Shure SE535. Any Changes?
Jun 15, 2010 at 11:56 AM Post #31 of 35

 
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After this, I treated my Shures like s*** intentionally so that they would fail within the warranty period, I would get my new Shure's, and the warranty would essentially refresh.  I went through 4 pairs of e3c's in 4 years like this till I eventually lost my scl3's.  Since the warranty policy was so good, I looked no further than the new se530's as my replacement/upgrade.  Unfortunately, though understandably so, the warranty policy has changed. 
 

because of people like you abusing the warranty policy. nice.
 
 
Jun 15, 2010 at 12:06 PM Post #32 of 35
 
Potentially.  Certainly it becomes a factor.
 
On the other hand, it also could suggest that the product had a hard time living up to the warranty period.  Period.  If that is the case, you either fix the underlying cause of failure(s), eat the cost, or change the warranty.  *shrug*
 
Hopefully the 535 is bulletproof and this becomes less of an issue.
 
-john
 
Jun 15, 2010 at 12:55 PM Post #33 of 35
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As far as I know, you are going to basically pay MSRP for both the 530s and the 535s if you want the warranty.  So you can either pay full price and get the warranty, or get them from an unauthorized source and take your chance.
 
I'm sure the 535s will show up at unauthorized dealers at a discounted price sooner or later. 
 
-john


I've heard that any of the amazon sellers whose products are "fulfilled by amazon" will count for your warranty.  I got mine from Z Electria fulfilled by amazon, and they honored the warranty.
 
I doubt they're actually 'unauthorized' anyway.  I'm pretty sure Shure sells them to whoever will buy them.  I though at first they call places that won't sell below the MAP, "authorized" to skirt price fixing laws, but since they don't have to do that anymore, I think its a scam so they don't have to honor warranty claims.  They sell them at the same low wholesale price to everyone and get to advertise having a good warranty, but actually make it a $100+ option.  Shure doesn't get any of that extra money, but it creates a price discrimination scheme where fewer people will pay full price for the warranty, and reduce the number of warranty claims Shure has to shell out for.  I'd eat my hat (if I had one) if any significant number of 'phones sold from 'unauthorized' dealers were even actually grey market.  Even if they were, Shure still owes you the warranty, since they got paid for them in the first place.  If someone is selling some stolen ones then they might still even owe you the warranty depending on who they were stolen from.  (Shure themselves of out of a retailer's warehouse.)  I would say they'd owe you the warranty either way and that they should recover their losses from the thieves, not from the innocent customer, but there is a decent argument for the other side.
 
On a related note I believe the reason Shure decided to honor 'unauthorized' dealers which are "fulfilled by amazon" is because they were alienating too many people who followed the amazon link from Shure's authorized dealers page and bought it from another seller, since amazon usually automatically gives you the one with the lowest price.  People don't know or care about such differences, and people will understandably get very angry when their warranty isn't honored as it should be.  Since amazon isn't going to redesign their site to help some random company's price fixing policy, and they are such a big customer to Shure, they had to decide between dropping amazon an and 'authorized' dealer or honoring 'unauthorized' amazon sellers that are indistinguishable to the average consumer.
 
Jun 15, 2010 at 12:57 PM Post #34 of 35


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I am in the market for something new with a budget of £250 I'm thinking UM3x?  I would prefer flush fitting iems....


Get some IE8's.
 
Jun 16, 2010 at 8:41 PM Post #35 of 35

 
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because of people like you abusing the warranty policy. nice.
 


Hey, I never intentionally destroyed them to beat the warranty period, I just treated them like I would treat apple ibuds or whatever, and this was after I spent more than year treating them like gold only to have an issue anyway.  Also, I'm sure the good folks at Shure knew how this warranty policy operated, and it worked cause I bought several Shure products subsequent to my first purchase and would recommend the company to friends and family etc.  I would never have done this had my initial investment lasted only two years.  Brand loyalty can be a pretty powerful marketing tool.  
 
Edit: I only really told my little story because people were complaining about Shure's customer service in this thread which strikes me as odd cause I've always thought their service was excellent.  I know it's now what it used to be and tbh I was amazed it ever was that good. I still think their service is quite good with the exception of the out of warranty replacement, which is still cheaper than buying a replacement, but costly enough to make me look elsewhere.  When my 530's cable eventually cracks, I could send shure $145, get some dba-02's, or get them remolded by fisher for around the same price.  Of course, if I didn't know about head-fi I'd probably just buy some 535's.
 

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