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Rich, > It's almost never worth trying to fix anything, > even if it's only a couple months old and covered by > warranty. If you're pressed for time, is a warranty > worth anything at all? I think this is true everywhere and for everything, sadly. I just replaced a 250W metal-halide flood lamp because the ballast failed. Replacing a ballast is child's play, but an entire new fixture was $66 while the ballast alone was $90. I wrote the company, but their answer was half lawyer / half psychologist and entirely worthless (... commitment to safety and exceptional customer value, yadda, yadda ...). There may also be something that marks you/me/us as being of some previous generation -- as a trustee of a fraternity at MIT I can see & say that even today's MIT freshmen arrive at school never having fixed anything in their lives. If those of us who want to fix things are a declining fraction of one's customer base, why would a thin-margin supplier bother making it possible for us to repair anything? (Independent repair shops, whether for autos or computers, seem to be slowly fading away, too.) I may be turning into a curmedgeon, --dan
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