Zardoz wrote:
What's happened there Craig?
From my notes:
March 10, 2007: Bought Mac Pro from refurb store
March 20, 2007: Realised item was faulty. Contacted Apple. Was told to take it to local repair centre.
Late March: Mac ‘repaired’ by Rapid Group. 'Removed a loose screw'.
Summer, 2007: Mac still not working correctly. Returned to Rapid. Optical drive and fan replaced.
Spring, 2008: Increased and constant mooing noises. Intermittent buzzing from hard-drive area, which stops when Disk Utility is launched.
April 2, 2008: H/D upgrades attempted. Discovered broken connection on bay 2.
April 2, 2008: Letter sent to Apple. No response.
Although the unit's outside of warrantee, my opinion (having found a damaged internal component) is that the unit breaches the SoA on no less than three points:
1. Of satisfactory quality - was not, as it’s had several major faults, two repairs, and was clearly damaged when sold
2. As described - was not described as damaged - refurb is supposed to be ‘as new’, with only possible cosmetic imperfections
3. Fit for purpose - is not fit for purpose, due to noise and now due to upgrade issues
Of course, the onus of proof is on the buyer after six months, but my argument (if I have to make one) is that the main damaged item is an internal component, which you can only see when you remove both the Mac's side panel and the drive cradle—and that's not exactly something you do when you buy a computer. It's kind of akin to ripping up floorboards to check your plumbing's OK.
I have literally no idea how Apple will be with this, nor what the company will do. Ideally, I'd like a replacement or partial refund (a credit note for the Apple Store would also be fine). I suspect the best I'm likely to get offered is another 'free' repair. The possibility, of course, is that Apple will just tell me to fuck off, which wouldn't be the wisest move for the company, but it's perhaps more typical of a large corporation. We'll see, I guess.