CassidyAce
Senior Retro Guru
Wow! That's pretty harsh on the OP. I don't think he comes across as that unreasonable at all. If he was that unreasonable, he wouldn't be questioning whether he's being unreasonable. After all, it was sold with a lifetime warranty on the bearings and, for all we know, sales staff at the time might have made quite a selling point of that.sinnerman":2dusu1k9 said:I think dragging it out now during a Pandemic to go for a jolly (as so many have). Seeing seized and/or damaged bearings/cases, and thinking hang on, its suppose to have a lifetime warranty, is more than unreasonable, its a bit of a piss take.
But to be fair, this is whats wrong with the world.
When something has been neglected, its always easier to find others to blame. Of course your bearings should LAST FOREVER. :facepalm:
Now, Marin admit that it was a mistake to offer that warranty. At least they're being honest about it. They're not claiming that the Marin Bikes of today is not the same company as the Marin Bikes of 2004. They're not saying that the 'lifetime' in question is five years, ten years, fifteen years or whatever. They're saying it wasn't 'realistic' to offer that warranty or, in other words, an honest mistake was made. Not ideal, but it happens.
However, it opens the door for dishonest 'mistakes': companies offering warranties as a selling point and fully intending to water them down a few years down the line. Furthermore, 'lifetime warranties' are, I feel, deliberately vague and labelled as such in the full knowledge that unwitting, unquestioning consumers will think the warranty is for their own lifetime rather than the lifetime of the product. Or they will think that it's for the lifetime of the product, defined as 'as long as it lasts for', not 'as long as the manufacturer says it should last for'. The 'lifetime warranty' is clearly a selling point but I think businesses exploit its vagueness in the interests of sales.
Personally, I would not pursue Marin for the £40 bearings but, equally, I think that the law should clarify when the phrase 'lifetime warranty' can be used because, at the moment, it's open to multiple interpretations.