The best part IMO was the new TV ended up crapping out as well hell but it was under the Best Buy warranty not the manufacturer warranty.
And the TV I had was no longer being made (the exact model number that is) so they asked if I wanted a check or an equivalent model.
I took the check and fixed the TV that time using parts from the first TV.
10/10 would pay $200 for a 75inch 4k OLED TV again (how much the warranty cost because Best Buy cut me a $1500 check)
moody@lemmings.world 9 months ago
If they don’t want you to ship it back, it’s pretty common for them to ask for some kind of proof of destruction. Back in the days of non-removable cords, they would have you cut the cord off your device or appliance before sending you a replacement.
UNWILLING_PARTICIPANT@sh.itjust.works 9 months ago
That’s so sad
moody@lemmings.world 9 months ago
Sort of. It kind of makes sense in that they don’t want you to lie about having a TV that doesn’t work to get a free second TV. If the issue is small enough that it can easily be ignored, it’s not worth replacing. And if it’s a big enough issue that it’s unusable, it shouldn’t bother you to destroy it.
What sucks is that stuff ends up in the landfill most of the time instead of being recycled.
UNWILLING_PARTICIPANT@sh.itjust.works 9 months ago
Yeah that’s the sad part. It’s such a colossal waste.
I disagree. I think should, and probably does, butter everyone involved. Why damage it further, when it could be sold or even just given to a refurb/repair outfit?
I mean I know why, it’s because there’s no immediate profit motive there. Maybe even the opposite. Which again, is sad.
Dultas@lemmy.world 9 months ago
They just had me rip off the sticker with the model and serial number and mail it too them the last time I had something like that replaced.