- Joined
- May 3, 2001
- Messages
- 7,516
A computer drive does not come with the possibility of unseen but "waiting to explode" internal strain, nor the cleavage waiting for just the tiniest pressure to split down the cleavage plane. A diamond is a totally different premise although I wish it were as easy as it sounds. Even the best benchman can have an unexpected disaster although thankfully they are very rare. It just is not possible for us to assume the liability for your stone, whether it be an inheritance or a new purchase in exchange for the very small profit that we make on setting them. Frankly, the "profit" is mostly non existant and we do it more as a service than as a profit. At $10 - $15 per stone it would take a loooonnnnnggggg time to replace the loss on even a $1,000 stone.Date: 6/30/2005 12:52:57 PM
Author: Kaili
If a setter agrees to take the job, promises the service, and the customer is paying for the job, I think the job should be completed with no damage. If I take my computer in to have a new drive installed and the technician accepts the job, I do not expect the trained technician to break the drive. If he does, he replaces it. I know we are talking about a great deal more money with diamonds, but I feel like it is the same premise. We go to a setter because it is his/ her job to know how to set stones without damage. That is why I don''t try to do it myself.
Fortunately the loss is seldom total and can usually be repaired at only a small loss of value in the diamond, but when you are wanting us to take the risk on a stone we did not sell, it is really not in our best interests to do so. It is always better if this bothers you to let you take your buisiness to someone willing to take the risk, but when asked, I have never had a client tell me "Sure, go ahead and tack on an extra $200 per stone that you set for me so that if any break you take the responsibility". I have asked, and had many tell me emphatically, "NO!".
I know this seems unfair to many, but with the small margins allowed to us it is patently unfair to us to do it the way that you would like.
Wink who would LOVE to make the $75 an hour that my computer tech does when he fixes my toys...