Matrix Orbital warranty policy
Posted: Thu Jan 25, 2007 8:12 pm
Hi,
We are a developer of government security systems worldwide and are evaluating several of the M.O. displays for a couple of projects, namely the GLK24064 and GLK12232. While we are generally pleased about the looks and general operation of the displays (we use I2C), we have a little concern on the warranty shipment policies. We have discovered in the short time we've had the displays that both displays have some design defects that require shipping them back to Canada (from Georgia) to get firmware updates. The GLK24064 does not perform the I2C reads from the display like the user's manual says it does. We were told that version 5.4 corrects the problem (we have 5.3). On the GLK12232, the I2C protocol doesn't work at all. There seems to be a 'mod', which requires 'lifting a pin' from a RS232 chip and jumpering one of the RS232 pads. We have been unable to get this mod to fix the I2C operations. We were told to send them back for update.
However, the warranty policy of M.O. is that only AIR shipments are allowed for warranty repairs, which puts the shipping costs at $50+ dollars. We think this policy is unfair? Particularly, when the displays have definite design flaws that prevent them from working like the user's manual states.
We haven't as of yet received an answer from M.O. on the reasoning behind their strict AIR shipment policy on warranty repairs. We were told simply that 'No Ground shipments are allowed'. With a policy like this, is M.O. discouraging sending defective product back by having high shipping costs? Do their products have that many problems to warrant such a policy? We have to justify and document all project components, and why we choose and do not chose them for all our govt. projects. We don't think our customers are going to allow us to choose a product that has this type of expensive warranty policy, particularly for design defect situations. It seems a little suspicious.
Any help on this issue would be greatly appreciated for those who have sent their displays back for warranty repair. We are simply looking at the long term outlook of using the M.O. displays in our govt. products and how to justify their use.
Thanks.
Sutton Mehaffey
Lookout Portable Security
We are a developer of government security systems worldwide and are evaluating several of the M.O. displays for a couple of projects, namely the GLK24064 and GLK12232. While we are generally pleased about the looks and general operation of the displays (we use I2C), we have a little concern on the warranty shipment policies. We have discovered in the short time we've had the displays that both displays have some design defects that require shipping them back to Canada (from Georgia) to get firmware updates. The GLK24064 does not perform the I2C reads from the display like the user's manual says it does. We were told that version 5.4 corrects the problem (we have 5.3). On the GLK12232, the I2C protocol doesn't work at all. There seems to be a 'mod', which requires 'lifting a pin' from a RS232 chip and jumpering one of the RS232 pads. We have been unable to get this mod to fix the I2C operations. We were told to send them back for update.
However, the warranty policy of M.O. is that only AIR shipments are allowed for warranty repairs, which puts the shipping costs at $50+ dollars. We think this policy is unfair? Particularly, when the displays have definite design flaws that prevent them from working like the user's manual states.
We haven't as of yet received an answer from M.O. on the reasoning behind their strict AIR shipment policy on warranty repairs. We were told simply that 'No Ground shipments are allowed'. With a policy like this, is M.O. discouraging sending defective product back by having high shipping costs? Do their products have that many problems to warrant such a policy? We have to justify and document all project components, and why we choose and do not chose them for all our govt. projects. We don't think our customers are going to allow us to choose a product that has this type of expensive warranty policy, particularly for design defect situations. It seems a little suspicious.
Any help on this issue would be greatly appreciated for those who have sent their displays back for warranty repair. We are simply looking at the long term outlook of using the M.O. displays in our govt. products and how to justify their use.
Thanks.
Sutton Mehaffey
Lookout Portable Security