Posted by Cynthia on November 2, 2005, 9:59 pm
Hi there....
First off....based upon this experience and on what I have read, we
will not buy a GE appliance. I would encourage others to shop around
for other brands to meet their needs before buying GE.
We have just had a "not so good" experience with GE in terms of their
repair/support capability and am wondering how many others have a
similar experience.....
Ours is not as bad as some, I am sure.
Placed a service call for a "trinitron" or something similar for our
$1000 built in microwave. Everything works except the heating element.
A $150 part, plus service and labor.
Called Scotland or India or wherever (with a 20 minute wait time just
to chat with a person) to place the service call....1-5pm for our
service call....at around 5:20 the day of service I called their 1-800
number and reached a person at 5:45 :) "We have you scheduled for 1:00
- 5:00 today, didn't you hear from them". "No". Long story short....
The technician called us at 6:20 (which he should have done per GE
guidelines at 4pm if he knew he was going to be late, but I think he
only did because I asked them to page him) and said, "well, that is an
old microwave (11 years old), I am not sure I have the parts and are
you sure you want to fix it?" We cancelled the service call. If GE
didn't want to fix it, they should have told us up front.
I will call their Consumer Relations Dept tomorrow, but I am thinking
they don't really give a s--t.
What's your experience with GE? And....better yet...what company's
appliances have totally beat your expectations? What would you
recommend to someone in the market for a new appliance?
I can tell you we have a Kenmore (Whirlpool) refrigerator that is at
least 15 years old and have NEVER had a service call, nor on our
Whirlpool washer and dryer (also close to that).
We are unhappy with GE. They have lost our business.
Sort of a funny.....when I ended the call to GE to find out where the
heck our service technician was, he said "Thank you for shopping GE".
I said "Not ever again, thanks,".
Cynthia
Posted by Mortimer Schnerd, RN on November 3, 2005, 6:24 am
Cynthia wrote:
> What's your experience with GE? And....better yet...what company's
> appliances have totally beat your expectations? What would you
> recommend to someone in the market for a new appliance?
> I can tell you we have a Kenmore (Whirlpool) refrigerator that is at
> least 15 years old and have NEVER had a service call, nor on our
> Whirlpool washer and dryer (also close to that).
> We are unhappy with GE. They have lost our business.
You are being unreasonable. Eleven years old? I'm surprised they service
anything older than ten years. Many things today are cheaper to replace than
repair... the service tech's question was valid. I admit I'd be pissed if I sat
around waiting for a vist that never happened.
Those Whirlpool appliances that are 15 years old: do you think Whirlpool will be
able to fix those if they were to die in a financially feasable way? Since they
haven't died yet, you have no way of knowing... but I'd bet they won't.
You can probably find a microwave with the same features as your old one for
half the price now. I replaced my GE over the stove microwave with another
one... and the new one is one thousand times the microwave. I wish I'd bought
it sooner.
--
Mortimer Schnerd, RN
mschnerd@carolina.rr.com.REMOVE
Posted by Al Bundy on November 3, 2005, 8:41 am
GE is not what it was when "Ronney" was advertising for it.
You got 11 years off a magnatron in a GE microwave? You are the man.
I understand that it's built in and you'd probably rather not deal with
changing it. However, a newer one probably would be fairly cheap and
easy to fit in there because the technology has made them lighter and
smaller.
You should still be able to find someone to service your product other
than GE. Just move on and make a decision.
Posted by Percival P. Cassidy on November 3, 2005, 10:04 am
You think they're going to reduce the price of spare parts for an old
appliance? The price of a new magnetron for our old microwave (also
happened to be GE, but I doubt that the practice is peculiar to GE),
even from one of the online discount parts suppliers was more than the
cost of a new microwave. Spare parts are typically very expensive: ISTR
that any years ago somebody priced building some popular model of
automobile from parts and came up with a figure 10x that of just buying
the complete car.
Even closeout items are typically priced in relation to the original
price, not in relation to the price of the
newer/faster/quieter/better/cheaper one.
Perce
On 11/03/05 08:41 am Al Bundy tossed the following ingredients into the
ever-growing pot of cybersoup:
> GE is not what it was when "Ronney" was advertising for it.
> You got 11 years off a magnatron in a GE microwave? You are the man.
> I understand that it's built in and you'd probably rather not deal with
> changing it. However, a newer one probably would be fairly cheap and
> easy to fit in there because the technology has made them lighter and
> smaller.
<snip>
Posted by Mortimer Schnerd, RN on November 3, 2005, 12:23 pm
Al Bundy wrote:
> GE is not what it was when "Ronney" was advertising for it.
> You got 11 years off a magnatron in a GE microwave? You are the man.
> I understand that it's built in and you'd probably rather not deal with
> changing it. However, a newer one probably would be fairly cheap and
> easy to fit in there because the technology has made them lighter and
> smaller.
My old GE Spacesaver only had about 11" inside from front to back; the new one
is a hair over 14".... and yet I doubt it sticks out more than 1/2" further into
the room than the old one. This has made the difference between night and day
in terms of what I can stick inside it. I believe it's probably roughly twice
the power, and now I have defrosting and other features the old one didn't.
Although the instructions specifically say not to install it without help, I
love a challenge and was able to hang it by myself. I used a couple of 24"
spreader clamps to help hold things steady when it ran the bolts through....
jamming them between the bottom of the oven and the countertop on either side of
the stovetop. It was a bit of a job but like I said... I love a challenge.
Sure turned out well...
> appliances have totally beat your expectations? What would you
> recommend to someone in the market for a new appliance?
> I can tell you we have a Kenmore (Whirlpool) refrigerator that is at
> least 15 years old and have NEVER had a service call, nor on our
> Whirlpool washer and dryer (also close to that).
> We are unhappy with GE. They have lost our business.