LifelineIT
Member
- Reaction score
- 24
- Location
- Fairmont, WV
Awesome. Good guys finish first, once in a row. 

Wow, was there no warranty help at all from Dell?
Would Dell not work with you at all? Did you tell them that you yourself had checked the computer that you sold her and it was faulty?
The whole system was a bad, you had to replace everything? You couldn't fix it by swapping any of the parts with known good parts?
That was nice of you. I hate lemons. It makes me feel bad when something like that happens to a friend or family member or like you said a sweet lady who is the mother of a childhood friend.
That's great, sounds like everybody is happy. You did what you thought was right and got paid for it too. I'll bet they will be repeat customers.EDIT 3: 3/28/2014: Thanks for all the responses. Maybe I just needed to hear from the masses to validate what I was already thinking. A hundred bucks isn't worth the potential ill will from a dissatisfied customer. I agree with LifelineIT: I performed a partial task (not to completion) and then damaged working (albeit crippled) equipment. (If it was the adapter that caused it, then if it wasn't his drive I fried, it'd be the next customer. So I'm go to replace the adapter regardless as a preventative measure.) I'm going to replace his drive, reinstall the OS with his product key, install all updates/Adobe/Java/Firefox, set his home page to his webmail page, give him a big apology and not charge him anything. If he has other applications life MS Office or whatever, I'll reinstall those from his media when I deliver back to him. Thank you to everybody who posted with suggestions. I appreciate all the feedback. For me, customer service and reputation trumps profit.
EDIT 4: 3/29/2014: I delivered the PC back to the customer today. Once I got in to his assisted living facility room, I told him I had good and bad news. He asked for the bad first. I explained what happened, apologized profusely, told him I bought a new HD at my cost, reloaded Win7, AVG, Adobe, Java, all security updates and set browser home page to his AT&T webmail page for him - and that I wasn't going to charge him for any of it. My business lives and dies on customer referrals and word of mouth and I wanted him to be satisfied that I did everything possible for him. He was very appreciative, and sympathized that in his previous work experience in dry cleaning sometimes accidents happen. Well, a few minutes later his lady friend from upstairs came down and I explained it all again to her. She was much more impressed with what I did to rectify the problem. I told her I wasn't going to charge him/her for anything. She protested and said I should charge him/her something. I told them I wasn't going to give them a dollar figure - they could pick whatever they felt comfortable. I was ready to accept $0 and would be privately grateful for anything greater to defray the cost of the HD as well as my labor. As he pulled out a fat wad of cash, they bantered a bit back and forth about what was enough and finally handed me a $100 bill. I was surprised at this large amount and I asked him AGAIN if he was sure he wanted to pay me that much. He insisted and I reluctantly but gratefully accepted. As long as he doesn't download every optimizer, registry fixer and toolbar helper again, I think everybody is a winner here.
I was thinking it sounds like an intermittent hardware problem, may throw a version of Linux on it and use it for while as a test machine and see if the problem gets worse.Unfortunately I still have that box sitting in my office...someday I'll get around to taking another look at it to see if I can fix & resell it or donate it or something...
Well done! Thanks for the update.EDIT 4: 3/29/2014: I delivered the PC back to the customer today. . . . As he pulled out a fat wad of cash, they bantered a bit back and forth about what was enough and finally handed me a $100 bill . . . . I asked him AGAIN if he was sure he wanted to pay me that much. He insisted and I reluctantly but gratefully accepted. As long as he doesn't download every optimizer, registry fixer and toolbar helper again, I think everybody is a winner here.
They do care if you Nuke and Pave and make no effort to save the data. By accident this guy did basically the same job Geek Squad does. The OP got a lucky break on what was otherwise random disaster.
Sorry I with most of the others here. I can't see any way that I could justify charging anything on this.