I always ask them to take their power cord home with them, as I write and say "No power cord" on the ticket.
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Fix an amp just enough to sell it
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Originally posted by rockinrob View PostThe problem is that once you've touched it, they'll flip it and say - "It's in great working condition, Mr. Tech just fully went through it last week - everything is solid!"
I like the idea of adding the refused repairs to the invoice....
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Originally posted by Randall View PostGuy comes in today. Represents as one of the biggest dealers in the area of vintage guitars and amps. Mostly interested in flipping gear. Brings me a Bassman AB165 that looks like a problem child. Doesn't want to spend much because he wants to flip it. It has obviously shot filter caps, a blown fuse, and mildew on the board. I tell him I must do the filter caps, and AC cord ( the death cap is shorted and there is 125vac on the chassis). He agrees, but no more than that.
I get the filter caps and Ac cord and death cap addressed, and find there are some other issues. I take care of those because I cannot stand to send an amp out with issues that I know of after I have serviced an amp. These extra fixes are on my own time because I quoted him the price of $150 to do the filter caps and AC cord and cleaning (it was bad) . I ended up fixing a bad ground in the first channel causing a hum, fixing the weird bias resistors in this circuit ( one tube was drawing 80mA). Balancing the biasing it so the one tube didn't cause the China Syndrome. And some other things
I wonder how others deal with customers who only want to do minimal repairs to flip gear, and how you feel this exposes you to liability as well as reputation. This is the first time I have dealt with this, and I don't like it.
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This reminds me of back in my camera repair days I had a photographer from The Denver Post ask me to check out her gear she was selling. She actually had gotten the idea in her head that if she paid me to check her gear, that meant she now had a 6 month warranty on each piece of equipment she could use as a selling point.
Go figure how she arrived at that!Drewline
When was the last time you did something for the first time?
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Originally posted by Drewline View PostThis reminds me of back in my camera repair days I had a photographer from The Denver Post ask me to check out her gear she was selling. She actually had gotten the idea in her head that if she paid me to check her gear, that meant she now had a 6 month warranty on each piece of equipment she could use as a selling point.
Go figure how she arrived at that!
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When people head down that road, I tell them a warranty is not insurance. I warrant my work, I don't insure the amp. How the hell would I know if some tube is going to fail in a month?Education is what you're left with after you have forgotten what you have learned.
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