When I read that HTC was offering to replace cracked screens on a one-time basis I thought that was pretty cool. But then I read it was only if the screen was cracked within the first 6 months and I thought what were the odds of that happening. Seemed like it was more likely to happen in months 6-24. Well, I got my M8 in April and the other day I dropped it. I was sitting down and reached into my pocket when it rang and it fell out. It was only a short distance and I've had it happen many times before without incident, but for some reason the screen completely shattered. I even had a protector on it to no avail.
Well, I contacted HTC via messenger and had a great experience. It did take awhile as the operator went over the various options, but ultimately I chose the completely free option which will take 8-10 days which I can afford because I am just using my old phone. Just sent it off yesterday so I'll let you know how it goes, but so far, it seems they have lived up to their promise.
That's awesome ! I was wondering how they would handle this and if there weren't any conditions they could deny your phone.
Well i'm not going to try it on purpose ..
They just asked for the serial # and then they were able to get all of the other information they needed from that, although they did ask when I bought the phone. I'm not sure why they would ask that considering it had to be less than 6 months that I've had it.
They sent me a pre-paid label and I dropped it off at UPS.
Be thankful you live in a country where they offer the advantage program
Sent from my HTC One_M8 using Tapatalk
Oh, really. What country do you live in that they don't offer it?
bigragu said:
Oh, really. What country do you live in that they don't offer it?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Every other country except USA?
bigragu said:
Oh, really. What country do you live in that they don't offer it?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Canada's HTC Advantage is only the extra Google Drive space and software update promise.
Didn't realize. Doesn't really make any sense why that would be.
So you didn't root this or anything I hope right?
I just got off the chat with HTC and they said if I root this phone it voids all warranty even screen repair.
So now I have been scrambling to go back to stock everything from S-OFF so I can send this in for repair using the same free option.
murf43143 said:
So you didn't root this or anything I hope right?
I just got off the chat with HTC and they said if I root this phone it voids all warranty even screen repair.
So now I have been scrambling to go back to stock everything from S-OFF so I can send this in for repair using the same free option.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Unfortunately, they will still be able to tell. My screen shattered and I had an unlocked bootloader with S-off. Went back to stock, re-locked, changed re-locked to locked and removed tampered banner, and sent it in (from what I read turning S-on will trip re-locked and tampered so I didn't do).
Got a quote from them yesterday that they'd only replace my screen for free if I paid $290 for them to replace my motherboard since my bootloader was unlocked (they will look to see if you requested an unlock token from HTC Dev as well as looking on the device itself). After spending an hour on the phone with them yesterday they say they will do it for $145 but a supervisor is supposed to call me back so we can discuss more. They still haven't explained to me why the motherboard needs to be replaced besides "we have to since the bootloader was unlocked."
My approach when dealing with them is that there are two separate warranties for the phone - the screen replacement warranty and a 1 year warranty for the rest of the phone. The screen warranty doesn't mention unlocked bootloader voiding it, only that "unauthorized modifications.." will. Whereas the 1 year warranty mentions "unauthorized modifications..." as well as "the bootloader has been unlocked.." voiding the warranty.
I'll let you guys know where I get with them.
jfvick said:
Unfortunately, they will still be able to tell. My screen shattered and I had an unlocked bootloader with S-off. Went back to stock, re-locked, changed re-locked to locked and removed tampered banner, and sent it in (from what I read turning S-on will trip re-locked and tampered so I didn't do).
Got a quote from them yesterday that they'd only replace my screen for free if I paid $290 for them to replace my motherboard since my bootloader was unlocked (they will look to see if you requested an unlock token from HTC Dev as well as looking on the device itself). After spending an hour on the phone with them yesterday they say they will do it for $145 but a supervisor is supposed to call me back so we can discuss more. They still haven't explained to me why the motherboard needs to be replaced besides "we have to since the bootloader was unlocked."
My approach when dealing with them is that there are two separate warranties for the phone - the screen replacement warranty and a 1 year warranty for the rest of the phone. The screen warranty doesn't mention unlocked bootloader voiding it, only that "unauthorized modifications.." will. Whereas the 1 year warranty mentions "unauthorized modifications..." as well as "the bootloader has been unlocked.." voiding the warranty.
I'll let you guys know where I get with them.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
But requesting a unlock token from htcdev doesn't necessarily mean that the device is unlocked. This HTC policy is crap.
I got my screen replaced under warranty from HTC for my One X, and they gave me a non gorilla glass, which i realized in a week as it got plenty of scratches easily. But didn't bother to explain the dumb customer care, just sold the device...
Sent from my HTC One_M8 using XDA Premium 4 mobile app
bigragu said:
When I read that HTC was offering to replace cracked screens on a one-time basis I thought that was pretty cool. But then I read it was only if the screen was cracked within the first 6 months and I thought what were the odds of that happening. Seemed like it was more likely to happen in months 6-24. Well, I got my M8 in April and the other day I dropped it. I was sitting down and reached into my pocket when it rang and it fell out. It was only a short distance and I've had it happen many times before without incident, but for some reason the screen completely shattered. I even had a protector on it to no avail.
Well, I contacted HTC via messenger and had a great experience. It did take awhile as the operator went over the various options, but ultimately I chose the completely free option which will take 8-10 days which I can afford because I am just using my old phone. Just sent it off yesterday so I'll let you know how it goes, but so far, it seems they have lived up to their promise.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Wow well be careful next time
I smashed the screen on my one and damaged the case and speaker grills. All repaired by HTC for £103 ($175) in just over 2 weeks. Couldn't believe how cheap it was considering the parts themselves cost more than the actual cost of repair.
So a all in all thumbs up for HTC for not charging an extortionate price for repair. I sent mine in unlocked everything, but no complaints from HTC because I wasn't claiming under warranty.
I was watching xmen yesterday and when it ended I got up and somehow my phone slipped out of my shorts pocket and landed screen down. It made such a loud noise I was so scared to pick it up. Luckily, when I did not a scratch on the screen. I think what might've saved me was I had a clear skin on the two grills (nothing on screen) which might've propped it up a bit by making a lip. There was a small scuff on the metal rim on the left side of the phone. I took a nail filer and smoothed it out. When you shine light on it you can see some scratches from filing. However, when you run your finger down it, it doesn't catch like it did when the scuff was there.
Sent from my HTC One_M8 using XDA Free mobile app
otariq said:
I was watching xmen yesterday and when it ended I got up and somehow my phone slipped out of my shorts pocket and landed screen down. It made such a loud noise I was so scared to pick it up. Luckily, when I did not a scratch on the screen. I think what might've saved me was I had a clear skin on the two grills (nothing on screen) which might've propped it up a bit by making a lip. There was a small scuff on the metal rim on the left side of the phone. I took a nail filer and smoothed it out. When you shine light on it you can see some scratches from filing. However, when you run your finger down it, it doesn't catch like it did when the scuff was there.
Sent from my HTC One_M8 using XDA Free mobile app
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
So how was the movie
Sent from my HTC One_M8 using XDA Premium 4 mobile app
they charged me $290 because i rooted and unlocked my bootloader on AT&T variant.. they said it is no under warranty anymore
it wasn't converted to GPE, just rooted..
before i sent to them i re-locked bootloader and installed stock version as well. .still they charged me $290
I can't believe how horrible this is. It's really not what one would expect by a company such as HTC, especially as they are trying to build a loyal user base and get out of trouble.
As far as I read until now, this doesn't seem to happen in Europe, but this policy proves that they are only behaving well in Europe because of the laws, not because of caring for being fair.
flayzeraynx said:
they charged me $290 because i rooted and unlocked my bootloader on AT&T variant.. they said it is no under warranty anymore
it wasn't converted to GPE, just rooted..
before i sent to them i re-locked bootloader and installed stock version as well. .still they charged me $290
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Wow really? I thought warranty was still valid. In any case, how would a shattered screen be related to software mods? I have an AT&T variant as well with S-Off and unlocked bootloader. Not looking good then.
is350 said:
Wow really? I thought warranty was still valid. In any case, how would a shattered screen be related to software mods? I have an AT&T variant as well with S-Off and unlocked bootloader. Not looking good then.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
nope, i did 4 times conversation with htc representative and they told me, when you download bootloader unlock file from htc's website, there is a disclaimer says this will void your warranty.. you have to accept that to download the unlock file.. that is why they charged $290 for the replacement on cracked screen even if i revert back to stock and re-lock it
flayzeraynx said:
nope, i did 4 times conversation with htc representative and they told me, when you download bootloader unlock file from htc's website, there is a disclaimer says this will void your warranty.. you have to accept that to download the unlock file.. that is why they charged $290 for the replacement on cracked screen even if i revert back to stock and re-lock it
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
jfvick said:
Unfortunately, they will still be able to tell. My screen shattered and I had an unlocked bootloader with S-off. Went back to stock, re-locked, changed re-locked to locked and removed tampered banner, and sent it in (from what I read turning S-on will trip re-locked and tampered so I didn't do).
Got a quote from them yesterday that they'd only replace my screen for free if I paid $290 for them to replace my motherboard since my bootloader was unlocked (they will look to see if you requested an unlock token from HTC Dev as well as looking on the device itself). After spending an hour on the phone with them yesterday they say they will do it for $145 but a supervisor is supposed to call me back so we can discuss more. They still haven't explained to me why the motherboard needs to be replaced besides "we have to since the bootloader was unlocked."
My approach when dealing with them is that there are two separate warranties for the phone - the screen replacement warranty and a 1 year warranty for the rest of the phone. The screen warranty doesn't mention unlocked bootloader voiding it, only that "unauthorized modifications.." will. Whereas the 1 year warranty mentions "unauthorized modifications..." as well as "the bootloader has been unlocked.." voiding the warranty.
I'll let you guys know where I get with them.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
So after talking to them Friday, they said someone from the repair team would call me in 3-5 days. Today (Monday) I got a message that they would in fact replace my screen free of charge. He apologized and said because the bootloader was unlocked it automatically generated the $290 quote to fix it but since the software on my phone was stock and supported by HTC they would fix it under warranty. They should be shipping my phone back to me tomorrow or the next day.
From what I've seen there is a lot of confusion on the issue of free screen replacement and unlocked bootloader. So for those of you in a similar situation I would recommend converting back to stock completely (bootloader and rom) before sending to HTC and when they send you a quote for $290, call and complain and ask to speak to a manager when they say there's nothing they can do. Only the Limited Warranty (which is separate from the Screen Warranty) stipulates unlocking the bootloader void's the warranty and you're filing a claim under the Screen Warranty. If you keep complaining they'll eventually do it for free.
Hope this saves more than a few people the $290 they keep trying to charge.
Related
It seems quite a few people have had questions about getting a replacement phone due to a dust issue on an original rooted phone. Here is my experience:
I called HTC and began the replacement process, but did not mention my phone was rooted. Three days later I received another Nexus One with no battery and no battery cover. My observations on the differences between the old phone and the new phone can be found here: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=655966
I removed the battery cover and battery from my original phone and shipped it to HTC in Texas with the packaging and shipping label they supplied.
Approximately 5 days later (today), I received an email from HTC saying "We have completed our diagnostic tests. To review the results and confirm this quotation please visit our service site." I went to the site and there was an option to pay a $196 service fee or to pay $28 for the return shipment of my original phone (without any servicing).
I called up HTC to find out more information. The service representative pulled up my file and immediately asked me if my phone had been rooted. I had little choice at this point so I said my phone had indeed been rooted. The representative told me my options are to:
a) Pay the $196 to replace the motherboard in the phone (does this mean Goolge/HTC also do not know how to relock the bootloader?), keep the replacement phone they sent, and not receive back my original phone. This is the worst case scenario where I pay $196 to get a brand new replacement N1 with no dust issue.
b) Pay the $28 shipping charge to return my old phone, and return the replacement phone. This would bring me back to square one, with having my original rooted phone with the same dust issue.
c) Pay the $28 shipping charge to return my old phone with the same dust issue. Now I would own two full priced N1s, one that is brand new, and a second that still has a dust issue.
Most importantly, and my only hope really for coming out on top, the representative mentioned that I should call back tomorrow before 5PM EST and speak to a supervisor that has the ability to declare that rooting the phone has no impact on the dust manufacturing issue, and I could keep the replacement phone at no charge. The representative said that there is a 50/50 chance the supervisor would do this.
If the supervisor will not honor the warranty and let me keep the replacement phone for no charge, I will just return the replacement phone, get my old phone back, disassemble the phone, clean the dust out and reseal the phone with RTV or something similar.
I will call them up again tomorrow and report back what happens.
It has been difficult to resist rooting the replacement phone.
UPDATE: Through the help of a google employee, I was pointed towards this form: http://google.com/support/android/bin/request.py?contact_type=refund
If you start a ticket with this form, the Google sales team will work to help resolve voided warranty issues from an unlocked bootloader when exchanging or servicing the N1 due to a manufacturing defect.
I called HTC today and they said I was no longer going to be charged $196 because of my unlocked bootloader, and my warranty would be honored. The representative on the phone seemed to have no idea why the ticket status had changed.
I am very pleased with the outcome, and give many thanks to the Google employees that go out of their way to support their loyal customers. It is nice to know that the passion we have for Android is acknowledged and supported by the Google team.
Time to root the new N1.
I wonder if they make a distinction between rooting and an unlocked bootloader?
Because it is possible to un-root. So for other people returning phones, they could un-root, and if they ask if it's rooted, they could say no.
Paul22000 said:
I wonder if they make a distinction between rooting and an unlocked bootloader?
Because it is possible to un-root. So for other people returning phones, they could un-root, and if they ask if it's rooted, they could say no.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Valid point, but I think the issue is voiding the warranty by unlocking the bootloader.
How do you expect HTC to honor a warranty which you clearly and willingly voided?
JD914 said:
How do you expect HTC to honor a warranty which you clearly voided willingly?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Welcome to XDA.
I don't necessarily expect HTC to honor my voided warranty, but I am optimistic that HTC will fix my $580 defective phone from a manufacturing defect that is in no way related to rooting.
Like the representative I spoke with said, there's about a 50/50 chance it will work out. No harm in trying.
Interesting.
I think it's kind of crappy that unlocking the bootloader voids your hardware warranty too. I mean, if your phone has an obvious physical defect like this, completely unrelated to the firmware, then they should honor the warranty.
Comon, HTC, be reasonable! There is dust under the screen and nothing else is bad! That is obviously not related to rooting in any way. $196 to replace the motherboard? Yeah right! More like press a button on the computer and relock it.
i don't know if he is still around here anymore, but swetland works for google, and when the n1 came out, he was going to be an advocate for us, and if you were having obvious manufacturing defects (such as dust under the screen), he could pull strings to get it fixed for you.
i say pm him, and see if you get a response.
GldRush98 said:
Interesting.
I think it's kind of crappy that unlocking the bootloader voids your hardware warranty too. I mean, if your phone has an obvious physical defect like this, completely unrelated to the firmware, then they should honor the warranty.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
They should but in the real world they don't have to and more than likely wont. Most people don't, but if you read the literature that comes with electronic devices you'll see why they do what they do as far as warranties go.
And this is why I keep saying repeatedly, stop sending your device back people. A few specs of dust isn't worth the hassle. Just sent it back at 364 days. THEN it's worth it.
Paul22000 said:
And this is why I keep saying repeatedly, stop sending your device back people. A few specs of dust isn't worth the hassle. Just sent it back at 364 days. THEN it's worth it.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I had excessive dust, more than 30 specs.
irishrally said:
I had excessive dust, more than 30 specs.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
30 specs?
The only way it'd be worth it to send it back is when you have so much dust you can't even COUNT the specs.
Paul22000 said:
30 specs?
The only way it'd be worth it to send it back is when you have so much dust you can't even COUNT the specs.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
No, dust is really annoying and is frustrating to have considering the price we paid for this thing. The more HTC has to refurbish, the more they learn their lesson and make sure that no dust gets in.
OP, get back to us and let us know what happens
Good news - this issue has been resolved and will be charged nothing for my rooted phone with dust defect exchange. See OP for details.
Many thanks to the dedicated Google team that supports their loyal customers.
irishrally said:
Good news - this issue has been resolved and will be charged nothing for my rooted phone with dust defect exchange. See OP for details.
Many thanks to the dedicated Google team that supports their loyal customers.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Congrats!
Any chance you can update the link in the OP?
It's linked as "google.com/support/android/bi...ct_type=refund" with the dots, which leads to a dead page of course
Paul22000 said:
Congrats!
Any chance you can update the link in the OP?
It's linked as "google.com/support/android/bi...ct_type=refund" with the dots, which leads to a dead page of course
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks. OP updated.
JD914 said:
How do you expect HTC to honor a warranty which you clearly and willingly voided?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Here in the US, a warranty termination because of a any fine print violation will not stand up in court unless the warranty violation had a direct impact on a defect in question. Automakers have tried that kind of bologna with aftermarket parts, and they've failed. They can't refuse to honor a warranty just because a car was serviced by others, and they can't refuse to warranty an alternator because someone put on an aftermarket exhaust system, unless they can prove that those actions had a direct impact on the defect.
This does not mean HTC is obligated to bail someone out who has bricked their phone, but hardware issues like dust under the digitizer or faulty microphones or the like clearly can't be tied to unlocking the bootloader. I expect HTC or any other company to honor the laws wherever their products are marketed, and it seems that's exactly what they are doing.
I hope this ends your confusion, and really wish more slack was allowed by some for people who unlock the boot loader and then end up with hardware issues requiring service.
attn1 said:
I hope this ends your confusion, and really wish more slack was allowed by some for people who unlock the boot loader and then end up with hardware issues requiring service.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I hope someone figures out how to re-lock the bootloader.
I'm really suspicious about the rooting voiding your warranty. I mean you paid damn near 577 for the device..well i know I Did... Why can't you root your own ****..its known as a google dev phone if I'm wrong correct me..But isn't android open source? why can't we try and help it be a better Operating system? They want us to sit on 2.1 until google puts something out? Why not dev with our phones and help google help itself? I mean damn... I could see if you were under a contract with tmobile..but I bought my phone brand new unlocked for the full price give me some damn use of my phone..
This is depressing, out of nowhere this big ugly glaring green pixel is here and won't go away
I've only had this phone for 2 months (The AT and T build sucks by the way compared to T mobile, screen atleast)
Now I wanted to ask, ive unlocked the bootloader so technically no warranty, but as this is a hardware problem ...nothing due to unlocking would cause this right
nothing on CYanogen..nothing on set cpu (which installed just 2 days ago and started using , that's why I suspect it)
but its not like my phone was over heating
Any ideas...does anyone know how nice HTC Support will be over this..or am I stuck with this
Thanks
PS: Is there a way to relock the bootloader, that is get rid of that unlock logo at boot?
attached photo**
SS2006 said:
This is depressing, out of nowhere this big ugly glaring green pixel is here and won't go away
I've only had this phone for 2 months (The AT and T build sucks by the way compared to T mobile, screen atleast)
Now I wanted to ask, ive unlocked the bootloader so technically no warranty, but as this is a hardware problem ...nothing due to unlocking would cause this right
nothing on CYanogen..nothing on set cpu (which installed just 2 days ago and started using , that's why I suspect it)
but its not like my phone was over heating
Any ideas...does anyone know how nice HTC Support will be over this..or am I stuck with this
Thanks
PS: Is there a way to relock the bootloader, that is get rid of that unlock logo at boot?
attached photo**
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
eesh sorry to hear that.
Your two options are...
1. Claim warranty exchange without telling them it's unlocked. I've read some cases of people getting away with this. My only concern with his is that I'm afraid someone at HTC will charge me for a motherboard replacement on the old phone once they find out it's unlocked. But again some people have gotten away with it.
2. Be honest and tell them it's unlocked...which is what I did BUT it was a very long battle with HTC to get my phone under warranty. They automatically will try to charge you $196 to replace the motherboard because of the unlocked bootloader. A new motherboard technically puts you back under warranty but at the cost of $196. I had to start a case with a better business bureau and after about a month of fighting on the phone on daily calls they finally sent me a new phone without even telling me they were. I guess their way of telling me to shut the hell up.
Unfortunately, there's no way to relock your bootloader. And because of my horrid experience I never unlocked my second Nexus. I'm glad I didn't cause my power button broke a few days ago and the warranty exchange was a lot easier with a locked bootloader.
Good luck.
Some people with unlocked bootloaders have had better luck conacting google about the warranty exchange. There's a thread around here where someone details the process.
That is big/bright! I had a defective pixel and it was way smaller than that. That looks almost like a cluster of them.
If you had tmobile I would say file a lost phone claim if you had the insurance on it.
Since paying 130 is cheaper than 200 lol.
Like the 2nd poster said, just call and don't tell em and see what happens.
Hey Everyone,
I just wanted to share my experience with sending my nexus one with an unlocked bootloader to HTC for cleaning.
Like a lot of nexus one owners, I started seeing dust under my screen after a few months (I always kept the phone in it's case while not in use). I called HTC and they sent me an email with a fedex delivery label. I sent the phone in on a Monday, and by the next day they had received it and posted a status that my phone was being diagnosed. A few hours later, the status changed to indicate it was being repaired. By Wednesday, they finished the repair and I received my cleaned phone on Thursday.
The best part: I had unlocked my bootloader and when I received the phone back the bootloader was relocked! This time, I gained root without unlocking the bootloader.
One issue however: My phone's IMEI is different that what it was when I sent it in. Not a huge problem, however some games I had no longer recognized my phone after I did a nandroid restore.
I hope this helps anyone who has a problem with dust under their screen and is reluctant to send it in for cleaning.
-a9
Interesting to hear that they cleaned it and returned the same phone. When I called them in may they said it will take two weeks and they will send me a refurb phone.
What was the process like? The Nexus I just bought form a dude from CL was kinda dinged up, which was okay, and the phone was perfect other than those few dings, I find out later(which he probably didn't care about but I do) was the back button isn't as sensitive as the other capacitive buttons and there's one spec of dust under the screen.
How do I start the process?
I had the same results a few months back, but I opted for a refurb instead of a repair. Told them I had dust under the screen, and the rep said, "OK, we have two options...repair or refurb." Not a single question asked.
staulkor said:
I had the same results a few months back, but I opted for a refurb instead of a repair. Told them I had dust under the screen, and the rep said, "OK, we have two options...repair or refurb." Not a single question asked.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Any deposit or hold on the account?
EDIT: Just checked the phone, It has definite dust under the screen near the top and bottom. I am a shoe-in for a refurb now.
Same exact story for me. I also had a few dings in the bottom shell of the phone, they replaced that as well. Which is awesome. I just know it's my phone because the IMEI is the same, as well as a small little scratch on the screen is still there.
Also shipped a Cliq in to Motorola to get the keyboard repaired. I shipped them both on a Tuesday, got the Nexus back on that Friday. Didn't get the Cliq back until the Friday after. That's ridiculous.
My serial number and wireless MAC are the same but the IMEI is different.
Sent from my Nexus One using XDA App
Grrr, I will have to wait almost a week and a half to do this, since that's when I will have the funds available for the process. . .I don't want to wait a week! Lol, I want to have this done by the end of the week.
@Tito You don't need "funds" to do the repair, just send them your phone and use another for awhile. I lucked out and upgraded to the Vibrant, and then got my Nexus One back the day I was returning the Vibrant. Since it sucks and all.. Haha.
Wisefire said:
@Tito You don't need "funds" to do the repair, just send them your phone and use another for awhile. I lucked out and upgraded to the Vibrant, and then got my Nexus One back the day I was returning the Vibrant. Since it sucks and all.. Haha.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I am wanting a refurb. Do they repair cosmetic stuff like dings or scratches on the housing aswell? If so I will just do that.
~~Tito~~ said:
I am wanting a refurb. Do they repair cosmetic stuff like dings or scratches on the housing aswell? If so I will just do that.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes, they replaced my entire casing which had a few small scratches and one large ding on the bottom where I dropped it on the sidewalk. It's pretty wonderful.
Wisefire said:
Yes, they replaced my entire casing which had a few small scratches and one large ding on the bottom where I dropped it on the sidewalk. It's pretty wonderful.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I will wait for the refutb lol, cs rep convinced me since everything is guarenteed to work and they make sure it has a new mobo and everything so its like new. I am down for that lol. But this wait time is gonna kill me, since I dont have all the money to do it.
staulkor said:
I had the same results a few months back, but I opted for a refurb instead of a repair. Told them I had dust under the screen, and the rep said, "OK, we have two options...repair or refurb." Not a single question asked.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
What was your situation? Unlocked bootloader and all? Did you mention it, did you get any charges, can you tell the whole story lol. I will have 500+$ on the line.
Nexus One Dev handset
I have the exact same issue with dust under the screen but on the lower left of the screen. I have two things working against me ;
a) I'm not sure if the handset is in warranty as it was given to me by a Google Staff member as it's a Dev phone.
b) there are superficial scratch marks from my keys on the casing which an engineer my assume are impact marks from a drop which is not the case.
what are my chances of it being repaired for free?
I would expect it to be out of warranty buy now if it came from a Googler.
I sent mine back due to my screen was impossible to use, sent it back, they replaced just about all inside parts, mother board and much more, I had the phone back in 3 days working great. HTC has done everything to make my phone perfect. I would not hesitate to purchase any HTC product, they are the best IMO.
Thank You HTC
I called HTC UK my phone is still in warranty period until December 2011. She also said the screen would be replaced free of charge as it is manufacturers fault if I wanted any additional repairs i.e. casing etc that I would have to pay for that, however I can still avail of the UPS pick up service. Price Quotation of £30 for new casing.
£30? That's bloody good!
I've my N1 off with HTC UK at present getting repaired, it for some reason stopped letting any SIM card connected to any network.
Sent it off last Thursday (24th Feb) and still not got it back yet. HTC repair tracking is telling me the repair is done but no sign of the phone as yet.
So my phone decided to start rebooting at random times all the time. No matter what ROM was on there, or if it was charging or not, it would reboot.
I called HTC and the tech asked me what I had done/tried and after a bit he told me that the sensor that detects overheating was faulty (referreed to it as the hardware watchdog) which was causing a reboot. He said that it was entirely possible that my phones memory was also borked but was not going to commit to that. He did mention that the fact it is unlocked may have negative consequences as they could blame software for the hardware failure.
I was xferred to warranty dept and opted for the "mail me a shipping label and I will mail my phone back" option rather than a swap. They told me to keep the battery, sd card, sim card, phone back plate and take off any screen protectors.
I will update this threat with what I experience so others can see what to expect.
My poor Nexus...it has treated me well.
Off goes an AT&T non SLCD model...here's hoping I get back the same
Sent mine in Thursday for dust under the screen and the sound muffled, came back in Monday fully repaired and no dust to speak of.
Good luck, sometimes 2 weeks is the wrong expected timeframe. =)
Did you get back an Amoled version?
I have a repair ticket in because my headphone jack (I thought) was flaky. I rebooted a few times and it has been working great since. When I called, I had the CS rep find out if I would get a SLCD or an AMOLED screen back as my exchange. She reported that I would get a SLCD. So I never finished the process in fear of losing my AMOLED screen, which was a huge buying factor.
I figured I use my headphone port rarely vs my screen every time. But again it seems to be working fine now. I would swap them if I knew I would get an AMOLED back.
Ticket Information
Status: Service is complete. Please visit HTC Customer Survey if you would like to take a quick survey regarding your experience contacting HTC.
Service Type: Repair
Issue Description: rebooting - (possibly overheating?)
----------------------
now to wait for it to return to me. who wants to bet nothing was done to it
player911 said:
Did you get back an Amoled version?
I have a repair ticket in because my headphone jack (I thought) was flaky. I rebooted a few times and it has been working great since. When I called, I had the CS rep find out if I would get a SLCD or an AMOLED screen back as my exchange. She reported that I would get a SLCD. So I never finished the process in fear of losing my AMOLED screen, which was a huge buying factor.
I figured I use my headphone port rarely vs my screen every time. But again it seems to be working fine now. I would swap them if I knew I would get an AMOLED back.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If your trying to warranty exchange the att unit, then I'm pretty sure you won't get the slcd unit! They stopped manufacturing the att units before manufacturing the slcd units. Anyone who swaps the att unit are only swapping for recycled refurbished att units.
Phone is back and seems fixed. They also locked my bootloader which goes to prove its possible.
Sent from my Nexus One using XDA App
I sent mine in for power button repair on Monday using the prepaid label. they got it yesterday morning and when I checked this morning, the status says its repaired. Hopefully it'll arrive by saturday.
I just got my phone delivered. Exactly 5 business days - mailed it on Monday and arrived today. I'm certain that its my original N1 because I made an inscription before sending it in. The power button is fixed and very responsive. I'm wondering how they are able to lock it. I had rooted my N with Cyanogen 6.1 on it. Gotta start all over again.
Hey, guys after reading this thread I decided to call HTC about my N1's paint peeling issue. I opted for the swap but I'm a little hesitant now because my bootloader's unlocked. Even though the paint chipping is under warranty, the unlocking the bootloader isn't. The lady said that I'll have to pay for any "out of warranty" repairs with my phone. Do you guys think I should go ahead with the swap or ask for them to not do the swap (I can just tell them that I don't want to be charged $529)? or should I even send my N1 in at all? Thanks guys!
I sent in a Nexus One rooted phone that was completely dead. The LED wouldn't even light up when plugged in.
Exactly 1 week later they fixed it, all under warranty.
quarq said:
I sent in a Nexus One rooted phone that was completely dead. The LED wouldn't even light up when plugged in.
Exactly 1 week later they fixed it, all under warranty.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Did u do the swap option or did you send in your Zune?
timchoi89 said:
Hey, guys after reading this thread I decided to call HTC about my N1's paint peeling issue. I opted for the swap but I'm a little hesitant now because my bootloader's unlocked. Even though the paint chipping is under warranty, the unlocking the bootloader isn't. The lady said that I'll have to pay for any "out of warranty" repairs with my phone. Do you guys think I should go ahead with the swap or ask for them to not do the swap (I can just tell them that I don't want to be charged $529)? or should I even send my N1 in at all? Thanks guys!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Well HTC seems fair with their warranty policy. Never had to deal with them, but from what I read, if the issue is not caused by unlocking the bootloader (and I am almost 100% positive paint chipping did not start by changing the ROM ) they will honor the warranty. Look up all those posts with people with failing power button and an unlocked bootloader, getting it exchanged under warranty.
deprecate said:
Phone is back and seems fixed. They also locked my bootloader which goes to prove its possible.
Sent from my Nexus One using XDA App
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Are you sure your bootloader is relocked? When I sent mine in for rebooting I got the same phone back... same serial no and imei sticker under the battery, but when I connect to adb it's a different serial number. I'm guessing they swapped out the motherboard but left everything else the same (including amoled screen) which would on turn give you a locked bootloader.
HTC can lock the bootloader again, they can also set your HBOOT to S-OFF, which is probably how they lock it.
How can I tell if I have a AMOLED screen or not? Going to swap with HTC. So I guess I need to know what I'm getting in the mail from them. My nexus one would not make calls or connect to voice or data anymore. Thanks
CentralWARMK said:
How can I tell if I have a AMOLED screen or not? Going to swap with HTC. So I guess I need to know what I'm getting in the mail from them. My nexus one would not make calls or connect to voice or data anymore. Thanks
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
lol, if you don't know what you have, then what do you care what you get back?
I'm glad you got a laugh out of it. At least someone is happy today.
But, yes I would like to know. Do you know?
The only way to tell is with your eyes. In a dark room, bring up a mostly black screen. On an AMOLED it will be black, on SLCD you'll get backlight bleed.
Thanks Rusty It looks like its a AMOLED screen! yee ha HTC was fast on sending a Nexus one on the swap. Only four days since I called.
For those of us who ordered the Nexus One on the day it was released (January 5, 2010), we're coming up on one year, which is the period of the original warranty (see http://static.googleusercontent.com...e.com/en/us/googlephone/nexusone-warranty.pdf).
So, if you haven't unlocked your bootloader yet because you didn't want to void the warranty, you may as well do it on January 5th, because your warranty expires then anyway
LOL @ waiting a year to unlock your phone that is specifically distinguished by being unlocked.
Hey, my phone's bootloader is still unlocked you know.
HTC replaced my N1 under warranty, even though I unlocked the bootloader the day I got it. Why wait 1 year to unlock the phone's true potential?
inneyeseakay said:
HTC replaced my N1 under warranty, even though I unlocked the bootloader the day I got it. Why wait 1 year to unlock the phone's true potential?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
My bootloader is locked and I have access to the full potential of my phone...just 10 minutes longer; the time needed to input the adb commands
I'm not willing to unlock my bootloader since my warranty is for a year (bought mine in september this year) and it's covered by my carrier, not by HTC...they will totally refuse any phone that has been unlocked, but won't care if it has been rooted or so (they are too noob to notice anyways )
Time sure does fly when your having fun on XDA. Still able to do everything I need with it locked
I bought mine in May and originally unlocked the bootloader... I highly recommend NOT doing so.
For one, its pointless. You can root and install custom bootloaders/kernels/roms without unlocking the bootloader
Second, you can't go back.
Third, you'll have a huge ugly unlock icon on every boot-up.
Fourth, you can't go back.
Fifth, you'll have a huge ugly unlock icon on every boot-up.
Nuff said.
I did a warranty swap for mine and luckily got a replacement that I am keeping locked (bad headset jack btw).
There is no reason to go back, and the unlock icon looks fine. What a bunch if stupid ass excuses that make zero sense.
Actually I'm not keen on the padlock, and do get tempted to lock mine back up every so often. Functionality wins though.
Mine was shipped January 7th, so the end of my primary warranty is imminent too. And I got two warranty swaps out of it, too.
It turns out I have an extra year of coverage though - yay MBNA Platinum Plus card! But I will have to figure out what is the routine for making use of this coverage. I suspect that device swaps will be out of the question; I'd probably have to send it in for repair and then submit the bill to the insurer.
Another potential snag - I think that in the fine print, to invoke my extended warranty it has to be something that would have been covered under the original warranty. So if I were to unlock the bootloader, and the insurer were to ask HTC, they might get an answer that the original warranty didn't cover my situation.
Mine was unlocked on launch day the moment I got it
The unlock icon is far from ugly, it's a nerd badge of honor.
player911 said:
Third, you'll have a huge ugly unlock icon on every boot-up.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Wear it with pride!
Never unlocked it, and I never will. No reason for that.
YoMarK said:
Never unlocked it, and I never will. No reason for that.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Flashing unreleased versions of Android was a huge plus for me!
mortzz said:
Mine was unlocked on launch day the moment I got it
The unlock icon is far from ugly, it's a nerd badge of honor.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
+1 to that guy!
mortzz said:
Flashing unreleased versions of Android was a huge plus for me!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Oh, if your bootloader isnt Unlocked, cant you flash unreleased versions of android, ie upcoming gingerbread?
If i unlocked mine now, would i have to wipe and reflash my current Rom?
I unlocked mine few days after buying mine in February. I just sent mine in a few weeks ago for dust under screen and got a replacement.
They won't reject the phones because they are unlocked. They will however, I believe; reject them if they are still rooted after you send them off to HTC repair center.
I do agree with not unlocking the phone since we have the one click root method.
Can anyone give me 5 reasons why unlocking the bootloader should be done? I rooted my phone and can do pretty much everything I think that is needed.
I'm interested to know what else is being missed out on (I'm not being sarcastic, I'm honestly interested!)
The most valid reason: safer flashing of the radio.
Sistum Id said:
They won't reject the phones because they are unlocked. They will however, I believe; reject them if they are still rooted after you send them off to HTC repair center.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Nope, I sent mine to HTC Repair Center with CM6.1 on it. They sent me a fresh replacement, no additional charges for unlocked bootloader/3rd party ROM/misc scratches/etc...