Reprinted from TidBITS#913/04-Feb-08 with permission.
Copyright (C) 2008, TidBITS. All rights reserved.
http://www.tidbits.com/

When Is a Warranty Not a Warranty?
----------------------------------
  by Mark H. Anbinder <mha@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/9399>

  Remember when Apple's warranty on Macintosh computers was a mere 90
  days, and the change to a full one-year warranty was big news? Or
  when on-site desktop computer and mail-in laptop warranty repairs
  became the norm? Big changes like that are generally the only time
  the average consumer stops to think about product warranties beyond
  the simplest "How long is the warranty?" level. Unfortunately,
  that's not all we need to know when considering a purchase.

  The hidden variation of what warranties can mean to different
  vendors was brought into sharp relief last month when the
  high-capacity internal hard drive I'd bought for my MacBook died,
  and I discovered that the three-year warranty I thought I had didn't
  necessarily mean I'd be back up and running any time soon.

  Our story begins in July 2006, when I wanted to purchase a larger
  internal hard drive than Apple had available in their MacBooks. The
  selection process, as with most hardware purchases these days,
  required balancing reasonable price against a reasonable expectation
  of reliability and post-sales support. The $279 Hitachi drive from
  Other World Computing (OWC, also known as macsales.com) I picked
  wasn't the cheapest option, but I felt I was investing in a computer
  component I'd be heavily relying on. The peace of mind of a known
  vendor and known manufacturer seemed worth a slight price premium.


**Where in the World is Mark's Hard Drive?** -- Unfortunately, the
  level of warranty information provided by OWC (and, to be fair, most
  vendors) ends at the length of the manufacturer's warranty. What
  they leave out, and what I've learned the consumer needs to seek out
  independently, is any idea of the specific warranty policies of the
  manufacturer, including likely turnaround time.

  I've discovered this in the worst manner possible, by finding out
  that Hitachi's standard operating procedure for warranty replacement
  is, literally, a "slow boat from Asia" approach. A replacement hard
  drive had to make its way from Singapore to California, taking an
  estimated 7-10 "business days" (in December, that was extended
  thanks to the holidays), after which it could be sent across the
  United States to me in Ithaca.

  The problem was compounded by Hitachi's customer service rep
  misleading me into believing that the drive was being sent to me via
  second-day air; despite my skepticism, I gave him the benefit of the
  doubt and allowed for the possibility that he had no idea the drive
  had to take a two-week trip from Singapore first. He helpfully took
  my credit card number for their advance-exchange option, a
  reasonable provision that allowed them to start the process now,
  rather than waiting for me to get the defective drive to them.

  My happy illusion that my conversation with Hitachi on a
  mid-December Monday meant I'd have a replacement drive on Wednesday
  or Thursday evaporated when I plugged my RMA number into Hitachi's
  Web site that Tuesday to see whether the replacement drive had yet
  shipped. Hitachi's RMA tracker doesn't understand advance-exchange
  returns, so it gave me incorrect info, which prompted me to call the
  company again. This time, I was given the word that the drive was on
  its way from Singapore.

  The Hitachi rep I spoke to that Tuesday said that if the drive
  hadn't already been dispatched from Singapore, he could have looked
  to see if a warehouse in the United States (one that isn't generally
  used for warranty fulfillment) had a drive they could send me, but
  since Monday's misleading (or confused) rep had started the
  slow-boat process, they were unwilling to change anything. I should
  expect my replacement 2-3 weeks after requesting it, and I'd be
  without a working laptop for that time. This just doesn't reflect
  modern computer-user expectations, and if their hope is that
  customers who can't wait that long will give up and buy a brand new
  device rather than seek warranty replacement, it's pretty shady.

  That's when I tried calling Other World Computing again, in hopes
  that my reputable vendor of choice would stand behind the sale and
  take care of the customer after learning how poor a job the
  manufacturer was doing. While I've spoken to some friendly and
  sympathetic folks at OWC, their policy and their stance is that
  their responsibility to the customer ends thirty days after the
  sale, and that warranty fulfillment past that time is solely the
  responsibility of the manufacturer. (The folks I talked to at OWC
  allowed that they can, and do, stretch the thirty-day limit, but not
  _this_ long.)


**What's a Buyer to Do?** Obviously, the old "caveat emptor" advice,
  "Let the buyer beware," applies here. But this experience has made
  it clear that the buyer can't stop at selecting a seemingly
  reputable vendor and a name brand product with a reasonable warranty
  period. If I had to do it all over again (and I'm sure someday I
  will), I'd take the additional steps of ensuring the manufacturer
  offers advance-exchange service (this means they will send you the
  replacement before the old equipment reaches them) and finding out
  what kind of turnaround time I could expect.

  For example, Seagate, which now offers a five-year warranty on hard
  drives, offers both ground and two-day air shipping for replacement
  drives; the latter is available for a fee, or is included with the
  company's $20 advance exchange option. Western Digital also offers
  advance replacement, and, like Hitachi, asks for a credit card
  number to secure the return of the original unit, but doesn't charge
  a fee. They quote a 3-5 business day turnaround.

  Ideally, resellers like OWC would provide this sort of information,
  upon request if not right on their Web site. OWC, Amazon.com, Small
  Dog Electronics, and most other online resellers already tell
  customers how long a product's warranty lasts, as a matter of
  course. Why not provide typical warranty turnaround time? A customer
  relations manager at OWC says they'd never be able to keep up with
  frequent changes to such info, and publishing it would expose them
  to liability if it made a manufacturer unhappy. I'd prefer they
  focused on keeping the customer happy.

  The situation is complicated when a "house brand" from an online
  reseller is really a standard manufacturer product that's been
  relabeled with the reseller's name, such as similar hard drives
  manufactured by Hitachi, and offered for sale without identifying
  Hitachi. One such vendor tells us that the manufacturer is
  responsible for warranty fulfillment on these drives, but a buyer
  who doesn't do a little digging beyond the provided information
  won't know that.


**Is this Normal?** Of course, I'm kicking myself for not having
  figured out _before_ this happened that not all warranties are
  created equal. I wish I'd looked into Hitachi and OWC a year and a
  half ago, before making the purchase, to see what I could expect
  from them. One of OWC's folks tried to convince me that two-week
  turnaround wasn't _that_ bad, based on the fact that a couple of
  their Macs had taken two months to be repaired under warranty.

  Two months does make two weeks look better, but misses the point
  that two weeks is _normal_ (and, really, the bare minimum) for
  Hitachi's warranty fulfillment turnaround, whereas it's extremely
  unusual for Apple, whose typical repair turnaround is under a week.
  If Hitachi had unexpectedly run out of a U.S. supply, and as a
  result needed to do something unusual by getting my drive from
  Singapore via surface ship, it would still be frustrating, but more
  understandable.


**What Could OWC Have Done Better?** -- For starters, I'd have been
  more impressed if the customer service rep I spoke to on that
  Tuesday had offered more than sympathy and a recitation of their
  policies. It wasn't until I gave a PR rep from whom we get OWC press
  releases a heads-up that I was working on a "caveat emptor" article
  featuring one of her clients that anyone at OWC tried to get in
  touch with Hitachi to intervene on my behalf.

  OWC couldn't get anyone at Hitachi to come up with a better
  resolution, though they did extract something I hadn't been able to
  - a delivery ETA of December 31st. That's right, the replacement was
  being sent to my employer's office while my employer was closed,
  which Hitachi knew; I'd given them my work address with the specific
  caveat that the office would be closed from that Friday through
  January 2nd, so they should ship there _only_ if it was certain to
  arrive that week. Hitachi refused to arrange for a change in the
  delivery address, though they said I was welcome to try that with
  DHL myself.

  While I feel that warranty fulfillment after over a year _shouldn't_
  be OWC's problem, I'll admit I was hoping their sympathy would
  extend to standing behind their customer by replacing the product in
  a timely manner when it became clear that Hitachi wasn't going to do
  so. Everyone at OWC seems dismayed that Hitachi's standard procedure
  involves shipping a replacement from Singapore, and they're now
  (understandably) wondering whether they should drop Hitachi drives
  from their product selection; but even if they do that, it doesn't
  help me.

  Ironically, OWC's published policies would have allowed me to
  purchase a _new_ laptop hard drive, use it for a couple of weeks
  until my warranty replacement arrived, and then return it for a full
  credit or a refund minus a restocking fee. (Luckily for them, I
  don't feel it's right to take advantage of a liberal return policy,
  and even if I did, I wouldn't have felt like laying out my cash to
  make up for this gross lapse in customer satisfaction. Instead, I
  waited - with my laptop down for the count - until my replacement
  finally reached me, last week.)

  I can't help but think that someone - at Hitachi or OWC - really
  should have said, "You know? This is unacceptable. We took your
  money and if we can't get you a warranty replacement unit without
  making you wait two or more weeks for it, we should pull a drive off
  the shelf and send it to you." Instead, they've created a customer
  who will never again buy a Hitachi product, and will have to think
  long and hard before ever again buying from OWC.