โNov-01-2006 05:30 PM
โAug-24-2007 10:10 PM
timsrv wrote:
Yeah, this will cost them, but the real cost won't be felt until it's time for their current customers to purchase new equipment. How they handle this problem will make the difference there. Dometic is a big company and is owned by an even larger (huge) parent company. I seriously doubt they will be facing bankruptcy over the cost of this recall.
My way of thinking is they should take their lumps, do the right thing by their customers and those customers will remain loyal. If that means going out of business, then so be it. The way I see it, it's black and white. Then again, I'm old fashioned and believe in the old ways. Today it's all about covering your ass and maintaining high profit margins. The big corporations don't look at long term anymore, they're only looking at short term profits. This is what got them into trouble in the 1st place. Doesn't look like they've learned their lesson because it appears they're using the same practices to try and save their bacon. If they do go bankrupt this will be the reason for their demise. I Don't mean to step on any toes with this rant, but this is my opinion, and Dometic isn't the only one it applies to. Tim
โAug-24-2007 07:07 PM
69800 wrote:
Also the guy who said if you make dometic fix everything they will be bankrupt. Yes the made a mistake but it was not intentional. I would hate to lose them cause I think they make a fine product and If they were gone that would leave one manufacture and then we would be in Deeep S==t.
Mark
PS Be resposible for yourself. No one else will do it for you:)
โAug-24-2007 04:13 PM
โAug-24-2007 12:31 PM
โAug-23-2007 09:33 PM
โAug-23-2007 07:18 PM
โAug-23-2007 05:28 PM
โAug-23-2007 05:24 PM
โAug-22-2007 10:36 PM
69800 wrote:
My amps were 4.7 and resistance was 44.9 ohms so I am sure I am good.
โAug-22-2007 06:46 PM
โAug-22-2007 06:39 PM
โAug-22-2007 01:02 PM
timsrv wrote:twigger wrote:
Dometic has clearly tried to guide blame in the direction of wattage of the electric heating element, when the ACTUAL CAUSE OF FAILURE LIES IN DOMETIC'S WELDING METALLURGY AND WELDING PROCESS CONTROL.
Only problem is that the rebuilt cooling unit is another Dometic, so some other weld will probably fail in a year or two.
Bottom Line: DOMETIC HAS A MATERIALS, WORKMANSHIP AND PROCESS QUALITY CONTROL PROBLEM, BUT SHAMEFULLY WON'T FESS UP TO IT AND DO THE RIGHT THING.
I have suspected this same thing, but have no proof. I personally think it's caused by a combination of cheap grade metal and not enough of it in the important places. The thing that has always bugged me about Dometic's statement to the NHTSA is: how can 29 watts make that much difference? Even 354 watts is admittedly within Dometic's own acceptable range of +/- 10% variance. I am now constantly seeing boiler failures on Dometic refers. 10 years ago this was a rare occurrence. I just replaced one last week that was not part of the recall (it was made a year before the recalled refers). Last month I saw the same thing on an RM2510. There are many more examples I see of this on a regular basis. It's becoming common place. Up until 2 years ago, when I sold a refer, chances were I'd not have to warranty it. Out of the last 10 refers I've sold, 3 have come back with failed cooling cores & 1 was bad out of the crate! At least Dometic gave that guy a new refer. As for my trouble to install, Dometic was generous enough to pay me a total of $60 (driving up to his remote location to install, repacking, shipping, and completing the paperwork was on me). Okay I'll stop, sorry for the rant :(.
My thoughts on rebuilt cooling cores: I quit using those about 3 years ago. I had used them for years and never had a problem. Then around 2004, about half of them I had recently installed started failing.
10 years ago installing a rebuilt core made sense because the end cost to the customer was about $500. At that time replacing the refer cost around $1,000. Failure rates on rebuilt cores were low, so this was fine. Now with inflation, higher shipping costs, and higher cost of doing business, end cost to customer is roughly $850 for rebuilding vs about $1,300 for a new refer. I guess a $450 savings is hard to pass up, but I trust rebuilt cores less than new refers, so over the long run, I think going with rebuilt will likely cost you more (except maybe for guys like twigger that have the skills and motivation to do their own).
When purchasing a new refer, at least you get a 3 year warranty. Most rebuilt cores only come with a very limited 1 year warranty. To get labor and shipping covered, the failure must occur within the 1st 30 days, and most remanufacturers only offer a maximum $50 labor allowance (actual labor is about 5 times that). At least Norcold and Dometic have motivation to make your refer last 3 years ;). Tim
โAug-20-2007 06:46 AM
โAug-20-2007 05:43 AM
timsrv wrote:
Okay, at the risk os sounding petty...
โAug-19-2007 10:55 PM