Gup:
NO manufactures monitors this site, SMA, Xantrex and Outback did initially, they now all have there own BBS and NONE of them have posted here in over a year.
DJ: Well, glad I can be a catalyst for change
. I've often told people that I don't personally *get* migraine headaches: I'm a carrier
.
Lloyd:
Your two dealers that say they have had trouble getting us to do warranty work is very strange.
DJ:
Two dealers, we'll call one of them "Peter" and the other one "Irwin". Both use Matrix as a middleman for Xantrex stuff. Both have had the usual amount of warranty and returns over the years, but in the last few years, although Matrix would take the stuff back happily "for exchange/replacement" it would take MANY MONTHS, with CONSTANT calling, to get action. Meanwhile, customers are inconvenienced, sometimes seriously. There's a fair bit of true off-grid people up here. Is it Xantrex or Matrix that is the problem? Matrix blames Xantrex.
My personal inverter. Gets wet, dies (which is why I look covetously at an FX
. I call one of the nearest Xantrex authorized repair depots. I won't say which one, but when I ask to get it fixed, I get told "Well, we can fix it, but only if the parts are on the shelf. If they aren't, we've had a lot of problem getting parts from Xantrex." I ship the inverter to them. They call Xantrex. Xantrex says "You're on your own, sorry." I kick up a little dust in alt.homepower, and magically, a Xantrex guy offers specs and a link to a US parts distributer. WHICH I RELAY TO THEIR DEPOT because Xantrex hadn't.
Lloyd:
"Before it was Xantrex, you could still call an engineer..."
I've heard that one before. We do have engineers here…with phone extensions and email addresses. We employ more engineers than anyone else in our industry. I will also add that we don't have only "self proclaimed" engineers…these are folks with real training and discipline. Who do you want to talk to? What is the topic? This sounds like the Outback smokescreen pitch…"talk to a live engineer".
DJ:
Actually, I was hearing this LONG before I ever *heard* of OutBack. My old mentor, "Peter", often lamented that he could no longer "talk to an engineer" to solve problems, leaving messages, getting no reply. Now, granted, "Peter" is an old hippie, and not net-savy. But if an old goat like him could see the difference, it was there.
Lloyd:
"talk to a live engineer". This is easy when you are really small and don't have many fielded products. At some sales level you have to invest in a real customer service infrastructure.
DJ: Actually, had a problem with a Thermo-Finnigan product yesterday (I still do some equipment management contracts for some hi-tech companies). YES_TER_DAY. And Thermo, by the way, makes Xantrex look like a lemonade stand in it's scope, no offence (
http://www.thermo.com).
This morning, I had two phone calls and an email from a Thermo engineer, dying to help me. Size doesn't mean jack, don't think that it does. Oh, and this was about support for a TWENTY YEAR OLD gas chromatograph-mass spectrophotometer. They seemingly think their clients have long memories, and remember support when purchase time comes around. I, myself, have disqualified manufacturers in million dollar instruments when I've called their other customers, and heard less-than-flattering things about after-market service. I weild a terrible sword
.
Lloyd:
DJ, you do realize that Xantrex's head office is based in Canada? In fact I am Canadian. Go Flames...Go! I'm sorry I can't agree with your comment. We are not a garage shop, we are CDN based real company. If you are in Vancouver some time, feel free to visit.
DJ:
Dude. I'm based in QUEBEC, not Canada
. But seriously. It could well be that it's your distributor chain out here. Could be. That still makes it your problem, though. And should I ever have the misfortune to have to leave Quebec and head to the Soggy Coast, I may well drop by
.
Lloyd:
As I said from the outset...we are not perfect, but we absolutely care and have invested alot of $ in customer service staffing. I know it's fashionable to trash Xantrex and romanticize the past Trace organization. But let's stick to facts and get over the fact that Trace was acquired over 4 years ago. It's time to move on.
DJ:
See, here's the thing. I don't have ANY experience with Trace. Four years ago, I wasn't "in" this industry. I was working alternative energy biotech. Doing some pilot work for Amoco R&D, some gov't contracts in prototypes. I have no romantic memories of Trace. I just hear alot of not-impressive stuff about Xantrex in the here-and-now.
Lloyd:
I will also add that we don't have only "self proclaimed" engineers…these are folks with real training and discipline.
DJ:
As I said, my base is in industrial maintenance and installation, licenced and certified in both. And to clarify that, you become a millwright by usually taking a four year college course in something usually called "electromechanical engineering technology", then a four year apprenticeship which has to cover all 23 diciplines of my trade, THEN take a journeyman's exam. So while I can admire an actual "engineer", I don't bow to them: they take the easy road
.
Gup:
Either you name names or stop with this non-sense. I'm not gonna have this web-site turn into a pissing match of third party hear-say
DJ:
As I said, I don't want them to get into trouble with their suppliers. And I'm not vindictive. I freely admit and congratulate Xantrex/Trace for the quality of their products. My problem is that the support I've HEARD about from my mentors in this business has been far less than desirable. No, I don't have any personal story besides my one burned inverter. But, to be flippant, "Once burned, twice shy."
Gup:
from my view both Xantrex and Outback have proven they will be there to help there customers ... Any company can always do better, neither can make the claim (or do) that they can't do better
DJ:
My problem is that out here in the hinterland of RE, there *is* substantial room for improvement.
Gup:
I really want Xantrex and Outback to be active participants in the solar-guppy forum.
DJ:
Damn right. Like I said in a previous post, I really appreciate seeing them in "no man's land", not just on their own boards, and applaud Chris, boB, and Lloyd for doing so. And should any of you end up in the National Capital Region of Canada, I'll make sure you get a REAL beer (especially you, Lloyd, because you're probably drinking that Labatt's crap
.
DJ