Originally posted by: kalrith
Originally posted by: crisscross
Slightly OT but is there a significant risk for LCD/Plasma TV's to go bad? i.e. are extended warranties needed?
As I stated above (in the 15th post), the advantage to EW is most definitely in favor of the warranty provider. There's at worst a 3% chance of failure for the TVs, so if you pay 3% of the purchase price of the TV for the EW, then that's a good price; however, you're likely to spend much more than that. Also, since the chances are good that the TV will fail outside of the EW period, that makes it a less than 3% chance that you'll use the warranty. It's also much less likely to fail if it's a quality brand than a budget brand.
Let's say you bought 33 flat-panel TVs during your lifetime (obviously that's an exaggeration). The odds (according to CR) say that one of those will fail. I went on squaretrade.com and priced the warranty for a $2000 plasma TV, which came out to $249.99. I've seen coupon codes that give a max discount of $50, so let's assume you get the EW for $199.99, or 10% of the purchase price of the TV. If you bought 33 $2000 plasma TVs, it would cost $6600 for an EW on each one, and the odds are that one will fail resulting in a $4600 net loss for your EW purchases (assuming that it fails during the EW period).
You'll always have someone who comes in and mentions that they paid $200 for an EW, and it saved them $2000. That's a possibility (just like it's possible to play roulette once and win a boatload), but the odds are definitely against you.
My feeling is to only pay for warranties/insurance on things that are required by law or things that I absolutely cannot replace. If my TV fails, then it's within my means to replace it. If my wife has a $40,000 surgery (which she had a few years ago), it is not within my means to pay that. Things like health insurance still profit the insurance companies and the chances are in their favor that you'll won't use as much money as you put in; however, if a situation arises when you need to use it, it will cover an amount that no normal individual could repay in a lifetime. This is obviously not the case with even a $5,000 TV. If someone could buy one in the first place, chances are that they have the means to replace it if they're unlucky enough to be within that 3% (at most) whose TVs fail. To sum it up, if I never buy an EW in my life compared to buying one for every big purchase, then I'll wind up ahead in the end.