Basis Audio - Exhorbitant servicing evaluation cost


I have lusted after a Basis Debut turntable for years, and recently was close to purchasing one used. That is until I explored Basis Audio's service policy. Service is not even a link on their website... I had to find the turntable policy, which explains they are a "victim of their own success" since they have such great sales success and excellent service, they can only provide very limited information about their older products. Then they say to know more you must send a table in for evaluation. The fees for evaluation are alarming to me (see below). $3400 just to evaluate a Debut vacuum table? I planned on spending just a little more than that to buy the table in the first place. I emailed Basis weeks ago to ask if I was understanding the policy correctly and whether the fee was applied to eventual repairs. No answer. 

Since this evaluation cost, and the general vibe I get from reading their website is "We don't want to service our tables so we will price ourselves out of most of the trouble," is preventing me from wanting to buy a Basis table, I thought I would ask experienced Basis owners here what they think. I've heard nothing but great things about their products over the years, but if I can't have it serviced if I need to, it just scares me away.

From the Basis website:

4. Basis turntables are extremely precise and technical tests and measurements are labor intensive. Pricing for the evaluation, based on model, is as follows:

1400: $500

2001, 2200: $1,200

2500: $1,600

2800: $1,800

Debut: $3,200

Debut Vac: $3,400

Inspiration: $3,500

Inspiration with Vacuum: $3,700

Vector Tonearm: $1,200

SuperArm: $1,600

montaldo

This is so-called premium pricing, i.e., rip off. They must have done study before. The honest pricing is $340. And 1 out of 10 audiophiles will use the service if they charge $3,400 for it.  It works out mathematically.  They will save nine times services labor and still have the same revenue. 

There is a possibility it is the equivalent to a charge allocated for the assembly of a New Table. 

If a Tech' is reallocated to work on a returned TT, the New TT is on hold, hence pass on the cost of the potential lost revenue. 

In my industry certain Services only supply their human resource at a Day Rate Charge, that matches their maximum turnover of revenue on a Pre-priced for work.

The reasoning being the Team can make this revenue when not supplying their service to another. Leaving another to cover the cost of what a Company projects as lost revenue.