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- Path: sparky!uunet!cs.utexas.edu!swrinde!mips!pacbell.com!att!princeton!silvertone!gibson
- From: gibson@silvertone.Princeton.EDU (John Gibson)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.hardware
- Subject: Re: Ripoff Repair Places
- Message-ID: <1992Jul25.124426.24180@Princeton.EDU>
- Date: 25 Jul 92 12:44:26 GMT
- References: <1992Jul23.114250@beanpot.ma30.bull.com>
- Sender: news@Princeton.EDU (USENET News System)
- Organization: Princeton University
- Lines: 62
- Originator: news@ernie.Princeton.EDU
- Nntp-Posting-Host: silvertone.princeton.edu
-
- In article <1992Jul23.114250@beanpot.ma30.bull.com>
- mikem@beanpot.ma30.bull.com (Mike Machnik) writes:
-
- >This is part III of the continuing saga of my attempt to repair a Mac SE.
-
- [ long tale of woe deleted ]
-
- >they are an authorized Apple repair place. And if anyone from Apple is
- >reading this, I think you should know how some of your licensees are doing
- >business.
-
- Remember that the Apple people on the net are not here in an official
- capacity. It's not their fault anyway.
-
- >Any other examples of places ripping you off? I wouldn't be surprised if this
-
- Now for my story. A few years ago, I was preparing to sell my trusty
- old Mac Plus after having bought a IIci. The Plus had served me
- well and was in fine shape with one exception: the speaker no longer
- produced sound. I thought I'd try taking it in to the local
- authorized Mac service center to see what was wrong. If it didn't
- involve a costly board swap, I would have them fix it. They looked
- at it and couldn't see any problem at first. Then they decided it
- might be the third party SIMMs I had installed (?). [I had 2 1MB
- + 2 256K = 2.5 MB.] Had I installed those SIMMs myself or had I let an
- authorized Apple dealer like themselves install them? I said an
- authorized dealer had done it, which was a only a small stretch
- of the truth.
-
- Later that day I got another call from them. The tech said, "I
- pulled out all of your SIMMs, and replaced them with 2 MB of our
- own, known-to-be-fine, SIMMs. Your Mac won't even start up now;
- the screen is black. We think your logic board is bad, and since
- we suspect it was damaged when your SIMMs were installed, we won't
- be able to repair the Mac under Apple Care [which I still had a
- few months of]. We can do a board swap for c. $400." Since I was going
- to sell the machine for $500, that wasn't a good idea. I asked them
- how much they would pay me to take it off my hands. "Oh, maybe $50."
-
- Discouraged, I went home to think it over. Then it dawned on me:
- maybe they made a mistake. I drove back over to the center and
- asked to speak to the tech. Turned out it was a rather young guy
- who seemed like an apprentice. (But don't these people have to be
- personally authorized by Apple trainers, or something?) I went over
- the procedure he used to exchange SIMMs for testing purposes. Then
- the clincher: "Did you reconnect the appropriate RAM size resistors?"
- No, he hadn't. He went back and put my SIMMs back in. I confirmed
- that the Mac was fine, except for the speaker. It didn't take too
- long to convince them that there was no way they were getting any
- of my money for their efforts. I hope the young guy didn't get fired.
-
- I thought about going some other place to get the speaker fixed, but
- my heart really wasn't in it. So I started packing up the Mac to ship
- it to the new buyer (who was aware of the speaker problem). Before
- putting it in the box, I thought I'd plug it in one last time just to
- check it out. The speaker worked. Probably just a cold solder joint
- or a loose connection that rattled back in to place during the bumpy
- ride in my car.
-
- -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
- John Gibson Princeton Univ. Dept. of Music
- gibson@silvertone.Princeton.EDU
-