Excerpt from the 6/30/07 article: "The Polaroid set seems like a good deal until you find out what the Circuit City and Polaroid websites fail to disclose, which is that Polaroid HDTVs cannot be repaired after the warranty period expires!"
It should not be a surprise. A lot of electronics have largely been disposable for decades now, particularly when you get the cheap stuff such that it's not worth the cost of fixing.
As long as the warranty is long enough to get you past the infant mortality stage, it should be fine.
I saw some story about the cost of making a repair on a budget TV. Accounting for shipping costs both ways, the cost of the parts and labor, it's not far from the cost of a new set.
It's incredibly wasteful, but when we're talking about a product made as much as into the millions of units using very cheap labor, cheap parts and cheap design in a developing country, it's tough to justify the cost of repair labor in a developed country.
Even when your TV is under warranty they ignore you, make promises to send parts and a repairman, and string you along until your warranty has expired. I will NEVER buy another Polaroid product of any kind ever again. I will get the word to the masses that this company makes and sells shabby products they don't stand behind.
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
EEL @ Nov 24th 2007 1:29AM
Polaroid LCD HDTV have one the worse warranty plains out there. Unless they have changed it for the new model line, don't buy them.
http://hdguru.com/your-new-disposable-flat-panel-hdtv/107/#comment-13243
Excerpt from the 6/30/07 article:
"The Polaroid set seems like a good deal until you find out what the Circuit City and Polaroid websites fail to disclose, which is that Polaroid HDTVs cannot be repaired after the warranty period expires!"
JeffDM @ Nov 24th 2007 8:28PM
It should not be a surprise. A lot of electronics have largely been disposable for decades now, particularly when you get the cheap stuff such that it's not worth the cost of fixing.
As long as the warranty is long enough to get you past the infant mortality stage, it should be fine.
I saw some story about the cost of making a repair on a budget TV. Accounting for shipping costs both ways, the cost of the parts and labor, it's not far from the cost of a new set.
It's incredibly wasteful, but when we're talking about a product made as much as into the millions of units using very cheap labor, cheap parts and cheap design in a developing country, it's tough to justify the cost of repair labor in a developed country.
Patty9755 @ Jan 3rd 2008 10:15AM
Even when your TV is under warranty they ignore you, make promises to send parts and a repairman, and string you along until your warranty has expired. I will NEVER buy another Polaroid product of any kind ever again. I will get the word to the masses that this company makes and sells shabby products they don't stand behind.