We have a robot mower - I have written about this before. Currently it is outside working hard, and saving me the bother. However it has developed a fault, which is slightly annoying.
It is a Flymo model, with a flap which comes up to reveal a keypad. Sometimes the flap opens up, and sometimes, after that, if the mower bumps into something, it will stop.
This was just beginning to be a problem last year, but it took me quite a while to find out whether it could be fixed. On the face of it, the problem seems trivial, but I can't find out how to remedy it myself. So eventually I contacted several Flymo offices, and eventually one of them replied and said I need to take it to a Husqvarna dealer.
As winter was approaching I eventually just put it away for the winter.
This year the weather has been so bad that I didn't even get it out until a month or so ago, and to my relief I got it working again quite easily - maybe an hour's work to check the wiring, plug everything else etc. Within a couple of days it tidied up our front lawn, and even when we went away for a week and parked it, it was able to get most of the surface tidied up within two days.
The flap up problem is still annoying though, so by now I had found out which was the nearest Husqvarna dealer - a tad under 20 miles away. I phoned them up and explained the problem.
The first person seemed to understand machines, and said it sounded simple enough, but maybe a catch had broken. He then warned me that it might take a while, but passed me over to someone else to see if I could book it in. She warned me straight off that there was a waiting time of at least 2 weeks - possibly a lot more. After a brief discussion I then said, "OK, - book me in, and let me know when to bring it in".
Then I heard the dreaded words - which are totally stupid - IMO.
"No - we don't do it that way".
"You bring it in, and we might get round to looking at it in two weeks, or more, then we can decide what to do".
As the machine is currently capable of doing an acceptable job, with the slight inconvenience of having to check on it every few hours, we have decided not to take it in for the moment.
There is of course no competitor local company that I can identify which will do the repair.
For the curious I won't mention the Husqvarna dealer, though Peter Rabbit's father wasn't keen.
This is not "life threatening", but a small example of the stupidity which I think is endemic in much of the UK right now.
It is a Flymo model, with a flap which comes up to reveal a keypad. Sometimes the flap opens up, and sometimes, after that, if the mower bumps into something, it will stop.
This was just beginning to be a problem last year, but it took me quite a while to find out whether it could be fixed. On the face of it, the problem seems trivial, but I can't find out how to remedy it myself. So eventually I contacted several Flymo offices, and eventually one of them replied and said I need to take it to a Husqvarna dealer.
As winter was approaching I eventually just put it away for the winter.
This year the weather has been so bad that I didn't even get it out until a month or so ago, and to my relief I got it working again quite easily - maybe an hour's work to check the wiring, plug everything else etc. Within a couple of days it tidied up our front lawn, and even when we went away for a week and parked it, it was able to get most of the surface tidied up within two days.
The flap up problem is still annoying though, so by now I had found out which was the nearest Husqvarna dealer - a tad under 20 miles away. I phoned them up and explained the problem.
The first person seemed to understand machines, and said it sounded simple enough, but maybe a catch had broken. He then warned me that it might take a while, but passed me over to someone else to see if I could book it in. She warned me straight off that there was a waiting time of at least 2 weeks - possibly a lot more. After a brief discussion I then said, "OK, - book me in, and let me know when to bring it in".
Then I heard the dreaded words - which are totally stupid - IMO.
"No - we don't do it that way".
"You bring it in, and we might get round to looking at it in two weeks, or more, then we can decide what to do".
As the machine is currently capable of doing an acceptable job, with the slight inconvenience of having to check on it every few hours, we have decided not to take it in for the moment.
There is of course no competitor local company that I can identify which will do the repair.
For the curious I won't mention the Husqvarna dealer, though Peter Rabbit's father wasn't keen.
This is not "life threatening", but a small example of the stupidity which I think is endemic in much of the UK right now.
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