On Apr 8, 2017 6:47 PM, "William Park via talk" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> Something I noticed while shopping on Newegg.ca:
>
> 1. Linksys WRT1900AC -- $155.99 reburbished.  I don't know what that
> means.  Why was it returned in the first place?
<snip>     

Any reason that the retailer uses to accept a return is designated as Returned 
Merchandise Authorized by a manufacturer. Since they don't want their 
traditional retail supply chain to sell their "used" equipment, the retailer 
sends it back to the manufacturer through the distributors RMA process. It's a 
part of corporate Quality Assurance process.

If the unit was damaged or faulty it is refurbished or recycled. It is never 
retailed as a used product but as a refurbished product.

Back in the day, 97 or so, any linux user had a bonanza on refurbished Fujitsu 
drives. Something in MS Windows didn't allocate partitions correctly and 
reported the drives total capacity as much smaller than advertising said it 
was. They were being RMA by the truckload. However use an ext filesystem and 
bingo, full capacity at a third the price.

In fact refurbished often means more trustworthy than new, because of all the 
extra testing. The future waranty and this includes the implied warrany of 
serviceability all new and RMA products are vended under, all depends on the 
RMA chain of documentation.

-- 
Russell
Sent by K-9 Mail
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