RJM62
Touchdown! Greaser!
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Geek on the Hill
Captain's thread about his refrigerator adventure inspired me to mention my recent experience with the extended warranty provided with my USAA Signature Visa card.
Basically, the dryer was overheating. GE had sent a company out several times during the original warranty period, but they always showed up unprepared and never actually fixed the problem. They were very nice guys, but I wasn't looking for a new BFF. I wanted the dryer fixed.
I had a hunch the problem was one of the thermostats. The phone rep at GE concurred. So I bought one. It was very, very hard to find. A lot of them had been failing and almost everyone (including GE) was out of stock. But I finally found one.
I literally had tools in hand and was about to install it myself when I remembered that the USAA Visa included an extended warranty. Dryers are not difficult to work on if you know where all the hidden screws are, but I didn't. Once I remembered that I had the warranty, I figured it was better to call someone who actually knew what he was doing. So I went to Visa's site and tried to open a claim. It wouldn't accept it because it said there were no benefits associated with the card.
I contacted USAA on their message board, and they gave me a number to call which apparently is either a special department at Visa that only handles USAA cardholders' claims, or a special department at USAA that only handles Visa claims. Whatever the case, I called and explained the situation. They quickly verified that the dryer was in fact under warranty, and told me to contact the GE-Approved vendor serving my area and get an estimate.
At that point I told them that I didn't want to use that company because they'd already proven themselves to be incompetents. Amicable ones, mind you, but still incompetents. So USAA (or Visa) gave me permission to use whomever I wanted, but preferably someone who was GE-Authorized. They also said that I could either submit a written estimate in advance and they would pay the company directly, or I could pay the company myself and get reimbursed.
So on August 20, I loaded the dryer onto my trailer and schlepped it to a guy named Bruce about an hour away. Bruce really takes appliances seriously. He's the third generation to own his family's appliance business, he's been working on appliances since he was a child, and he knows pretty much everything there is to know about them. He's also GE-Authorized, but his franchise doesn't extend to where I live (which is why I had to schlep the dryer to him).
Bruce isolated and fixed the problem in about 45 minutes, replacing both the thermostat for which I'd brought the replacement and another one deeper in the machine. Apparently a batch of the thermostats had come through bad and a lot of them were failing. He put the machine back together, tested it with various meters and special thermometers, and it worked perfectly for the first time in its life.
That evening or the next day I submitted the paperwork to get reimbursed online, so it was either the 20th or the 21st. On the 24th I checked the status online and found that it had already been approved for payment. I got the check a few days later for both Bruce's bill and for the part that I'd bought.
Nice. Very quickly handled, and with no drama.
They didn't reimburse for the travel because that was my choice. I could have used the "local" company and had them come to me, but I chose not to. I'm okay with that. I'd rather have the freedom to choose than to have had to endure the same bunch of amicable incompetents again.
USAA continues to be one of the few companies that has never disappointed me. In my experience, everything that they do, they do well.
Rich
Basically, the dryer was overheating. GE had sent a company out several times during the original warranty period, but they always showed up unprepared and never actually fixed the problem. They were very nice guys, but I wasn't looking for a new BFF. I wanted the dryer fixed.
I had a hunch the problem was one of the thermostats. The phone rep at GE concurred. So I bought one. It was very, very hard to find. A lot of them had been failing and almost everyone (including GE) was out of stock. But I finally found one.
I literally had tools in hand and was about to install it myself when I remembered that the USAA Visa included an extended warranty. Dryers are not difficult to work on if you know where all the hidden screws are, but I didn't. Once I remembered that I had the warranty, I figured it was better to call someone who actually knew what he was doing. So I went to Visa's site and tried to open a claim. It wouldn't accept it because it said there were no benefits associated with the card.
I contacted USAA on their message board, and they gave me a number to call which apparently is either a special department at Visa that only handles USAA cardholders' claims, or a special department at USAA that only handles Visa claims. Whatever the case, I called and explained the situation. They quickly verified that the dryer was in fact under warranty, and told me to contact the GE-Approved vendor serving my area and get an estimate.
At that point I told them that I didn't want to use that company because they'd already proven themselves to be incompetents. Amicable ones, mind you, but still incompetents. So USAA (or Visa) gave me permission to use whomever I wanted, but preferably someone who was GE-Authorized. They also said that I could either submit a written estimate in advance and they would pay the company directly, or I could pay the company myself and get reimbursed.
So on August 20, I loaded the dryer onto my trailer and schlepped it to a guy named Bruce about an hour away. Bruce really takes appliances seriously. He's the third generation to own his family's appliance business, he's been working on appliances since he was a child, and he knows pretty much everything there is to know about them. He's also GE-Authorized, but his franchise doesn't extend to where I live (which is why I had to schlep the dryer to him).
Bruce isolated and fixed the problem in about 45 minutes, replacing both the thermostat for which I'd brought the replacement and another one deeper in the machine. Apparently a batch of the thermostats had come through bad and a lot of them were failing. He put the machine back together, tested it with various meters and special thermometers, and it worked perfectly for the first time in its life.
That evening or the next day I submitted the paperwork to get reimbursed online, so it was either the 20th or the 21st. On the 24th I checked the status online and found that it had already been approved for payment. I got the check a few days later for both Bruce's bill and for the part that I'd bought.
Nice. Very quickly handled, and with no drama.
They didn't reimburse for the travel because that was my choice. I could have used the "local" company and had them come to me, but I chose not to. I'm okay with that. I'd rather have the freedom to choose than to have had to endure the same bunch of amicable incompetents again.
USAA continues to be one of the few companies that has never disappointed me. In my experience, everything that they do, they do well.
Rich