The black hole of component repair?


Is the repair time for components typically measured in months? I have been fortunate over the last ten years with this hobby but at the end of January I had to send an amplifier and a DVD player in for repairs. The DVD player was past warranty and had to be sent to an independent service facility. They have had the player for 6 weeks and informed me today that the manufacturer in the UK sent them the wrong part (or maybe they ordered the wrong part) and they are waiting for the correct part. Looks like another 3-4 weeks before I see the DVD player. The amplifier was under warranty so that went back to the manufacturer. The amp sat on the floor for 6 weeks. I was told today that they have looked at it and that they have located the board they need to fix it. They may be able to get it installed in a week but can not make any promises. I am guessing that it will be another 3-4 weeks before I see the amplifier. I know some of this repair time is unavoidable but weeks can quickly turn into months especially with shipping time and components sitting around for weeks before they are even looked at. I now know why there are frequently things for sale on Audiogon where the listing states something like "just back from the factory in perfect working order". I guess when you send something in for repair you might just as well go ahead and replace the item right away and then sell whatever you sent in for repair when you finally get it back.
mchd1
That`s the way it goes.
Sony took 6 MONTHS to fix my JA3ES Minidisc recorder.
It was sent back 4 times because they did NOT fix it
properly to begin with. It was OUT of warranty,
AND it only cost me $50 for a look over and shipping
the FIRST time to sony. It`s NOW working PERFECTLY!
HOWEVER, I took my
Pioneer Elite PDR-W37 CD recorder in the shop
in January, because the triple tray is broken,
and 3 MONTHS later, STILL NOTHING has been done to
fix it!
I think this is a really big problem with high end. It would be great if our "hobby" didn't include so many boutique manufacturers who guard their schematics in fort knox, and insist -if they still exist- that you can only use their facility. Most electronic engineers can isolate the problem and their are quite a few DIY people who can do it themselves but getting old boards and the like can be nearly impossible. They have to let you try to use the repair facility of your choice, in the first place though. Its a really shameful situation. I have a 1992 Coda preamp that is in pristine condition that suddenly dropped a channel, I wouldn't even bother to send it to them, knowing full well that it will cost me an arm and a leg if they even have the parts for that model laying around.
Bryston has been very fast (< 1 week) to fix stuff for me. Teac was about 5 days. Guess I've been lucky.
Took my JVC HT rec/player back to the GoodGuys JANUARY SIXTH and am still waiting. Ran maybe 30DVD's through it before it wouldn't read any type of disc. While I don't miss it (love my 2 channel music only rig)its driving my wife nuts
It sounds like my experience has not been unique. The other part of this experience has been the misinformation and sugar-coated answers I have received when I have called to find out where things were with repairs. If you can't look at a component for 6 weeks and its going to take another X number of weeks to do the repairs, why not just tell me up front? I could have bought the same amplifier used 6 weeks ago and kept my system running for the last month and a half. OK, I am done venting.