Tom's Guide > Forum > Home Theater > HDTV > Best Buy Service Plan for Samsung DLP HDTV - Advice needed

Best Buy Service Plan for Samsung DLP HDTV - Advice needed - Page 2

Forum Home Theater : HDTV - Best Buy Service Plan for Samsung DLP HDTV - Advice needed

TomsGuide.com: Over 800,000 questions and answers to address all your high-tech questions. Sign up now! Its free!
Word :    Username :           
 

Last message on previous page:
Archived from groups: alt.tv.tech.hdtv (More info?)

 

On Mon, 25 Oct 2004 22:25:58 -0400, "Leonard Caillouet" <no@no.com>
wrote:

>> In your other post, you said the Sears techs are most likely to just
>> swap out a board and go on their way. As a consumer, I'm trying to
>> understand why that is a bad thing. I bought my Sony from Sears and
>> it's still under warranty. If the thing fails, I call Sears service,
>> a service tech comes out, takes the back off the TV, swaps out a board
>> in 10 minutes, puts it back together and it works.... then I'm a happy
>> camper! Why would I have a problem with that?
>
>For warranty repairs it is not a problem, unless the board happens to have
>an EEPROM on it and the entire set needs to be realigned. Few techs will
>ever get it right. For out of warranty repairs, board swapping is very
>expensive in many cases. It is unlikely that for out of warranty repairs
>that they will carry all the boards to repair even most sets. Also, board
>swappers rarely develop the troubleshooting skills to really solve problems.
>
Ahhh, I see what you mean. Yeah, as far as out of warranty repairs
go, I cannot recommend Sears nor can I say anything negative as it is
not anything I have any experience with. While the service
departments do get called quite a bit to do repairs on all sorts of
things, whether purchased from Sears or not, I've no personal
experience with them.

Yeah, I was only touting the service department as part of a good
selling point for the retailer as a whole.... the fact that Sears
performs any and all warranty work on the TV's and appliances it sells
sets it apart from all other major retailers.

>> Best Buy doesn't have any service techs on the payroll, they are
>> outside contractors. Again, Sears is the only big box retailer with
>> employees on the payroll who perform the warranty work.
>
>Not true in all areas. In south Florida they do. I have met a number of
>them over the past couple of years. Overall, I'd generally buy from Sears,
>but the point is that you can't generalize as much as you do and be sure
>that you are getting the best service nor price. It is best to shop for
>both.
>
Leonard, now you've got me curious and a bit confused because it has
long been touted by Sears that all other major retailers have
independent contractors and/or they refer the customer to the
manufacter for all warranty work.

Are you absolutely certain those guys in those areas are not
independent contractors? Because one of our former employees who was
fired (but still a friend of mine that I stay in touch with) has
confirmed to me that BB uses local, independent contractors
nationwide.

It is possible that in some areas where large, high volume BB stores
exist, a small, independent contracting company is doing the BB
warranty work through an exclusive arrangement, thereby giving the
*appearance* of being BB themselves. However; technically speaking,
it is indeed a totally independent company with absolutely no alliance
with BB other than to fix their TV's in that particular territory.

Sears does this too but in deliveries (not service) and it creates a
lot of fires we salespeople have to put out constantly. For example,
Sears will not personally deliver to certain locations within our
metro area. In these instances, we use a local delivery firm that
exclusively does these "special" deliveries, "swap outs", etc. Some
of these people are rude with the customers or are just plain ignorant
with them.

The customers are constantly complaining to we and our management
about "instances" they have had with this company and we've lost quite
a few sales due to them. In one instance, a customer receiving a
Grand Vega 60" was told "Hitachi is better than Sony" and I ended up
losing a huge sale because I could not convince the customer this guy
didn't even work for Sears and didn't know his ass from a hole in the
ground.

This is just ONE example - it happens all too often and our store has
been trying to replace this company for some time. Problem is, we're
locked in w/them for another 2 years! I can see where the customers
are confused, too... the manager gave these clowns a ton of Sears
shirts. They are generally, unshaven and unkept looking and have the
IQ of a rock but people see the unmarked vans coming up their driveway
and these clowns jump out of the cabs wearing Sears shirts... of
COURSE the appearance is given that Sears is their direct employer.

I think you get my point. Sorry for being so long-winded. I've
enjoyed your informative responses :-)

Reply to Anonymous
Sponsored Links
Register or log in to remove.

Archived from groups: alt.tv.tech.hdtv (More info?)

 

Leonard Caillouet wrote:
>
> "Julie" <julie@nospam.com> wrote in message
> news:417D0FD6.B57D1D50@nospam.com...
>
> > I've checked it out, and they get Sears-specific classes from the factory.
>
> On what products? How often? What percentage of their techs get them?
>
> >
> > What do you recommend instead of Sears?
>
> I recommend that you ask some tough questions of Sears or any servicer. You
> should check out all of the options and you will likely find that the best
> tech for your set is not at Sears. If you do, and the prices are
> reasonable, then you should use Sears. In most markets you will find better
> techs fixing sets more effectively at lower prices at independent servicers
> and independent dealers who service what they sell. You have to shop for
> service just like you shop to buy the product.
>
> > At least Sears will backup up their warranty -- if they can't fix it, or
> if
> > there are more than 3 failures of the same part, they replace the set w/ a
> new
> > (equivalent) set. I speak from experience, they couldn't fix an
> intermittent
> > screen blank problem on a top of the line Hitachi RPT that developed near
> the
> > end of my 3 year contract, so the told me to go an pick out something new
> at
> > the store based on my original $4000 purchase price. Got a brand-new
> Hitachi
> > 60" LCD projection set, couldn't be happier. Not many service contracts
> are
> > willing to do a $4000 replacement that I'm aware of...
>
> Virtually any reputable dealer can sell you a service contract that will do
> the same. You have to shop and ask the tough questions, but you can usually
> do better than the service contract at Sears. Like everyone else, margins
> at Sears are much higher on service contracts than on the product.
> Negotiate and read the fine print.
>
> Chances are pretty good that Hitachi would have done the same if the set
> could not be fixed. There was a customer that we serviced a while back that
> had a set nearly three years old that had a problem that could not be fixed
> and we arranged for them to exchange it for a new model for the customer.
> The set was purchased at Circuit City and there was no extended warranty.
> Over the years I have administered hundreds of thousands of dollars of
> repairs on products out of the warranty period that manufacturers have
> covered, including replacing entire sets as old as 5 years. I have also
> seen extended warranty companies do the same thing. Most of the better
> policies have a "lemon" clause.
>
> Sears may have the best deal. They might have the best option for service
> in some cases. To assume so without exploring the options is just what they
> want you to do. It is also foolish.
>
> Leonard

My 3 year service contract on a $4000 set w/ Sears was $199. It is a waste of
my time and money to do any more research at that price. At the end of the 3
years, the set, out of warranty, moves up to the bedroom and I head back to the
store for the latest and greatest.

Reply to Julie

Archived from groups: alt.tv.tech.hdtv (More info?)

 

"HDTV-slingr" <NOSPAMMERS@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:12krn01tkmiebke5k3uu0q0d5o9h8n3hov@4ax.com...
> On Mon, 25 Oct 2004 22:25:58 -0400, "Leonard Caillouet" <no@no.com>
> wrote:
>
> >> In your other post, you said the Sears techs are most likely to just
> >> swap out a board and go on their way. As a consumer, I'm trying to
> >> understand why that is a bad thing. I bought my Sony from Sears and
> >> it's still under warranty. If the thing fails, I call Sears service,
> >> a service tech comes out, takes the back off the TV, swaps out a board
> >> in 10 minutes, puts it back together and it works.... then I'm a happy
> >> camper! Why would I have a problem with that?
> >
> >For warranty repairs it is not a problem, unless the board happens to
have
> >an EEPROM on it and the entire set needs to be realigned. Few techs will
> >ever get it right. For out of warranty repairs, board swapping is very
> >expensive in many cases. It is unlikely that for out of warranty repairs
> >that they will carry all the boards to repair even most sets. Also,
board
> >swappers rarely develop the troubleshooting skills to really solve
problems.
> >
> Ahhh, I see what you mean. Yeah, as far as out of warranty repairs
> go, I cannot recommend Sears nor can I say anything negative as it is
> not anything I have any experience with. While the service
> departments do get called quite a bit to do repairs on all sorts of
> things, whether purchased from Sears or not, I've no personal
> experience with them.
>
> Yeah, I was only touting the service department as part of a good
> selling point for the retailer as a whole.... the fact that Sears
> performs any and all warranty work on the TV's and appliances it sells
> sets it apart from all other major retailers.
>
> >> Best Buy doesn't have any service techs on the payroll, they are
> >> outside contractors. Again, Sears is the only big box retailer with
> >> employees on the payroll who perform the warranty work.
> >
> >Not true in all areas. In south Florida they do. I have met a number of
> >them over the past couple of years. Overall, I'd generally buy from
Sears,
> >but the point is that you can't generalize as much as you do and be sure
> >that you are getting the best service nor price. It is best to shop for
> >both.
> >
> Leonard, now you've got me curious and a bit confused because it has
> long been touted by Sears that all other major retailers have
> independent contractors and/or they refer the customer to the
> manufacter for all warranty work.

Anytime ALL or EVERY are used in the retail or service industries you can
assume that the statement is wrong. Most of the time this is true.

> Are you absolutely certain those guys in those areas are not
> independent contractors? Because one of our former employees who was
> fired (but still a friend of mine that I stay in touch with) has
> confirmed to me that BB uses local, independent contractors
> nationwide.

Most of the time this is true. They apparently do have their own service
depots in some areas. They have a facility, trucks, and employees with
their logo on them and they claim to work for Best Buy. The operation may
be run for them by someone else, I am not sure about the specifics of their
business. I do know that they were recently shopping our market for techs,
and were reportedly expanding their service area here, but apparently they
had no success. Finding experienced techs is next to impossible these days.

> It is possible that in some areas where large, high volume BB stores
> exist, a small, independent contracting company is doing the BB
> warranty work through an exclusive arrangement, thereby giving the
> *appearance* of being BB themselves. However; technically speaking,
> it is indeed a totally independent company with absolutely no alliance
> with BB other than to fix their TV's in that particular territory.

Like I said above, I don't know the details of their business. The guys at
the manufacturer's training that I went to recently seem to think they work
for BB.

> Sears does this too but in deliveries (not service) and it creates a
> lot of fires we salespeople have to put out constantly. For example,
> Sears will not personally deliver to certain locations within our
> metro area. In these instances, we use a local delivery firm that
> exclusively does these "special" deliveries, "swap outs", etc. Some
> of these people are rude with the customers or are just plain ignorant
> with them.

Some Sears service techs are not much better. They seem to have trouble
with anything that is not on the troubleshooting chart or the symptom-repair
database. To be fair, this is pretty typical. My point is, as always,
don't be satisfied with the typical, shop for the exceptional. Otherwise,
the bar keeps getting set lower. Sears is perhaps better than the industry
in general, but that would not cut it for me if I were shopping for service,
nor will it cut it in my shop.

> The customers are constantly complaining to we and our management
> about "instances" they have had with this company and we've lost quite
> a few sales due to them. In one instance, a customer receiving a
> Grand Vega 60" was told "Hitachi is better than Sony" and I ended up
> losing a huge sale because I could not convince the customer this guy
> didn't even work for Sears and didn't know his ass from a hole in the
> ground.
>
> This is just ONE example - it happens all too often and our store has
> been trying to replace this company for some time. Problem is, we're
> locked in w/them for another 2 years! I can see where the customers
> are confused, too... the manager gave these clowns a ton of Sears
> shirts. They are generally, unshaven and unkept looking and have the
> IQ of a rock but people see the unmarked vans coming up their driveway
> and these clowns jump out of the cabs wearing Sears shirts... of
> COURSE the appearance is given that Sears is their direct employer.
>
> I think you get my point. Sorry for being so long-winded. I've
> enjoyed your informative responses :-)

Very clearly. Don't get me wrong, I think Sears is generally much better
than BB or the competition. They do have their problems, however, like
every big organization. They are not an exception to my rule that
everything deserves to be shopped carefully for VALUE, not just for price.
That means you need to understand the whole story and assume nothing.

Leonard

Reply to Anonymous

Archived from groups: alt.tv.tech.hdtv (More info?)

 

"Julie" <julie@nospam.com> wrote in message
news:417DE26E.F1B38117@nospam.com...
> Leonard Caillouet wrote:
> > Sears may have the best deal. They might have the best option for
service
> > in some cases. To assume so without exploring the options is just what
they
> > want you to do. It is also foolish.
> >
> > Leonard
>
> My 3 year service contract on a $4000 set w/ Sears was $199. It is a
waste of
> my time and money to do any more research at that price. At the end of
the 3
> years, the set, out of warranty, moves up to the bedroom and I head back
to the
> store for the latest and greatest.

Sounds like a good deal. If you are happy with it, that is all that really
matters.

Leonard

Reply to Anonymous

Archived from groups: alt.tv.tech.hdtv (More info?)

 

On Tue, 26 Oct 2004 06:43:16 -0400, "Leonard Caillouet" <no@no.com>
wrote:

>> I think you get my point. Sorry for being so long-winded. I've
>> enjoyed your informative responses :-)
>
>Very clearly. Don't get me wrong, I think Sears is generally much better
>than BB or the competition. They do have their problems, however, like
>every big organization. They are not an exception to my rule that
>everything deserves to be shopped carefully for VALUE, not just for price.
>That means you need to understand the whole story and assume nothing.

I agree, Leonard. Some people are just dead set on getting the lowest
price out the door but they don't think about things that can happen
down the road. I'll say it again - in general, you can't beat the
service of a reputable, family-owned "mom & pop". It's not cheap but
it's within reasonable limits and the service is better than any big
box. They may not have the margins the big boxes have but there is
something to be said for being able to buy your TV directly from the
same person who will fix that TV if there are problems with it down
the road.

Reply to Anonymous

Archived from groups: alt.tv.tech.hdtv (More info?)

 

Somewhere around Mon, 25 Oct 2004 13:33:53 -0500, while reading
alt.tv.tech.hdtv, I think I thought I saw this post from HDTV-slingr
<NOSPAMMERS@hotmail.com>:

>On Mon, 25 Oct 2004 13:10:56 -0400, "Leonard Caillouet"
><nospam@noway.com> wrote:
>
> . . .
>In your other post, you said the Sears techs are most likely to just
>swap out a board and go on their way. As a consumer, I'm trying to
>understand why that is a bad thing. I bought my Sony from Sears and
>it's still under warranty. If the thing fails, I call Sears service,
>a service tech comes out, takes the back off the TV, swaps out a board
>in 10 minutes, puts it back together and it works.... then I'm a happy
>camper! Why would I have a problem with that?
>
>If rebuilding a diode takes 3 hours and swapping out a board takes 10
>minutes, again, as a consumer, I'm just fine with that and in fact
>would be happier with the latter.

I used to repair stereos, back when they were much simpler. We did replace
components. But these days, I think it's better to replace boards in most
cases. Labor is expensive, parts not as much so as they used to be. When
you replace a part, you run the risk of causing problems with soldering,
replacing parts that are bad but maybe missing the part that caused them to
go bad, etc. If it's a warranty job, I would not be happy at all to see the
tech soldering parts onto the board.

--
Marty - mjf at leftcoast-usa.com
"Those are my principles, and if you don't like them...
well, I have others." - Groucho Marx

Reply to Marty

Archived from groups: alt.tv.tech.hdtv (More info?)

 

"Marty" <this.address@is.invalid> wrote in message
news:1442o09irijkrimllo16edpup9uf5jiqb5@4ax.com...

> I used to repair stereos, back when they were much simpler. We did
replace
> components. But these days, I think it's better to replace boards in most
> cases. Labor is expensive, parts not as much so as they used to be. When
> you replace a part, you run the risk of causing problems with soldering,
> replacing parts that are bad but maybe missing the part that caused them
to
> go bad, etc. If it's a warranty job, I would not be happy at all to see
the
> tech soldering parts onto the board.

For warranty repairs we don't want to do component level work on most units
because the labor rates are not realistic. Also, there may be dozens or
hundreds of alignment parameters lost if the board contains the memory.
Techs who do mostly board swapping are also the ones who likely are either
too lazy to restore the alignment completely or may simply be incapable of
doing so. I have seen many sets that got repaired under warranty and never
got set up correctly after the repair. On OOW repairs, some things make
sense to do at the board level and some at the component level. The
decision needs to be made based on the specific instance and the relative
cost of the board, parts, and labor that may be involved. If you make
blanket assumptions about the cost or efficacy of board swapping vs
component level repair you would be making a foolish mistake in many cases.

Virtually all stereo repair is still done at the component level. Most
stereo amplifiers and receivers have lots of discrete components, other than
the high density LSI areas such as DSP circuits. This makes component level
repair more practical. If you try to repair everything at the board level
you will be disposing of virtually everything except the most expensive
products. This IS becoming the case in many product categories. On the
most expensive products, swapping boards often increases the cost of repair
by hundreds of dollars. If it doesn't, and you don't lose important data,
then it makes sense to repair at the board level.

Don't assume.

Leonard

Reply to Anonymous

Archived from groups: alt.tv.tech.hdtv (More info?)

 

On 29 Oct 2004 12:48:58 -0700, hoppie_2k3@yahoo.com (Lola) wrote:

>Well, I'm glad you got that off your chest...
>And I'm glad to know about all this stuff from Sears.
>I have been a loyal customer for a long time, and I am glad you are
>spreading the word. You've helped me decide where to get my next TV!

Thanks, Lola, I appreciate it. I really didn't come here to "spread
the word", I came here to lurk and learn but I've held most of this in
for a long time and it really does feel good to express my thoughts
finally, both positive and negative. Thanks for your patronage and
please spread the word :-)

To the other regular posters in this NG, please forgive me if I've
come off like an infomercial for Sears. It wasn't my intent at
all.... it's not a bad place to shop and I'm happy I sell HDTV sets
for them overall.

Reply to Anonymous

Archived from groups: alt.tv.tech.hdtv (More info?)

 

> The only thing I would buy from Sears is craftsmen tools.

Since you are new to this thread, could you please give a little more
of an explaination to that?

If you had read the previous posts, you could see that Sears sells
some great stuff across the boards.

My advice would be to either go to the store, or check out the
website, and see what kind of deals and service they have.
Just this weekend, that had a ton of sales, including this awesome
Samsung HDTV:
http://www.sears.com/sr/javasr/pro [...] Cookie=Yes

And free shipping too!

Reply to Anonymous

Archived from groups: alt.tv.tech.hdtv (More info?)

 

>But Sears today provides their own service for the TV's they sell and
>warranty and have an excellent reputation for quality of service,
which they
>also farm out for other retail stores. Their TV departments vary
greatly
>from store to store but, in the larger stores, they usually have lots
of
>choices on display. They will dicker on price and match competitor's
prices
>+ 10% of the difference. If they are late in delivering, they will
knock
>more money off. If you don't like your TV, you can take it back in
60 days
>for a full refund, for any reason or no reason. If you buy their
extended
>warranty, they provide in-home service from day one and fix anything
that
>goes wrong, even if the problem is just cosmetic.



As I am coming to find out, some people hold a grudge way longer than
they should. Every store, if they are open long enough, will face
problems, and certain bad publicity.
All told, Sears is still around, and there is a reason for that.
Thankfully, some reasonable people have stepped forward and spoken the
truth that Sears does a pretty good job, especially in their
electronics department.
I encourage those people who had a bad experience back in 1973 to give
them another chance, and then let all of us know what you thought.

Reply to Anonymous

Archived from groups: alt.tv.tech.hdtv (More info?)

 

Lola wrote:


> As I am coming to find out, some people hold a grudge way longer than
> they should. Every store, if they are open long enough, will face
> problems, and certain bad publicity.
> All told, Sears is still around, and there is a reason for that.
> Thankfully, some reasonable people have stepped forward and spoken the
> truth that Sears does a pretty good job, especially in their
> electronics department.
> I encourage those people who had a bad experience back in 1973 to give
> them another chance, and then let all of us know what you thought.

After years of going to Sears to buy flyer items only to find that they
were "sold out" when the doors opened on the first day of the sale I
stopped buying anything from Sears. Last summer I bought a GE double
wall oven from Sears via the internet (best price, lowest deliver cost).
My credit card company called to see if it was fraud.

Matthew (happy with the purchase from Sears)

--
Thermodynamics and/or Golf for dummies: There is a game
You can't win
You can't break even
You can't get out of the game

Reply to Anonymous

Archived from groups: alt.tv.tech.hdtv (More info?)

 

> After years of going to Sears to buy flyer items only to find that they
> were "sold out" when the doors opened on the first day of the sale I
> stopped buying anything from Sears. Last summer I bought a GE double
> wall oven from Sears via the internet (best price, lowest deliver cost).
> My credit card company called to see if it was fraud.
>
> Matthew (happy with the purchase from Sears)

Glad to see you had a good experience.
It is hard to beat the price-matching.

Reply to Anonymous

Actually the bulb is covered through PSP. Your flaw in your argument is that best buys service plan is not an extended warranty. They cover much more than just manufacturer defects. The bulb is covered once in the life span of the plan. The thought process that plans are rarely used also shows a lack of critical thinking a nd is dishonest. If you took how many TVs completly gave up and stopped working, this may be true. However, with plans like the PSP, they cover preventitive maitenance to make sure your picture quality does not degrade over time, they also cover the repairs needed to keep it functioning as intended. This includes replacing the tv with credit for what you paid for OR a comperable tv.

curmudgeon wrote :

Archived from groups: alt.tv.tech.hdtv (More info?)

There is nothing to argue about. A bulb IS a consumable and not covered by
any warranty.

But also understand that BB will NOT provide service to any device that is
out of warranty...even when you bought it at their store!
Do you have a good service source in your area BESIDES BB?




"Jim" <jra@ncrb.org> wrote in message
news:fe23f062.0409300857.43bf1aee@posting.google.com...
> Hi, we purchased a Samsung 61" DLP HDTV almost a month ago and we are
> still debating the purchase of the Best Buy Service Plan. We have
> some concerns, however:
>
> 1) Our TV was purchased on sale for approx. $3800-3900, the service
> plan price quoted was $400 for 4 years. This seems high to me. Is
> it?
>
> 2) Is Best Buy reliable with their service? ie. Will they do what
> they say? We are interested in knowing if anyone has had any
> experience with actually trying to get things fixed.
>
> 3) We felt the sales manager was exaggerating with his stories of all
> that could go wrong, even in the first year, with these TV's. He had
> horror stories of possible $1500 repairs and such. At the minimum he
> suggested that the bulb would need to be replaced at least every 2
> years, which at $200/bulb would recoup the cost of the service plan.
> I question this. With a 6000 hour bulb life, say we watch a maximum
> of 5 hours/day on average, that gives us 1200 days which is over 3
> years.
>
> 4) We are not even sure the service plan WILL cover the bulb as the
> sales manager claims. It does not specifically mention the bulb. It
> does offer "complete coverage if your product fails due to normal wear
> and tear/usage", BUT it also says "not covered are replacement costs
> for lost or consumable parts (knobs, remotes, batteries, bags, belts,
> etc.)" We are afraid they could argue that a bulb is a "consumable
> part".
>
> We are not naive enough to think that just because the sales manager
> says something is covered, that it is. I have read the performance
> plan brochure carefully, and unfortunately, it is written for a
> variety of products and not specifically for an HDTV.
>
> So, should we or shouldn't we? $400 is a lot of money and we don't
> want to throw it away. Thanks!


Reply to Au0614

I also bought 56 inch samsung dlp with the extended warranty at best buy.Big mistake on 8/26/09 they will be out for the fouth time,2nd time in two weeks.I have had the light engine replaced2 times all ready next week maybe the 3rd.The warranty co.is not calling thre next service call a repair but a continues so they do not have to replace the TV.Your biggest problem was buying a samsung dlp,\.YES you are going to the warranty but they are ripe off two.

Reply to Anonymous
1 2
Next
Tom's Guide > Forum > Home Theater > HDTV > Best Buy Service Plan for Samsung DLP HDTV - Advice needed
Go to:

There are 9 identified and unidentified users. To see the list of identified users, Click here.

Google ads