- Jun 30, 2004
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On approximately July 11, 2014, I put in a request for RMA replacement of a 600GB VelociRaptor HDD I'd purchased in June, 2011.
I made the purchase then from Compu-Plus in Monsey, NY/NJ. I had used the reseller since 1997. Apparently, they only recently went out of business, since I can no longer find their web-site.
The original drive arrived DOA after I purchased it. Or -- perhaps it made it through initial format and Win7 installation for about a day's time. In any event, I returned the drive to the reseller for replacement. The working, error-free drive was soon installed, and it served me for three years. The warranty on the VR drives is 5 years. I wouldn't have known if there were any caveats to the warranty.
After decommissioning the drive from 24/7 use at the end of that three-year period, I tried to re-partition and re-format the drive for use as a backup. The drive gave up its ghost and died during that operation.
So I poked around the Western Digital web-site, attempting to arrange an RMA. The automated RMA page failed to verify that the drive was under warranty. I was able to communicate with WD Support via e-mail, and got a response two days later.
There was apparently some gap or omission in the WD database of serial numbers. I continued my e-mail exchange with the support-rep (Amy), who asked for the drive's serial number. Eventually, I had to produce a picture of the yellow/black&white HDD label. Amy persisted in escalating the RMA request, since the serial number didn't match any in their database eligible for warranty replacement. Of course, the drive-model was listed for 5-year-warranty, but not the serial number.
A few days later, I received a direct e-mail from WD RMA support stating that the request had been refused. I only responded briefly and politely, wondering how someone would have the resources to counterfeit a hard disk.
But within a day of that response, WD RMA-support sent me a response to my response, stating that they would go forward and honor my RMA request. A flurry of additional e-mails followed -- directions for shipping the defective unit, a UPS shipping label and RMA label I could print. I still thought I wouldn't get the replacement until I shipped the HDD carcass.
I was stunned. On the day they sent me the reversal and approval of my RMA request, I found the replacement drive delivered on my doorstep.
In a world where institutions, agreements, promises and contracts seem to be evaporating before our very eyes, this has been a most pleasant experience with Western Digital RMA-Support. My hat is off to all the WD folks who assisted me with the replacement.
[Disclaimer: I offered -- on my own -- to post this "RMA-review" at Anandtech, when I received the decision-reversal for my request. I figure the WD folks deserve it.]
I made the purchase then from Compu-Plus in Monsey, NY/NJ. I had used the reseller since 1997. Apparently, they only recently went out of business, since I can no longer find their web-site.
The original drive arrived DOA after I purchased it. Or -- perhaps it made it through initial format and Win7 installation for about a day's time. In any event, I returned the drive to the reseller for replacement. The working, error-free drive was soon installed, and it served me for three years. The warranty on the VR drives is 5 years. I wouldn't have known if there were any caveats to the warranty.
After decommissioning the drive from 24/7 use at the end of that three-year period, I tried to re-partition and re-format the drive for use as a backup. The drive gave up its ghost and died during that operation.
So I poked around the Western Digital web-site, attempting to arrange an RMA. The automated RMA page failed to verify that the drive was under warranty. I was able to communicate with WD Support via e-mail, and got a response two days later.
There was apparently some gap or omission in the WD database of serial numbers. I continued my e-mail exchange with the support-rep (Amy), who asked for the drive's serial number. Eventually, I had to produce a picture of the yellow/black&white HDD label. Amy persisted in escalating the RMA request, since the serial number didn't match any in their database eligible for warranty replacement. Of course, the drive-model was listed for 5-year-warranty, but not the serial number.
A few days later, I received a direct e-mail from WD RMA support stating that the request had been refused. I only responded briefly and politely, wondering how someone would have the resources to counterfeit a hard disk.
But within a day of that response, WD RMA-support sent me a response to my response, stating that they would go forward and honor my RMA request. A flurry of additional e-mails followed -- directions for shipping the defective unit, a UPS shipping label and RMA label I could print. I still thought I wouldn't get the replacement until I shipped the HDD carcass.
I was stunned. On the day they sent me the reversal and approval of my RMA request, I found the replacement drive delivered on my doorstep.
In a world where institutions, agreements, promises and contracts seem to be evaporating before our very eyes, this has been a most pleasant experience with Western Digital RMA-Support. My hat is off to all the WD folks who assisted me with the replacement.
[Disclaimer: I offered -- on my own -- to post this "RMA-review" at Anandtech, when I received the decision-reversal for my request. I figure the WD folks deserve it.]
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