- Oct 24, 2000
- 17,254
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In answer to a thread about "it's just our job to sell the ESCs at Best Buy!" and for those of you who have bought into the 'need' for them, read on.
When "Nobody Beats the Wiz" was still around, I went in and bought a floor show model panasonic 'boombox', complete with everything I wanted for it. Aux Inputs, CD player, dual tape deck, am/fm, and a remote control for about $120. Sure it had a dig in the speaker and a scratch in the plastic, but whatever.
We were assaulted by the salesman about how these things break all the time and we NEED a service warantee. We said no. The guy even rung it up with the contract in the cost, which we told him again we didnt need it. Then he actually got angry that we wouldnt buy one. I used it at home to hook up to my sony playstation 1 when it first came out, brought it to college with me and hooked it up to my TV for movies and my computer for music. It's currently still being used in my basement gameroom... 10+ years later and I have NEVER had a problem with it.
This is just one example of an electronics device that I needed an ESC for, and refused.
If something is going to happen to your new TV, Stereo, et al, due to a manufacturers defect, it will most likely happen within the first year of ownership, and typically is covered by the manufacturers warantee.
Anyone else got similar electronic purchasing stories?
When "Nobody Beats the Wiz" was still around, I went in and bought a floor show model panasonic 'boombox', complete with everything I wanted for it. Aux Inputs, CD player, dual tape deck, am/fm, and a remote control for about $120. Sure it had a dig in the speaker and a scratch in the plastic, but whatever.
We were assaulted by the salesman about how these things break all the time and we NEED a service warantee. We said no. The guy even rung it up with the contract in the cost, which we told him again we didnt need it. Then he actually got angry that we wouldnt buy one. I used it at home to hook up to my sony playstation 1 when it first came out, brought it to college with me and hooked it up to my TV for movies and my computer for music. It's currently still being used in my basement gameroom... 10+ years later and I have NEVER had a problem with it.
This is just one example of an electronics device that I needed an ESC for, and refused.
If something is going to happen to your new TV, Stereo, et al, due to a manufacturers defect, it will most likely happen within the first year of ownership, and typically is covered by the manufacturers warantee.
Anyone else got similar electronic purchasing stories?