BradyH wrote: » Hi thanks for thoughts. Im a totally reasonable person so I understand things break, thats fine. But for something as essential as a fridge, theres no reason they cant have a mini fridge on standby and also petty cash for frozen stuff. You reach for a cool drink..oh yeah no fridge. Must get the chicken wings out for dinner..oh yeah. You want butter on that toast?oh yeah. I want cereal mam, oh yeah down to shop. The pack of ham, coleslaw,lettuce etc etc all gone next day. Id be in and out of neighbours all day.
Former Former wrote: » Eh? You store your food in your local supermarket??
CeilingFly wrote: People in shops are human - treat them with respect and in most cases they will do their utmost to help you.
CeilingFly wrote: Treat them like sh1t and they'll respond in kind.
CeilingFly wrote: In a lot of cases it your attitude to a retailer that gets different levels of servcie.
WoollyRedHat wrote: » In terms of what to do in the interim period, see if your local shop or supermarket will store your food for you in their nicely chilled fridges/ freezers. I have an arrangement like this in place with nearby supermarket, I pay them a storage fee for this neat little service but I think it's worth it.
coylemj wrote: DO NOT TAKE CONSUMER ADVICE FROM SOMEONE WITH UNREALISTIC EXPECTATIONS
coylemj wrote: and who's motivation for posting here is pure revenge. The post at the start of this thread was only the OP's second post in over four years.
colm_mcm wrote: » Do you think that if the OP had bought the fridge in DID or Harvey Norman or Curry’s, Would the story be different?
coylemj wrote: » You can literally walk into DID with a broken appliance and no receipt and they will replace it? If DID are so 'amazing' at customer service, why did you buy the fridge from Power City? Let me guess..... price?
BradyH wrote: » I usually buy from DID tbh, they are amazing, you just hand them broken thing & they replace it, immediately, no questions & often no receipt,
coylemj wrote: » Who should we buy from then? An electrical retailer whom you know would have provided the solution you're suggesting? Like who?
Del2005 wrote: » Manufacturers wouldn't have many field service engineers for domestic appliances so Power City will send someone. It could be from the manufacturer or it could be a person from stores. They still have to get the OP back to having a working fridge.
vintagecosmos wrote: » you would think in this day an age with phone/video consultations with doctors, that they could do smth similar in emergencies. A remote assessment by the engineer would save powercity a lot of money for clear cut cases. (assuming it is). Ive found them to be fine when dealing with them. At least they are talking to you and booking in appointments. Harvey Norman wouldnt even call me back when I had issues.
colm_mcm wrote: » It’s hardly Power City’s own engineer that’s coming out though? Surely it’s the manufacturer sending someone out?
whippet wrote: » Which of the three ‘r’ solutions is up to the retailer to decide .. the consumer can choose to accept or go the SSC .. and then the SSC decides if the retailers offer was reasonable.
TallGlass wrote: » You problem comes under the three R's. Refund, Repair or Replacement.https://www.ccpc.ie/consumers/shopping/faulty-goods/ Just ask for a refund be my advice.