Quote:
Originally Posted by GoinAllTheWay
Ok, so because the guy does it for a living, his info if bullet proof, eh? How do I know the guy is giving me good advice? On top of that, from what the Sears rep on the phone told me, the repair guy is 3rd party so is it completley outside the realm of possibility that this guy really couldn't care less about my concern, just wants to get the job done and move onto the next one? Maybe, just maybe, someone had been down this path before and could suggest something that I had not thought of. The repairmen is there to do just that, repair. I seriously doubt he has the ability to tell me how my warranty would respond down the road if the motor burns out.
Just because someone is an "expert" does not make them infallable. I simply ask a question to see if anyone would have any other advice regarding warranty issues down the road and you jump all over me. Rediculous.
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Fine, you want advice on the warrenty, that's cool, but that's not what you asked.
You asked if you should bring it up.
I will now answer your question as just about every person with some common sense would answer it.
OF COURSE YOU SHOULD BRING IT UP.
Ask the repair guy, if you don't like what he says, ask the guy where you bought the thing, and if you don't like what he says, maybe try calling the customer service number in the ownern's manual.
Are those things really that tough to figure out that you need some guy on the internet to tell you to do them?
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