Author Topic: GPS warranties.  (Read 494 times)

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Offline Siskiyou

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GPS warranties.
« on: August 16, 2006, 08:30:12 PM »
First off I must say that I am very pleased with Garmin’s response to my broken 76Cx.  One of the battery connector had broken.  I sent e-mail to their Support address, but it got miss-directed, and sent to Europe and then back to Kansas.  But I called their busy, but helpful support number.  I received a RMA number and mailed my unit to them.  I insured the unit, but I did not get a tracking number.  The lady at the “Contract” post office told me that with insurance I did not need to pay for a tracking number. 

She told me the number on my insurance receipt was my tracking number.  The information was incorrect.  After trying the number without results I checked the US Postal Service website.  I found that I had been given bad information.  After ten days I called Garmin and the customer service lady told me they had received the unit, but she could not give me a current status on the unit.  She also fed back all my information off her computer screen.  That was rather re-assuring.

Three days later UPS delivered a new 76Cx package to me.  According to the paper work it is a new unit.  Garmin had transferred all the waypoints from my old unit to the new unit.  Since yesterday afternoon I have been playing with the new unit.  It works great.

Garmin also provided me with a new Unlock Code for City Navigator v8.  This was very important to me because it is good, but expensive software.  When I returned the old unit I left the 128MB micro SD card on board.  That card is standard with the 76Cx and came with it at time of purchase.  I had purchased a 1GB micro SD card.  Last night I tried the 1GB card, but the new 76Cx would not recognize it because the earlier unlock code did not match the new unit.  I followed the directions and used the new unlock code with MapSource and it unlocked the mapping software.  I spent a long time selecting every Topo map from the Pacific Ocean to the Eastern boundary of the Rocky Mt. States and from Canada to Mexico.  I also loaded the City Navigator maps for Washington, Oregon, California, Arizona, Florida, and Nevada.  I also selected maps for Boise, ID, and Denver, CO., along with City Navigator maps along I-80 going East.  I also loaded maps for Michigan.  This amounted to 1731 maps and 904.5 MB of space on the 1GB micro SD chip. Selecting so many Topo maps was rather time consuming.  I had to take a break for cookies and milk.

A standard 128 MB Micro SD Chip came with the unit.  I am sure that I will find a use for it.

So things went right.  I resolved the warranty problem during the period the unit is covered by the one-year warranty.  I followed 99 percent of the instructions provided on the Garmin website. (I failed to get a tracking number.)

I have read and heard a number of horror stories regarding warranty problems from other manufactures.  Garmin treated me right.  Yes, there was a long wait to get phone support, approximately 20 minutes.  But there was no rush once I got somebody on the line.  Support was polite and helpful.  When I asked a question that the first support person could not answer I was passed to another Support person who had the answer.   :)

 
There is a learning process to effectively using a gps.  Do not throw your compass and map away!

Boycott: San Francisco, L.A., Oakland, and City of Sacramento, CA.