This sounds about like my experience with a rangefinder last year. Ordered it, they took five-ever to get it shipped out. When it finally showed up, the illumination was extremely weak. Couldn't make out the readout in low light. Emailed them, nothing. Crickets. Multiple emails, I finally decided to call. Got the most un-helpful individual ever on the phone. He had the audacity to tell me I "obviously didn't hunt, because hunters only needed their rangefinder in low light, and so the display was designed specifically for hunters in low light." I told him my Vortex and Sig rangefinders worked just fine in all light conditions, and that the problem was obviously theirs, and I expected them to fix it. He finally reluctantly agreed to look at it, but that they were going to charge me for the repairs. I told them that if they were going to charge me I would just throw it away, and he finally agreed to take it back. It went into a black hole for 16 weeks, and I only got it back after posting about the debacle on here. They ignored emails, phone calls, voicemails, but they saw my post and were quick to get me taken care of. Then the guy called and asked if I would change my post. I told him no, that It needed to stay up, because I was providing feedback for them to improve on. He told me I would taint their reputation and that this type of service wasn't normal. I told him it didn't matter if it wasn't the norm, because it was the norm for me. I had a sample size of 1, and the experience sucked. Plus the rangefinder ended up being a $700 pile of crap that wouldn't do 30% of what it was advertised to do, even in perfect conditions.My experience was mixed.
On binoculars - bought a new (old stock) 8x42 SLC that had issues with the hinge and focus wheel. They fixed it under warranty for no charge. Very happy with that. However, I made the mistake of being honest on the follow-up survey = the repair was fine but I’d attempted to contact them multiple times over the course of several weeks and could not get a human or return call. Service manager responded quite annoyed and aggressively to the survey. His response was way over the top as I noted the repair was well done and just suggested they could improve comms with customers. After all, aren’t surveys looking for honest feedback?
Riflescopes - far different experience here. Had a Z5 that was trouble from the very start - fogged internally on its first trip to the range, then later on had a wandering zero, etc. They fixed the fogging issue under warranty, but made me pay to have the zero repaired. Said I damaged it - however, it had not been dropped, remounted, etc - just started wandering. After repair it worked for a few hunts and then began wandering again. But I no longer have faith in it or the durability of SW repairs and now it is sitting on a shelf.
YMMV
I don’t understand this logic. Because they are quality and cost money, they should replace them when you run it over with you truck?For the price they should be no questions asked.
Not saying when you run it over with a truck. A 10 year warranty is not that good. Most rifles stay in a gun safe for most of the year. That is probably 90 percent so that means the actual use warranty is crap. One year of use or less and it is not covered. Also you might want to actually talk to a Swar rep at a show about profit margin. It is not no 10 percent.I don’t understand this logic. Because they are quality and cost money, they should replace them when you run it over with you truck?
I see what you’re saying. But that’s not a typical “no questions asked” warranty, as those usually include owner damage.Not saying when you run it over with a truck. A 10 year warranty is not that good. Most rifles stay in a gun safe for most of the year. That is probably 90 percent so that means the actual use warranty is crap. One year of use or less and it is not covered. Also you might want to actually talk to a Swar rep at a show about profit margin. It is not no 10 percent.
I'd think that if they were going to do that, they'd either have to increase the price even more or cut back on labor and materials costs, i.e. make a lesser product. What many don't realize about about a no-questions-asked unlimited warranty is that the replacement costs are factored into the purchase price. You're paying for all those warranty replacements, but some people get excited for a $500 quality piece of glass that they pay $1500 for and comes with an unlimited replacement warranty. I don't understand the craze about these type of warranties. A quality product doesn't fail, but in the rare case it does, it is repairable. You don't just throw it in the trash and ship out a new one.For the price they should be no questions asked.