Yes, but demand outstrips their resources so unless there are complaints in bulk or evidence of actual criminality they won't become involved.Isn't this the kind of situation where Trading Standards could be helpful.
Small claims court for the cost of a new tv. Print the form off the web, take it to the shop and serve a photocopy with a letter explaining that as his statutory legal rights are being ignored you have no choice but to sue for a replacement.
Odds are you'll have a new tv that day, and in the unlikely event they don't they'll soon have the cash for a new one.
Don't try any of that speaking loudly crap - it's just as likely to have the manager on the phone to the police, or have security remove you, and no matter how righteous you are any onlookers will simply then presume you're a troublemaker. The object of the exercise is to get a new tv, not get banned from the store. Do it properly.
Firm, polite is very effective, and works
And when my brother was a mechanic they used to do unspeakable things to the cars of rude people. Idcrather a polite 'no' than making myself look a twot (or more of a twot than normal).Depend on the retail chan/store manager.
I've been the man that said no and stuck to my guns while being firm and polite..
Why do you think solicitors, barristers have so much money... it's in their interests to make things as ambiguous and as unclear as possible.... and then feed off people getting hung up about 'right's and points of principle and 'seeing it through to the end'.... music to their philistine, machiavellian ears!What surprises me is the hugely different interpretations of one set of rules.
Er, no you can't. The relevance of the six year period is simply that after that it is statutorily too late to sue for breach of contract.You can ask for a repair or replacement at any time up to six years after purchase. It is the choice of the retailer whether to repair or replace.
Er, no you can't. The relevance of the six year period is simply that after that it is statutorily too late to sue for breach of contract.
Many consumer products have a design life shorter than six years. You have absolutely no legal right to a repair or replacement of something which packed in after four or five years, or often less.