To any of you who make a living servicing or repairing audio equipment, I have some general questions on how to handle the customers.
My problem is, after spending decades just down the road from NASA, seriously, in the highest-of-tech environments (plasma reactors, for one) I find myself building and repairing guitar amps. And I love it. Except for one thing: the culture shock.
I mean, the sort of customers who bring a piece of road-weary, 20-year-old, burned up (If I hear, "well, I loaned it to a friend" one more time, it's 'postal' for me) dirty, vermin-infested, abused crap-which sucked when it was new, even--which they swear "was working just fine until two nights ago and it just made a 'funny noise'" and burned down half of the fire-trap blues district (as seen on the news, no doubt.) And they want it fixed in a stupid-short amount of time, for next to nothing, and they want me to guarantee it for 999 years, as if it were brand f'n new.
Here is the thing...five things, actually. I didn't design it, I didn't build it, I didn't sell it (read: "make money on this sub-consumer-grade garbage") I didn't break it, and now you want me to compensate for the previous 4 steps?
I just repaired a hermaphrodite Super-Reverb-Pro-Silverface-Blackface, on which some idiot had wired the hum balance to ground on both sides, and, for extra fun, in the process shorted the filament pin to the plate pin (2 & 3 on the octal socket.) No kidding, the filament AC rode on a 500 V DC bias--for a little while. Hilarious. They had replaced the upper rear "baffle" with plywood and spray-painted the back side of the cabinet black, with overspray on the tolex, naturally. Yeah, I did repair it, just because I could not turn away-like looking at a multi-fatality highway accident.
Now the cretin-owner wants to use his own 6L6 tubes (the condition of which I have no knowledge) to complete the repair, and they expect me to warranty my work? To quote Melvin Udall, "Think ***** and get real."
So, Pros, how do you handle these morons?
My problem is, after spending decades just down the road from NASA, seriously, in the highest-of-tech environments (plasma reactors, for one) I find myself building and repairing guitar amps. And I love it. Except for one thing: the culture shock.
I mean, the sort of customers who bring a piece of road-weary, 20-year-old, burned up (If I hear, "well, I loaned it to a friend" one more time, it's 'postal' for me) dirty, vermin-infested, abused crap-which sucked when it was new, even--which they swear "was working just fine until two nights ago and it just made a 'funny noise'" and burned down half of the fire-trap blues district (as seen on the news, no doubt.) And they want it fixed in a stupid-short amount of time, for next to nothing, and they want me to guarantee it for 999 years, as if it were brand f'n new.
Here is the thing...five things, actually. I didn't design it, I didn't build it, I didn't sell it (read: "make money on this sub-consumer-grade garbage") I didn't break it, and now you want me to compensate for the previous 4 steps?
I just repaired a hermaphrodite Super-Reverb-Pro-Silverface-Blackface, on which some idiot had wired the hum balance to ground on both sides, and, for extra fun, in the process shorted the filament pin to the plate pin (2 & 3 on the octal socket.) No kidding, the filament AC rode on a 500 V DC bias--for a little while. Hilarious. They had replaced the upper rear "baffle" with plywood and spray-painted the back side of the cabinet black, with overspray on the tolex, naturally. Yeah, I did repair it, just because I could not turn away-like looking at a multi-fatality highway accident.
Now the cretin-owner wants to use his own 6L6 tubes (the condition of which I have no knowledge) to complete the repair, and they expect me to warranty my work? To quote Melvin Udall, "Think ***** and get real."
So, Pros, how do you handle these morons?
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