I bought a Suzuki digital piano in jan 05 from a large reputable music store. It wasn't a cheap purchase - the guts of 1K. It has been working fine up until last night. Now one (only one!! ) of the notes will not work - e flat incidentally. The Suzuki guarantee that came with it is for 1 year. Obviously it's past 1 year at this stage.
The piano has been well cared for, played by adults only no kiddies hammering on it! I would also have to say that it hasn't been played that often. Initially every day but as interest waned it was only played once a week.
My query is, do you think that the shop are still liable to fix it regardless of the manufacturers guarantee ? I bought it from the shop after all not the manufacturers. Does consumer law not state that the product has to be fit for it's purpose ? A piano that breaks due to the keys being pressed surely can't be fit for it's purpose ??
Does anyone think I have a leg to stand on ?
The piano has been well cared for, played by adults only no kiddies hammering on it! I would also have to say that it hasn't been played that often. Initially every day but as interest waned it was only played once a week.
My query is, do you think that the shop are still liable to fix it regardless of the manufacturers guarantee ? I bought it from the shop after all not the manufacturers. Does consumer law not state that the product has to be fit for it's purpose ? A piano that breaks due to the keys being pressed surely can't be fit for it's purpose ??
Does anyone think I have a leg to stand on ?