unless it’s simaudio, then it’s still the customer’s fault.I think you are mixing subjects. An initial defect when purchased from an authorized dealer in my experience is never an issue.
unless it’s simaudio, then it’s still the customer’s fault.I think you are mixing subjects. An initial defect when purchased from an authorized dealer in my experience is never an issue.
The Mcintosh amps and preamps I've owned have zero cost of ownership. I can sell them for more than I bought them for. To my knowledge no other brand has pulled this off. We don't talk about their Pre/Pros, whose values drop like a rock.This among many other reasons is why McIntosh has one of the best resale values of any manufacture. I have sold several pieces of gear over the years. The pieces that always seem to sell almost immediately are McIntosh.
I had a similar real world experience, but had superb support from the manufacturer.Resale of goods offers no value whatsoever to the manufacturer - despite whatever you may think. Let me give you a real world example:
Let’s assume a CD player manufacturer does allow the transfer of warranty. The original owner received it via freight - on a pallet. He then sells it to someone over the internet and ships it Fedex. The fedex sorting station has conveyor belts which always causes a tumbling of the box. The tumbling motion is destructive to the transport mechanism. The new owner gets it and it has issues loading the CD. He calls the manufacturer to repair under warranty. Fair? No.
The warranty is extended to the original purchaser only in many (most) cases.
If you want warranty, buy new. Otherwise you live with the tail light warranty in most cases.