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Old 31-03-2008, 15:53   #3
SMHarman
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Join Date: Jun 2003
Services: Cablevision
Posts: 8,305
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SMHarman is cast in bronzeSMHarman is cast in bronzeSMHarman is cast in bronzeSMHarman is cast in bronzeSMHarman is cast in bronzeSMHarman is cast in bronzeSMHarman is cast in bronzeSMHarman is cast in bronzeSMHarman is cast in bronzeSMHarman is cast in bronzeSMHarman is cast in bronzeSMHarman is cast in bronzeSMHarman is cast in bronzeSMHarman is cast in bronzeSMHarman is cast in bronzeSMHarman is cast in bronzeSMHarman is cast in bronzeSMHarman is cast in bronzeSMHarman is cast in bronze
Re: warranty question

Quote:
Originally Posted by Raistlin View Post
I would imagine that you need to be very careful about offering warranties on eBay - technically the buyer's contract would be with your son, and therefore it might be up to him to service any warranty claims.
Read the Warranty. It will indicate how it should work. He may need to provide the purchaser with proof of purchase - the store receipt - that is so the mrf knows when the item was purchased and when the 1 or 2 years is up, but in many cases the mfrs wwty is to warrenty the item is free of defects, not free of defects to the original purchaser.

On a bigger scale, you buy a 6m old car and you get the balance of the mfrs wwty, that car should last just as long as the one the guy next door bought new.
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