Retired, I think point # 6 says it all.![]()
and this: And you can get support or arrangement for repairing by e-mail.
Retired, I think point # 6 says it all.![]()
Looked high and low for warranty info on hcigar's web page.
When products need maintenance, please provide complete Warranty Card information:
User Name:
Detailed Address:
Contact Information:
Product Name:
Product Serial Number:
Purchased Date:
Distributor:
Distributor stamp:
Please feel free to contact us at anytime, we are happy to answer everything about hcigar
products! And you can get support or arrangement for repairing by e-mail.
Everything you see above is what's issued to a vendor. The "warranty card" is actually a word document that fully explains their warranty terms and their fixed pricing.
Why not have it on their web site in plain sight?
I've been lucky enough to never need to cash in on a warranty card on a mod assembled by a Chinese based manufacturer but from what I've been reading, it's likely not worth the paper it's printed on. From reading the experiences of others, it seems clear that the vendors generally just point to the manufacturer and the manufacturer is not communicative. This is true at MSRP or not.
What the manufacturer gets from a RPM program where solid pre and post sale support is not required of every vendor eludes me. To put it plainly, Hcigar appears to be behaving irrationally. They might want to copy a top shelf brand pricing model but to do so they need to copy the corresponding service model. What they end up with is high volume vendors making lots of money (there's a shock, right lol) but no additional value to the consumer to enhance brand identity or loyalty and no additional profit to themselves. Just dumb.
The warranty is, IMO, only as solid as your vendor....cuz your replacement would be issued by them, not Hcigar.
It's then the responsibility of the vendor to get a replacement from Hcigar for the replacement that they gave you out of their stock.
That's what the "warranty card" is used for...(vendor replacement)
The warranty is, IMO, only as solid as your vendor....cuz your replacement would be issued by them, not Hcigar.
It's then the responsibility of the vendor to get a replacement from Hcigar for the replacement that they gave you out of their stock.
That's what the "warranty card" is used for...(vendor replacement)
Yup, so hcigar's threat that they won't honor any warranty if a vendor does not charge at least MSRP is meaningless. Neither Hcigar nor any vendor I know of will stand behind their product so why should I pay extra for some illusory warranty?
I don't understand why everybody keeps saying the consumer is being punished.Consumers are not bound by any reseller agreements, so to punish the consumer for a reseller violating any agreement with Hcigar seems shady at best.
I don't understand why everybody keeps saying the consumer is being punished.
If a reseller sells a unit with warranty to a consumer then that reseller is obliged to fulfil the warranty claims should anything be wrong. If it turns out the reseller has sold the unit below MSRP and HCigar has voided the warranty then that's the reseller's problem, not the consumer's.
To me the customer should not be placed in the MSRP issue at all. That should be between HCigar and the vendor and the threat of loss of warranty by the customer should not be in the equation at all.
It IS just between the vendor and HCigar. Where do you read HCigar is saying the customer loses warranty? The vendor loses warranty.To me the customer should not be placed in the MSRP issue at all. That should be between HCigar and the vendor and the threat of loss of warranty by the customer should not be in the equation at all.
It IS just between the vendor and HCigar. Where do you read HCigar is saying the customer loses warranty? The vendor loses warranty.
If the vendor then decides to withdraw the customer's warranty then that's something between the customer and the vendor. You buy something from a vendor. They give you warranty.
I don't know the laws in your country but if I buy something here and the vendor gives me warranty then they make a commitment. No matter what happens, they have to fulfil that. If they won't I can sue themIf you tried to approach Hcigar asking for a warranty replacement, they would direct you to the vendor where you bought it. But if you bought it from a vendor that they-canned, you're SOL.
I don't know the laws in your country but if I buy something here and the vendor gives me warranty then they make a commitment. No matter what happens, they have to fulfil that. If they won't I can sue them