Have you considered getting a second opinion on the repair locally that doesn't involve shipping? I suggest this because a dim display may be nothing more than a poorly soldered LED light connection, or a faulty LED bulb. Hardly a $400-$500 repair. The manufacturer, who hasn't yet seen the unit, nay be overestimating the problem because they don't know what it is yet. They don't want to say: "Oh, it's just a 50 cent light bulb", then find it's something more serious and come back to say: "Our original estimate was too low. You need a circuit board replaced for $500". Consumer laws in many places preclude people from lowballing estimates and then asking for more. So people err on the side of caution by overestimating a bit.
Need advice from experienced sellers
I have a well regarded integrated amp which has a dim display. I've discussed having this repaired with the manufacturer and the cost of repair with shipping could run as high as $400-$500. I've noticed these units go quickly at $3000 and few have been available recently.
I've pondered whether to sell the unit as is with a discount to compensate for the fact that it isn't 100% or risk having it sent in for repair. If I send it in for repair should I sell it from the repair site or have it shipped back to me so I can check it out and verify its condition before selling. How would you handle this?
Thanks in advance!
I've pondered whether to sell the unit as is with a discount to compensate for the fact that it isn't 100% or risk having it sent in for repair. If I send it in for repair should I sell it from the repair site or have it shipped back to me so I can check it out and verify its condition before selling. How would you handle this?
Thanks in advance!
7 responses Add your response