Sorry about the silly name of the shop.
Any recourse you have is against the retailer you purchased the telly from.
My own belief was exactly as you say, that my contract is with the retailer and not with the manufacturer. But this is where I then get confused. I don't understand the legal implications of been given a guarantee at all? I mean, is the guarantee completely irrelevant because I have no contract with the manufaturer?
A guarantee is in addition to your legal rights , not replacing them.
Think of it as bonus on top of what they legally have to do.
Yes. But some retailers try not to treat it that way. They ask customers to take on the trouble of exercising the manufacturer's guarantee.
Can I therefore conclude that;
(1) My contract is with the retailer only, I have no contract with the manufacturer.
(2) The manufacturer attempts to establish a contract with me by giving me a guarantee.
(3) A guarantee is an addition to my legal rights.
(4) A guarantee may be wholly or partially legally irrelevant if it tries to adversely affect my statutory rights as a consumer.
(5) The guarantee as described in my original post is legally irrelevant because it does adversely affect my statutory rights as a consumer by making the terms for repair more onerous. There is an unqualified duty upon the retailer to repair, or to arrange the repair of, the item in question.
Number (5) is the point I would really love an opinion on.
In addition to the questions posed - can the manufacturer charge you to have the engineer come out to fix the problem?
I've had an issue with a washer which was about 15 months old - the only way to get an engineer to come out was to pay the call out fee & he replaced the faulty part. Should they not have to refund the call out if the fault is a manufacturing one rather than misuse (if anyone has the specific legislation I'd be grateful)
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