I can’t imagine an instrument where the pads don’t
fit, the keys need swedging, etc. as you describe….we set them all up here,
I personally play test them all before they go out……as does my #1
repair guy, so we have two opinions……..many of our customers pick
up their horns in person, and we set spring tension etc. to their taste at no
charge…..I’ve had bad luck having other shops do warranty work for
me: they don’t have our proprietary pads, resonators, and pearls and
generally don’t understand how some of our unique mechanisms work. We
also don’t have the chance to do quality control checks. I’ve also
found that they often try to over charge me for warranty work.
From:
SaxophoneRepair@yahoogroups.com [mailto:SaxophoneRepair@yahoogroups.com] On
Behalf Of Blair Barrett
Sent: Sunday, July 05, 2009 10:26 AM
To: SaxophoneRepair@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [SaxophoneRepair] Re: Saxophone Warranties
Instrument warranties are a pet peeve of mine and I'm speaking from the
perspective of a consumer who has had issues in this area in regards to a brand
new bass sax I bought a little over a year ago from one of the better known
saxophone manufacturers. They assured me the horn was throughly checked by their
tech in Boston before it was shipped to me but the fact the original seals from
the manufacturer on the shipping boxes were still intact told me otherwise.
IMO instrument warranties from the perspective of the purchaser are next to
useless if there is only one place in the world where the horn can be sent for
warranty repairs. The cost of transportation and loss of the use of the
instrument while it is being serviced under warranty in most cases exceeds the
cost of having the repair done locally by a trusted repair tech. It's simply
easier and less time consuming to forget about the warranty from my
perspective.
From my perspective fit and finish should be included. You can't warrant wear
and tear, but at minimum the pads should be the correct size for the cups and
seated properly, the tone holes should be level, the keys shouldn't need
swedging, all key silencers should be in place, the springs shouldn't be
broken, and the necks should fit properly. After paying thousands (in some
cases the price of a brand new car) for an instrument it shouldn't cost the
purchaser $500 or more to correct problems from the factory (this happened to
me on the above mentioned bass). IMO a horn setup shouldn't cost the purchaser
more than $200 in labor to adjust the action to a player's preference. If
anything needs to be replaced within the first 30 days of purchase including
the neck cork, it should be covered. I don't care if the posts in the ribbed
construction were lovingly and gently brazed by tiny woodland elvers who all
look like Pamela Anderson, because that all goes down the drain if the fit and
finish on my brand new horn is so bad I can't get a note out of it when I
breathlessly unpack it the first time. We'd never accept that kind of a
warranty on a $12 coffee pot, so why do we accept it on an expensive in some
cases hand-made musical instrument?
If you truly want to make your customers happy, establish a network of repair
techs throughout the country you trust to work on your instruments so it's
worthwhile for your customers to obtain warranty repairs (maybe start with some
of the people on this list). If the horns are the quality you say they are then
a strong easy to invoke warranty shouldn't really eat into your profits. If it
does then you need to go back to the factory you've contracted to make your
horns and demand better. That will make your customers extremely happy. As the
old saying goes, a happy customer will tell three of his friends. An unhappy
customer will tell ALL of his friends.
Sorry about the long winded rant. As I said, this is a pet peeve of mine.
Blair Barrett