Tamara68 · 56-60, F
Many years ago, a new fridge was delivered at our home, but it was not the one we ordered. They delivered ours somewhere else. The delivery person was rude and aggressive and first refused to get us the right one. In the end he did take the wrong one back and delivered the right one. But he was agressive and scratched all the walls and furniture near him.
NativePortlander1970 · 51-55
@Tamara68 That's when you let the store know what happened.
Tamara68 · 56-60, F
@NativePortlander1970 sure, but they didn't care.
ArishMell · 70-79, M
Unless the delivery driver is directly employed by the retailer so might understand the products, why would you expect him to instruct the customer how to use the appliance? Which has presumably come with a manual anyway?
If the appliance did not work because it was genuinely faulty, that is a different matter and should be covered by the guarantee.
If the appliance did not work because it was genuinely faulty, that is a different matter and should be covered by the guarantee.
Younameit · F
You gotta call the fridges company
NativePortlander1970 · 51-55
Earlier this year our disability/62+ section 8 building got kitchen remodels, including new ovens and refrigerators, I lost a lot of food because the fridge i got was not cooling properly and not maintaining under 40F for days. When I looked online for the model number, GE didn't even have the model number listed even for parts on their site, I even had the building maintenance manager plug it in for 48 hours before I transfered my cold stuff over when it finally got to 34F, it took all that time to get to that temp. Ehen I woke up the next morning the thermometer I had in it was showing 49F, safe temp is 39F and below. I demanded another fridge and got it, it got to 33F within two hours and has never gone above 35F
swirlie · 31-35
That's why owner's manuals are written... the owner of a new fridge is expected to open the manual and read it upon delivery.
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swirlie · 31-35
@ArishMell
I actually have an entire external hard drive for my laptop that's dedicated to instruction-manuals! That's what I do as a sidelines is write descriptive explanation for how something works or is to be operated which is then published in different languages.
But I also have a drawer in a very large metal filing cabinet that's been dedicated to storing all the farm equipment manuals for farm equipment that my father has ever purchased, most of which he still owns! My father is Norwegian so believe me when I say that it's much better for all concerned if he phones me in the middle of the night and asks me to look something up in a manual that's kept him awake at night, than to leave the manual in his own desk drawer!
I actually have an entire external hard drive for my laptop that's dedicated to instruction-manuals! That's what I do as a sidelines is write descriptive explanation for how something works or is to be operated which is then published in different languages.
But I also have a drawer in a very large metal filing cabinet that's been dedicated to storing all the farm equipment manuals for farm equipment that my father has ever purchased, most of which he still owns! My father is Norwegian so believe me when I say that it's much better for all concerned if he phones me in the middle of the night and asks me to look something up in a manual that's kept him awake at night, than to leave the manual in his own desk drawer!
ArishMell · 70-79, M
@swirlie Writing technical manuals is a very valuable skill not really recognised enough - perhaps because we are all so familiar with imported ones for home equipment, written in second-language English but not edited to make better sense.
In my experience I have found industrial and laboratory equipment manuals usually much better than ones issued with domestic equipment. I expect that's true in agriculture too.
At work I once replaced a faulty sub-assembly in a large, complex electronics unit. This apparently caused raised eyebrows upstairs - am I qualified and all that. My line manager pointed out I had followed the official instructions for that work, used the proper tools, had assembly experience. The handbook was a model of instructions-writing, by numbered steps, clear diagrams, good-quuality text, etc. Yes, the repaired equipment did work! Phew!
At home my own family illustrated the value of the Instruction Manual.
My sister, Sue, told me this...
Her husband Mark "helped" their son-in-law erect a big garden shed, which had arrived as a kit. Mark can be a bit impetuous, is not always very practical, and seems to have taken charge. No careful matching parts to instructions, laying them out in a logical order, planning how to manipulate the bigger sections. They completed it, but with great difficulty, with some parts strained to make them fit, having muddled up some components and the erection order.
Meanwhile Mum and daughter, indoors, set to with a flat-packed bookcase. Move furniture to give working room, identify all the parts neatly laid out on the floor, follow the booklet carefully. The bookcase went together very easily and just as its designer intended!
In my experience I have found industrial and laboratory equipment manuals usually much better than ones issued with domestic equipment. I expect that's true in agriculture too.
At work I once replaced a faulty sub-assembly in a large, complex electronics unit. This apparently caused raised eyebrows upstairs - am I qualified and all that. My line manager pointed out I had followed the official instructions for that work, used the proper tools, had assembly experience. The handbook was a model of instructions-writing, by numbered steps, clear diagrams, good-quuality text, etc. Yes, the repaired equipment did work! Phew!
At home my own family illustrated the value of the Instruction Manual.
My sister, Sue, told me this...
Her husband Mark "helped" their son-in-law erect a big garden shed, which had arrived as a kit. Mark can be a bit impetuous, is not always very practical, and seems to have taken charge. No careful matching parts to instructions, laying them out in a logical order, planning how to manipulate the bigger sections. They completed it, but with great difficulty, with some parts strained to make them fit, having muddled up some components and the erection order.
Meanwhile Mum and daughter, indoors, set to with a flat-packed bookcase. Move furniture to give working room, identify all the parts neatly laid out on the floor, follow the booklet carefully. The bookcase went together very easily and just as its designer intended!
AbstractWave · 61-69, M
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