So the waterproofing of my phone is compromised somehow. I see condensation and water droplets behind the camera lens. I contacted the Amazon seller about it and he told me to contact Sony Mobile because this should have U.S. warranty. Well, I contacted Sony Mobile, and from my IMEI number, they determined my phone's origin was from Australia, and since it's close to the D6603 they are selling in the U.S., turnaround time shouldn't be long because they should have all the parts they need, locally. But the following email I received begged to differ. I'm just glad that they are honoring the warranty even though the phone is from Australia.
Dear DOHCtor,
**** Please include a printed copy of your proof of purchase when you send the item ****
Thank you for contacting Sony Xperia™ Support.
This is an RMA Number confirmation for your Warranty Service. Your RMA Number is: 123456789
To ensure that there is no shipping damage, we recommend that you pack your phone in bubble pack and then place it in a sturdy corrugated, crush-proof box for shipping as shipping damage will void the warranty.
Before shipping your product, please make sure you remove any removable or customized accessories, such as:
- battery cover (if removable)
- battery (if removable)
- SIM card
- SIM card adapters
- top cap that hides the SIM and SD cards (if your phone has this option).
- removable front faceplates (if your phone has this option - refer to User Guide)
- wrist straps/belt hooks (if applicable)
- memory stick or microSD card (if applicable)
Return of these extra items cannot be guaranteed. Please store these items in a safe place during your phone's repair so that they may be replaced on the phone when it is returned to you. Any SIM cards or memory cards received will be destroyed as a security precaution.
Make sure you send your accessory via a method that is traceable, i.e. UPS or FedEx. For all shipping methods we recommend you purchase insurance to cover the value of the device shipped.
We strongly recommend that you not use the USPS unless you purchase Delivery Confirmation and Signature Confirmation options. If you ship using USPS without both of these options, and we cannot confirm who signed for your package, Sony Mobile will not be responsible for lost or mis-delivered packages.
Please print clearly on the outside of the box your return shipping address and the RMA number 123456789.
Ship the package to:
Sony Laredo Logistics Center
Suite SM-DEU
11302 Eastpoint Drive, Building B
Laredo, TX 78045
Your phone was not made for the United States market. If parts need to be ordered to complete your repair then there may be delays. While we do our very best to return your phone as quickly as possible, for this reason there is no estimated amount of time for repairs of phones not released in this market (USA).
In addition, if the phone is not repairable or determined to be Beyond Economical Repair, but still covered by the warranty, please be aware that Sony Mobile will offer a local variant as close to the original model as possible, instead of the international variant that was sent for service.
Our records indicate that your phone should be returned to:
DOHCtor
Somewhere in the USA
If this return address is incorrect, please contact our support center at 1-866-766-9374 to obtain a new Order number before you ship. Upon receipt of your product, it will be inspected for damage. The Sony Limited Warranty, which can be found in your owner's manual, does not cover any failure of the product due to normal wear and tear, or due to misuse. The warranty does not cover any failure of the product due to accident or resulting from liquid damage. Physical and/or liquid damaged accessories are not repairable and will be returned un-repaired.
Thank you,
Sony Xperia™ Repair
Kind Regards,
Michael.
This is interesting, keep us informed. I would like to know if they change or repair your Z3.
I think that comment at the end of the service letter about turnaround time were stock template material. Since the D6603 has been officially released in the USA now, I'd imagine parts world be available for a speedy repair.
Sent from my D6603 using XDA Free mobile app
Its the D6603 released here? I thought the D6616 was the NA version.
abhinav.tella said:
Its the D6603 released here? I thought the D6616 was the NA version.
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D6616 is the t-mobile version (32GB, bands LTE 2,4,12, locked bootloader)
D6603 is the unlocked version sold via the USA sony store. (it says pre-order now, versus not available earlier this month) D6603 works 100% on AT&T's LTE bands(2,4,5,17) and unlockable bootloader
http://store.sony.com/xperia-z3-lte...artphone?vva_ColorCode=FFFFFF&_t=pfm=category
B&H says in-stock(D6603 as well, with the correct USA FCC documents in the box, according to some people)
http://www.bhphotovideo.com/c/product/1091325-REG/sony_1289_4869_xperia_z3_lte_phone.html
Thanks for the clarification, I assumed it was an unbranded D6616.
I ordered the d6603 from sony store last week. Shipping says tomorrow
Quick update. I sent in my phone and they received it on November 20. I called in to check on the repair status today (November 29) and they told me that they are scrapping my original Z3 because they can't repair it and going to be sending me a brand new replacement Z3. Been using my Nexus 5 on Lollipop and I don't know how i can go back to 4.4 when the replacement arrives lol.
Related
all heros have 12 month warranty right? you dont need to apply for it? if anything goes wrong with your phone then you just need to contact htc ? am i right?
thanks
That very much depends on where you are physically located, and where you physically bought the device.
My phone came from T-Mobile UK, and comes with a 1 year warranty. If I have a problem with the device in that time, I should go back to the original vendor (i.e. T-Mobile UK) to seek remedy. In addition, even though I only have a 1 year warranty, my statutory rights are not affected - see this link
Bear in mind that this is going to be covered differently in other regions.
Regards,
Dave
i bought it from ebay. its a simfree version
so will it still be covered.?
thanks
I couldn't tell you definitively.
Assuming you are in the UK, if you bought it from a UK company on Ebay and is was sold "new", then they are responsible. The same may well apply across the EU, but I'm uncertain of this.
If it was bought as second hand from an individual, the situation is not so clear, but it is probable that the original retailer should still be required to honour the warranty.
Regards,
Dave
I faced that issue some time ago and i contacted htc for a problem.
well from what they told me, if the phone wasn't bought at an official htc vendor, then you have no business with htc. Only thing you can do is you can send your phone to htc to get repaired or checked but you'll have to pay for it ( even if you have a guarantee from a shop)
You should contact the store where you bought the phone. And the catch at these local stores is that you should have your guarantee and receipt on your name to be able to claim it. so buying on ebay ...... i cant say for sure
Hello,
I'm planning to buy a new HD2 locked to T-mobile on eBay. The question is, even if the seller gives me a receipt, won't HTC send me to T-mobile saying u bought it there, fix it there and T-mobile will say to me that I'm not a T-mobile costumer and will decline?
I mean if something happens and I'll need a warranty
I'm pretty sure that yes, that would be the case. Mine is from O2, and if I put my serial into the htc website it says not today thank you.
Yes
If you don't want to use the HD2 on T-Mobile you will have no warranty as you described.
If you are going to use the HD2 on T-Mobile then as long as the person you buy it from has not used it then your warranty will be good. The warranty is tied to the account that first uses the phone. The IMEI number on the phone registers with T-Mobile on the account it is first used on for warranty purposes, any warranty claims would go through T-Mobile on that account.
Ok - first and most important - WHAT COUNTRY ARE YOU IN?
EVERY country has diferent rules. For example, in the states you have almost no consumer protection but in the UK you have very strong consumer protection.
If you are in the UK I can certainly help you with this.
Hi guys I also have a T mobile locked HD2 bought on Ebay from UK; she is/was an uk T mobile customer. Now the phone is with me in Italy, what can I do to have it replaced?
Its not t-mobiles responsibilty. Under UK consumer law you return the device to the person/company who sold it to you and NOT the manufacturer. So, if you purchased the phone from t-Mobile, then you return to T-Mob, if you purchased from Fred Smith on Ebay, return to Fred Smith on Ebay.
The device is also expected to last for a reasonable lifetime without fault. In the case of mobiles, if they wish to sell them on 18/24 month contracts it should be reasonable for a phone to last 18/24 months.
First you need to contact them letter via recorded delivery post detailing the problem and asking them to fix or replace the device.
return it to htc via t-mobile or directly to htc..
it's quite easy,i do this several times with items purchased on ebay that i returned to pc-world..
they have records that they sold the item as the item have a serial number..
gabbs said:
return it to htc via t-mobile or directly to htc..
it's quite easy,i do this several times with items purchased on ebay that i returned to pc-world..
they have records that they sold the item as the item have a serial number..
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If its Cavallipurosangue you are talking to this is very unlikely to work. T-Mobile will want to tie this up with the customer that they have and it won't.
Acer certainly wouldn't do this for me. I purchased a phone under a company contract (and therefor not covered by consumer rights) and it turns out that phone was already registered to someone else. Acer point blank refused to deal with me, almost claiming that I had stolen property.
In both cases, its NOT T-Mobiles responsibilty (in the eyes of UK Sales of Goods Act) and IF they do repair/replace, it will only be good will and out of there choice.
T-Mobile will have a "contract" (and i don't mean 12/24 month contract) with the buyer who would have been "Fred Smith" and no-one else, specialy not with the two posters here. The two posters have entered into a contract with the Ebay sellers and this is where ALL liability lays.
The Sale of Goods act doesn't cover private sales, which are effectively 2nd user sales. It's a case of buyer beware unless the item is faulty from the outset.
In this case, 'Fred Smith' has a duty to accurately describe something he is selling, but once accepted by the new owner his liability ends, even if it was technically a sealed box sale.
HTC have accepted responsibility for these sort of warranty claims in the past under their pan-european warranty, but they have no legal obligation so to do.
If a foreign buyer buys a T-Mobile phone, and it later goes wrong, his only other option is to contact the seller and see if he will negotiate with T-Mobile as a goodwill gesture.
heh - then they are royaly stuffed if anything goes wrong and depend entirley on the mood of the person they speak to at HTC at the time.
Simple then: If you want a warranty, don't buy from Ebay.
Monty Burns said:
heh - then they are royaly stuffed if anything goes wrong and depend entirley on the mood of the person they speak to at HTC at the time.
Simple then: If you want a warranty, don't buy from Ebay.
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Click to collapse
That's about the size of it! So make sure you get a bargain!
If you buy the xoom from ebay or even get it as a gift, will you still be able to use the motorola 1 year limited warranty or even be able to upgrade the radio to LTE 4g?
I have been reading that the warranty only covers the original purchaser, and the LTE 4g is only for the original purchase. Is there anyway around this?
For instance, could you still get it fixed/ upgraded if you have the original purchase receipt?
This sucks for people who get the Xoom as a gift or something.
Usually you'll need to have the original receipt with proof of purchase date. The receipt also usually needs to be from an "authorized" dealer, ie, not eBay, not a discount warehouse, not some guy out of his car.
If you have the original receipt, your chances are good.
Some companies also have a policy that if the device is released on X date, any warranty claims up to 1 year after that date are by default valid. However, you bet they'll want to see the receipt regardless to make sure you're the original purchaser.
One of the reasons I don't buy items like this on eBay unless I expect to completely throw my money away.
Edit:
Also, most warranties require some kind of registration of the device within X period of time. It's illegal in some states I believe but common practice in most. This gives them marketing information about their product, a chance to up-sell extended warranties,
know who the original purchaser of device X with Y serial number is, as well as where they bought it and when.
I think ASUS has a motherboard / video card warranty of 90 days, but if you register the device within the first 30 they extend the warranty to 1 or 3 years. BFG tech did a lifetime warranty if you registered the device.
Sirchuk said:
Usually you'll need to have the original receipt with proof of purchase date. The receipt also usually needs to be from an "authorized" dealer, ie, not eBay, not a discount warehouse, not some guy out of his car.
If you have the original receipt, your chances are good.
Some companies also have a policy that if the device is released on X date, any warranty claims up to 1 year after that date are by default valid. However, you bet they'll want to see the receipt regardless to make sure you're the original purchaser.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
So what if the original receipt has someone else's name/address on it?
Flaunt77 said:
So what if the original receipt has someone else's name/address on it?
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Click to collapse
Just say it was a gift from an aunt/uncle/brother/friend/whogivesacrap
have you tried square trade
does anyone know if they will warrant an unlocked phone? i read on Bell's website that their warranty is by the manufacturer's discretion, so i need to find out if motorola will accept it
I check the phone (Defy with suddenly dead earpiece) with Moto's online troubleshooting tools (and the tools show that the phone is under warranty), and was prompted to send it for repair. The shipping instructions say that I must "include proof of purchase (if required)". How should I deal with that? Include a note that this phone is a gift (it is), or just do not put anything? Should I pre-register the phone (and they may ask me how and when and where was it purchased) prior to sending it?
this was my original question too actually. Do you have a copy if the receipt? If not, I would start the process to send it back and then mention it was a gift or say you lost it. There really is nothing else for you to do but try. Even if you had the receipt. The shipping info on that proofbof purchase would be different than your own, but maybe you could just say you moved addresses since you bought it.
...
myv6mustang said:
have you tried square trade
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Click to collapse
I contacted SquareTrade yesterday about the same scenario and was told that an original receipt is necessary to have a plan with them...
I was looking to purchase a Samsung Galaxy SII i9100 (U.K. version) but I know that Samsung won't honor the warranty since its a not a U.S. phone.
I was reading some old threads on this about how for $94 Squaretrade will insure your phone for $600 for two years but some people said they would cover it and some said they wouldn't...
Then I got this directly from Squaretrade's website:
"Coverage Details
2 years of coverage: The SquareTrade Smartphone warranty covers your Smartphone for up to 2 years, starting on the date of purchase.
Covered Issues: Both accidents (e.g., broken screen or other damage through drops AND liquid damage including full immersion) and out-of-warranty normal use failures (e.g., battery no longer charging or other hardware failures) are covered. We do not cover loss, theft, willful damage or damage occurring through gross misuse."
This scared the hell out of me, I've never used Squaretrade before. Lets say something goes wrong and I contact them for support... wouldn't they just say "sorry we only cover out-of-warranty repairs you need to go to Samsung U.K. since you have a 1st year warranty through them" ???
Kind of a big purchase (over $600) so I need to be sure that I am covered before pulling the trigger
Also does anyone know the general cost of shipping a galaxy s i9100 from the U.S. to the U.K. for samsung to repair it?
Thanks for you help I really appreciate it.
P.S. in case anyone says to search I already looked through both of the U.S. warranty threads and didn't find an answer
If you a buy a phone in its country of intended sale from an authorized Samsung dealer it's covered by Samsung's two-year global warranty. So if you buy it in the UK and have it shipped to the U.S. it'll be covered as you'll have a receipt from the UK in GBP. Expansys-USA also sends phones they sell in the U.S. back to the UK for repair through their office there. Now that the phone's being sold in the U.S. there's a good chance you could get a UK phone under warranty repaired here. Samsung's very strict and requires a receipt and/or a credit card statement before they repair a phone under warranty. They also have a DB of serial numbers that show which phones were sent to which resellers. Their warranty system is hard to scam.
SquareTrade does cover gray market phones. This is from their T&C:
If the manufacturer refuses to honor their warranty because they consider your item grey market or not purchased from an authorized retailer, we will still cover you.
And yes, assuming you get your phone from the UK or from Expansys-USA, SquareTrade only covers what the manufacturer doesn't. But if you crack the screen or cause damage to the phone that Samsung woudn't cover it's still good to have SquareTrade as a back-up.
Owning a gray market phone is a pain in the ass if something goes wrong. If it has to be repaired in the UK you'll be without for a couple of weeks. If you want the safety and security of carrier insurance and swaps for defects stick with an American version.
BarryH_GEG said:
If you a buy a phone in its country of intended sale from an authorized Samsung dealer it's covered by Samsung's two-year global warranty.
Expansys-USA also sends phones they sell in the U.S. back to the UK for repair through their office there.
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Click to collapse
So if I purchase through Expansys-USA that means I still have the 2 year (or is it 1 year since it was bought from a Expansys branch in the States?) warranty and if anything goes wrong I send it to their U.S. branch which then forwards it to their U.K. branch to get repaired?
Is there any sort of warranty f.a.q. on Expansys website that says this in writing that I can print out? I looked on their website and found nothing detailing this U.S. to U.K. forwarding process and don't wan't to have something go wrong and then later on an Expansys-USA rep that doesn't know much telling me "Ooooh no sir, we don't do that... you have to go through Samsung U.K. yourself to get repairs"
BarryH_GEG said:
Owning a gray market phone is a pain in the ass if something goes wrong. If it has to be repaired in the UK you'll be without for a couple of weeks. If you want the safety and security of carrier insurance and swaps for defects stick with an American version.
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Click to collapse
Gezz why the heck does Samsung make it so hard for Americans? You'd think they would want to make it easier for potential customers to buy their products that make them money instead of blacklisting the product from warranty and turning sales away
ap3604 said:
So if I purchase through Expansys-USA that means I still have the 2 year (or is it 1 year since it was bought from a Expansys branch in the States?) warranty and if anything goes wrong I send it to their U.S. branch which then forwards it to their U.K. branch to get repaired?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
In essence, Expansys is your warranty. I'm guessing they act as middle-man for the life of the Samsung warranty which, internationally, is two years. You really need to check with them.
Is there any sort of warranty f.a.q. on Expansys website that says this in writing that I can print out? I looked on their website and found nothing detailing this U.S. to U.K. forwarding process and don't wan't to have something go wrong and then later on an Expansys-USA rep that doesn't know much telling me "Ooooh no sir, we don't do that... you have to go through Samsung U.K. yourself to get repairs"
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Click to collapse
E-mail their sales group and ask them to send you an e-mail confirming their policy. If you want to buy the phone in the UK, Handtec, Clove, and CleverBoxes all ship to the U.S.
Gezz why the heck does Samsung make it so hard for Americans? You'd think they would want to make it easier for potential customers to buy their products that make them money instead of blacklisting the product from warranty and turning sales away
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Click to collapse
The U.S. carriers are their bread and butter. They'd rather funnel all their sales through them rather than compete by selling unlocked phones direct.
Easy...
ap3604 said:
I was looking to purchase a Samsung Galaxy SII i9100 (U.K. version) but I know that Samsung won't honor the warranty since its a not a U.S. phone.
I was reading some old threads on this about how for $94 Squaretrade will insure your phone for $600 for two years but some people said they would cover it and some said they wouldn't...
Then I got this directly from Squaretrade's website:
"Coverage Details
2 years of coverage: The SquareTrade Smartphone warranty covers your Smartphone for up to 2 years, starting on the date of purchase.
Covered Issues: Both accidents (e.g., broken screen or other damage through drops AND liquid damage including full immersion) and out-of-warranty normal use failures (e.g., battery no longer charging or other hardware failures) are covered. We do not cover loss, theft, willful damage or damage occurring through gross misuse."
This scared the hell out of me, I've never used Squaretrade before. Lets say something goes wrong and I contact them for support... wouldn't they just say "sorry we only cover out-of-warranty repairs you need to go to Samsung U.K. since you have a 1st year warranty through them" ???
Kind of a big purchase (over $600) so I need to be sure that I am covered before pulling the trigger
Also does anyone know the general cost of shipping a galaxy s i9100 from the U.S. to the U.K. for samsung to repair it?
Thanks for you help I really appreciate it.
P.S. in case anyone says to search I already looked through both of the U.S. warranty threads and didn't find an answer
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Simple, throw it into the toiled before claiming the insurance.
My Verizon 10 has formed a yellow band on the right side of the screen. I would like to send it in for repair, but I bought the phone second hand and am not using it on the verizon network.
1) Would Verizon accept my warranty claim without a receipt or VZW account?
2) Would HTC repair it under warranty as if I bought it from them?
3) if the answer to 2) is no, would HTC repair it at a cost, and does anyone know how much a screen replacement costs?
Getting in touch with the original owner is not possible either. Any help would be appreciated!
Update: Just finished speaking with htc, they will accept my warranty claim directly! Hope they don't surprise me with a cost quote now!
Verizon won't do anything for you. The only way they would is if you are the original purchaser, in which case they will replace the device if it's within the manufacturer's 1 year warranty. HTC *might* do something for you, but I'm not too knowledgeable on their warranty policy. There's a good chance they will restrict warranty service to the original purchaser, or tell you that since it's a Verizon phone, you'll have to go through them. HTC does offer a one-time "uh-oh" protection, but that's limited to people who purchased their phone through HTC.com.
You can try it yourself, the digitizer runs around $70 on eBay, but it isn't a simple repair. Otherwise, most screen repair services charge in the $150-$200 range.
Here's the HTC warranty information. It looks like you'll want to have the phone 100% stock with locked bootloader and s-on. http://dl4.htc.com/Web_materials/Ma...evA.PDF?_ga=1.178459428.1435750642.1485623721
From the Warranty disclosure:
"A copy of the original invoice, receipt or bill of sale for the purchase of the Product or Accessory. You
must present a valid proof of purchase upon making any claims pursuant to this Limited Warranty. If no valid proof of purchase is supplied and the Product or Accessory was manufactured more than fifteen (15) months prior to the date the claim is made, HTC has no obligation to provide support under the Limited Warranty."
pastorbennett said:
Verizon won't do anything for you. The only way they would is if you are the original purchaser, in which case they will replace the device if it's within the manufacturer's 1 year warranty. HTC *might* do something for you, but I'm not too knowledgeable on their warranty policy. There's a good chance they will restrict warranty service to the original purchaser, or tell you that since it's a Verizon phone, you'll have to go through them. HTC does offer a one-time "uh-oh" protection, but that's limited to people who purchased their phone through HTC.com.
You can try it yourself, the digitizer runs around $70 on eBay, but it isn't a simple repair. Otherwise, most screen repair services charge in the $150-$200 range.
Here's the HTC warranty information. It looks like you'll want to have the phone 100% stock with locked bootloader and s-on. http://dl4.htc.com/Web_materials/Ma...evA.PDF?_ga=1.178459428.1435750642.1485623721
From the Warranty disclosure:
"A copy of the original invoice, receipt or bill of sale for the purchase of the Product or Accessory. You
must present a valid proof of purchase upon making any claims pursuant to this Limited Warranty. If no valid proof of purchase is supplied and the Product or Accessory was manufactured more than fifteen (15) months prior to the date the claim is made, HTC has no obligation to provide support under the Limited Warranty."
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Thanks, everything that you said is about what I was expecting myself. But htc surprised me by accepting it as an in-warranty claim. We'll see how it goes.
Tarima said:
Thanks, everything that you said is about what I was expecting myself. But htc surprised me by accepting it as an in-warranty claim. We'll see how it goes.
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That's good to hear. I'd wager it's because the date of manufacture is well within the 12 months, since I don't think the HTC 10 has even been out a year. It says a lot about a company that they're honoring their warranty when, technically, the don't have to.
That's awesome and it definitely says a lot about what type of company HTC is. They have been my go to for years and I'm so happy to continue backing them when they make business decisions like these.
LakesideWiseman said:
That's awesome and it definitely says a lot about what type of company HTC is. They have been my go to for years and I'm so happy to continue backing them when they make business decisions like these.
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Click to collapse
True, I was also impressed when I had my m7 and they offered to fix my purple-tinted camera for free way after the warranty was over (I didn't go for it because they said I would absolutely have to pay to fix my screen at the same time even though I didn't want to). But I've also heard bad things about their customer service (for example at the launch of the 10). This is my first time dealing with a warranty claim with HTC so I'll cross my fingers it goes well.
Update for anyone in a similar situation: HTC replaced the screen and shipped the phone back to me from Texas to Montreal, Canada overnight at no charge. The whole process including my own shipping took only 8 days, pretty impressive. And not a single dent/scratch or other trace of the repair. Very impressed with this service.
Only downside is having to pay 40$ shipping with insurance for a faulty device, but considering I didn't have a receipt I won't complain too much here!