YorkshireMartin
Established Member
flh801978":8g6e2u4v said:Does anyone know how the sewing machine retail network works?
My wife bought a new pfaff expensive embroidery machine £ 2.5 k
Working happily for 6 weeks then machine failed to work it just buzzed whilst starting up then refused to work.
Took it back to the supplier who is authorised pfaff dealer
They could not get it to work so said leave it with us...it will be 2 to 3 weeks !!!!
Remember this is a £2.5 k machine 6 weeks old...
Much annoyance as she had bought it to use anyway we had no option other than to leave it
After 2 weeks we rang shop to get progress report
Employee in shop said it hasn't been looked at yet
Shop owners at a show at the nec
So we thought we would go and have a work with pfaff on their stand about repairs policy
The pfaff stand when we were there seems to staffed by shop owners No one from the company present
Our dealer there on asking about our machine replied that it had been taken by herself to reddich which is also the home of pfaff uk
She also said that employee must have got wrong end of stick
In the next week I rang pfaff and they said no repair facility there all repairs are carried out by dealers in there own premises by their staff
After another week still no machine rang dealer and she was very evasive about our machine saying it was at repairers
This in spite of a pfaff dealers supposed also being a service centre
She wouldn't tell me where our machine was only after a lot of asking did she say it was at a pfaff dealers in Notts
Still no idea when it would be ready
Sorry for the long post and story but what should we do?
My wife wants her machine to use
Is it realistic to spend so much and after 6 weeks wait 4 weeks for a repair?
Ian
I'm sticking my neck out here as sewing machines are not my area of expertise.
However, I did recently buy one for my wife in a similar price range and spent about 6 months looking into them on and off. Below is what I was able to deduce about Pfaff, who were on the list of possible purchases for a long while.
Pfaff are no longer Pfaff as such. They used to be a high end industrial brand but I believe they are now owned by a retail group which may include Singer, also not what they once were. I think there was another brand in there too but the name escapes me, might be Husqvarna. In any case, it was clearly a retail consortium buying up brand names and making everything in China.
As is typical with these acquisitions, service has apparently dropped off and quality is dubious.
4 weeks to repair a 6 week old machine is utterly ridiculous. Unfortunately though, the way the sewing machine market is protected, the sewing machine shops act as agents, and as such are the only real point of contact. It's a very old fashioned business model but protects RRP very well.
Sucks to be a customer though.
We went with Brother in the end, because they have a dedicated division for their sewing machines and a vested long term interest in the industry at all levels. That's what won me over (keeping in mind it was a surprise gift).