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08-18-2024 11:48 AM
No
08-18-2024 03:02 PM
@ALRATIBA wrote:For computer, printer, TV etc .... I buy all my "electronics" from Best Buy and have their "Total Tech" coverage for everything.
It's worth it for me.
Have you ever used it?
08-18-2024 03:15 PM
@Jordan2 You may want to research other options for your printer. That price sounds high. Printers are usually a throw away price for the company so they can sell you the ink. I think we paid under $85.00 for the last printer we bought. It's an HP wireless. I think we bought it at Costco.
And, no need to get a contract for sure.
08-18-2024 03:39 PM
It has always seemed funny to me that a salesperson touts how great the product is and then when you decide to buy the hard sell for a contract starts:/
08-18-2024 03:44 PM
Another NO.
08-18-2024 06:12 PM
@PA Mom-mom I don't buy printers often, the only one I bought lasted me 12 years ( they discontinued the model). I want one that scans, prints, and copies. It has to automatically do double sided printing, automatically feeds, and I want a LCD touchscreen that you can see how much toner is left, shows the printing and more, some have dual band Wi-Fi. Some printers don't have the screen which is a deal breaker for me.
08-19-2024 09:41 AM
No. Not worth it for an item that costs only $140. Contract would probably expire before the printer does.
08-19-2024 10:20 PM
@CrazyDaisy wrote:
@ALRATIBA wrote:For computer, printer, TV etc .... I buy all my "electronics" from Best Buy and have their "Total Tech" coverage for everything.
It's worth it for me.
Have you ever used it?
Yes, several times. House calls, telephone assistance and in-store service.
08-20-2024 09:36 AM
@monicakm if you don't mind me asking, what model printer did you buy and where (I haven't purchased a printer yet)?
08-21-2024 08:36 AM
Most devices have what's called "the bathtub curve" when it comes to failure rate. If you look at the cross-section of a bathtub there's a steep part at the end then it stays flat for an extended period of time before gradually tapering back up. (you can Google "bathtub curve" to see examples of the curve.)
The highest failure rate is the steep initial part of the curve when manufacturing defects, damage in transit, etc, take place. That's almost always the part of the curve covered under the manufacturer's warranty. The long flat part (bottom of the curve) when nothing is likely to go wrong is when they want you to buy an extended warranty. By then anything that's likely to have happened will have happened and your device should be relatively trouble-free during that stretch. The long gradual slope up at the other end of the curve is when the device ages out. If you've been buying an extended warranty through the flat part of the curve you've likely already paid for the replacement via the warranty cost, or more.
Now, if you're buying a phone, tablet, or laptop, and you're the clumsier type who tends to drop anything and everything, an extended warranty that covers drops could be good. Just read the fine print. Many only cover one drop. And reading the fine print on anything is wise. Many service contracts include pro-rating where they devalue the device each year you own it. In year one or two they may give you full replacement value. As the device ages, the replacement value can drop a lot.
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