Another +vote for AYRE customer service.
Happy Listening!
Happy Listening!
Amp repair cost — is this right?
Have them ship it back, sell it, and get something else on the used market. Not adviseable to spend even $500 to swap out the caps. Here is your amp https://www.google.com/search?sxsrf=ALeKk02MceG65SQYDS2ndUQE1nLmoHvcfg:1603415550268&source=univ... Here is my Defy7 with 12 new Mundorf caps @ $50 each + a bunch of F&T's.. The tech guy changed the small can Nichicon's which really sound exactly like the old ones = did not need changing. also changed the plate resistors to Takman Rey,,all cost about $800, well worth it. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RpVCbHX6jWU&t=355s Tech guy did NOT remove the board,, he sniped leads and solder to lead tips.. Which makes the Defy now, unsellable, But I have no intentions to ever sell anyway. Tech geek's , some are honorable, others are scam artists, Which is why i preach the message, always buy a amp that is built like a tank and with high quality components. Take the $200 ship fee loss , sell the amp and move on. There are plenty of amps on the used market. Take the hit and move on. |
Pyramid Audio will quote you a price of $1300 to replace just the power supply filter caps in a Levinson 33x series amplifier, so, yes, the quote you got is not unreasonable. FWIW it took me the better part of a weekend to replace the damaged filter caps in my AR 100.2. The 8 caps cost less than $75... but there were parts in the way that had to be removed (and replaced) and some disassembly to get to the caps. There is no way I would have charged less than $1,000 parts and labor to do that job as it took a total of 6 hours start to finish, which does not include the time spent to plan the repair and catalog and order the parts. It is more work than it appears. |
I think this is the wrong question. I think the right question is "Is this repair shop honest?" If the answer is "yes" then the price is reasonable; if the answer is "no" then the price is not reasonable. The brake job analogy is imperfect, because there is a "book" that tells all shops how many hours of labor are involved. Did the repair shop break down the cost in terms of cost of each cap, cost of various parts of the labor (remove old caps, replace with new caps, test, etc.)? That should give you some idea. If they did not you might want to ask them to do so. You don't know how much labor is involved but you can find out what the caps would cost. |