- Thread Starter
- #21
menhaden_man
WKR
- Joined
- Jul 18, 2019
- Messages
- 2,204
You all nailed it - I pay extra coin to avoid hassle.
The hole in the jeans analogy is the exact same thing I thought of when people try to defend them. I have probably bought 40 or 50 pairs of Cinch jeans over the years and never had a hole, button, or zipper issue......same thing with my work shirts, and boxers.Idk I don't think any of it is really excusable especially for the price you pay for "good" gear.
When is the last time you bought a normal pair of jeans with a hole in the pocket? Can't say that has ever happened to me.
These examples are just lack of due diligence in the QC department and not correcting the problem at the manufacturing level.
Exchanging the item is all good and everything but doesn't do anything to improve further quality issues.
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This. We spend too much money on this crap too see this many issues. I almost never see issues on my everyday cloths and it's generally cheaper stuff.Idk I don't think any of it is really excusable especially for the price you pay for "good" gear.
When is the last time you bought a normal pair of jeans with a hole in the pocket? Can't say that has ever happened to me.
These examples are just lack of due diligence in the QC department and not correcting the problem at the manufacturing level.
Exchanging the item is all good and everything but doesn't do anything to improve further quality issues.
Sent from my SM-G960U1 using Tapatalk
Sometimes I think it's unreasonable for someone to put their hands on every item before it hits the proverbial shelves...and most companies utilized a sampling scheme because they simply can't. However, when you think that every car that's sold was test driven by a person at the factory, and companies sell hundreds of thousands of cars per year, it would seem that maybe a small production run company like FL could do the same, but maybe that's not reasonable....I'm guessing their product is coming from overseas directly to the fulfillment center.
Some of you might recall a recent screw up by a high end backpack company....lids not fitting. That defect should have never seen the light of day, but I know there was extreme pressure to get this product to market asap. The fact they were hand assembled and the fitment was not detected also raises an eyebrow....a person handled every single bag.
Oh well, all these companies can do is learn, it's concerning if they don't. I'd hate to think that these warranty issues are just been shrugged off and assumed the cost of doing business, because it's not.
Funny you mention that... I also purchased a K3 pack this year... they caught the issue before I did, sent an apology and asked for my address so they can send a new one. Didn’t care what happened with the “bad one” and wasted not more than 30 seconds of my time.
That my friend is customer service and how you own a mistake.