As you guys may (or may not know,) I was head tech at TCWO.
I've had little problems with Powmax or Ultra. BUT, I have run into problems with every brand just the same (at a percentage of about 2 failures per 100 units.) Fact is, sometimes power supplies fail. Sometimes they take out the motherboard too! What's odd about power supply failures is that power supplies are one of the few components that are tested PRIOR to going out to Joe Q. Public, but sometimes shipping can jar components inside the power supply lose causing a short.
I have an Ultra P/S in my 3200+. Have for two months and have had no problems. It actually replaced a failing Enermax (supposedly a good power supply, but then again.... every brand has failure rates.)
The replacement of the power supply is actually FrozenCPU's responsibility. Not sure why you started with Ultra, but.. ok.
As for their response about the motherboard/CPU... Normally, a vendor is not responsible for incidental damages to other products within the same PC. You actually would go back to whomever you bought the board from. The person at Ultra probably thought you had recourse with whomever you bought the board and CPU from because MOST resellers actually give you support after 30 days (at TCWO we supported product for a year.) Newegg is actually the exception, but with computer companies closing up their doors left and right because it costs too much to support computer parts that only have a 10-15% profit margin to start with (thus the reason I no longer work at TCWO and TCWO's doors are now closed,) lack of product support is quickly becoming the norm.
You could contact the motherboard manufacturer regarding the dead board. The CPU? You're screwed. OEM CPU's aren't supposed to be sold to end users in the first place. They're all gray market. Fortunatley, AMD and Intel is putting a stop to this practice by tracking serial numbers back to the original buyer of the OEM product (HP, IBM, Dell, etc.)
On a side note, I am surprised the CPU died. The CPU actually doesn't get voltage directly from the power supply, but rather has it's juice regulated by motherboard components that feed off of the 5V rail of the P/S. I can only assume that your motherboard was going to take a dive at any moment. It is entirely possible that the motherboard was the initial point of failure, despite the fact that it worked for this long with another power supply, and not the power supply. Hell. I've had RAM work up until the point where I move it to a particular working system's motherboard and then have the RAM never work correctly again. Stranger things have happened. I do also have to agree with CoolJazz though that MOST flaky systems stem from power supply issues.
I'm glad Ultra stepped up. I hope they pull through for you. Keep us up to date. I like it when companies actually stand behind their product... unlike Abit, Asus, Lite-On.....
