. I didn't even need to

contribute towards the repair.

I picked up what seems to be a brand new replacement yesterday.

Excellent!

So: the lessons here are: 1) know your rights, 2) be polite, calm but

assertive, 3) buy your electrical goods from Micro Anvika: they don't

screw you over and do what they say they will. Good job, guys!

posted by Richard Brown @ 3:23 PM

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