Conscript
Golden Member
- Mar 19, 2001
- 1,751
- 2
- 81
Originally posted by: greg
>>wrong, if you get something as promised, when promised, then it's positive heat. It's not up to you to decide if it was packed properly. There is WAY too much subjectivity in that.
The downside is that if this were a component that was damaged, but not destroyed, then the packaging hurt. E.g., a video card that was cracked, but not broken in two, subsequently ceases to function becuase of the crack. The shipper caused the damage, but under your system, the shipper gets a positive rating. A CPU is usually either broken or not. However, it is entirely possible that the ceramic or plastic developed a microscopic crack that didn't show up until schmoe buyer puts on a new heatsink that has slightly more pressure than the original. The same result, idiotic shipper gets a positve rating, buyer gets the shaft.
Hey, it's up to the buyer to determine if the product arrives as promised. If the goods are damaged in any way that were not stated before hand, then obviously not positive heat. You speak of the "possibility" that a microscopic crack is created? Well, if it's microscopic, then I assume it could have been there even if it was packed perfectly and the buyer woudn't have known until he put a heatsink on. Either way, I've enver had the experience, but I do know that I have received one or two poorly packed items (imo), but the items were exactly as promised. Whether it was luck or not that they arrived in that way, is not my concern, or my right to decide.