Is a Extended Gaurantee Worthwhile


by david burton - Date: 2008-07-18 - Word Count: 482 Share This!

Should you buy an extended warranty with your laptop? You may not want to think about it now, but sooner or later, something is bound to go wrong with your laptop. When it does happen, the main question will be who gets stuck with the bill, you or the maker.
The standard (free) garauntee on a new laptop usually runs around the 90 day mark. That probably doesn't seem like much when you consider how long you expect to have your laptop. What happens when your laptop busts on the 91st day?

First of all, even if your laptop only includes a 90-day warranty (and assuming you've purchased a well known make), the chances of your notebook dying on the 91st day are very, very slim.

Manufacturers don't offer a 90-day warranty with the expectation that their product will malfunction shortly thereafter. A shorter warranty is likely, at least in part, to be a sales gimmick to push you towards an extended warranty.

All major laptop makers offer a long menu of extended warranty options, each menu item with its own price tag. The two biggest components that factor into the cost of an extended warranty are duration and location.

Through extended warranty, you typically have the option to extend the duration of the standard warranty from one to three years or even five in some cases. The first extra year is always the most expensive, with each subsequent year costing significantly less. The longer the extended warranty, the better the deal.

As for location, the least expensive extended warranties require you to post your laptop (at your expense) to a remote repair facility. With the most deluxe extended warranty packages, a service technician will meet you at your own front door to attempt the repairs. This type of coverage tends to be on the expensive side.

At this point, you might decide to go online and check out each manufacturers websites to determine their standard garauntee policies. Don't bother, because most laptop manufacturers don't have standard garuantee polices. Warranties vary from line to line and product to product. Even with a particular model in mind, it's still going to take some digging.

So how do you decide whether an extended garuantee is right for you? Your best option is to consider your anticipated usage:

If you're buying a laptop as a second computer for occasional use when you need to travel, you can probably pass on the extended warranty and still feel relatively safe.

At the other extreme, if you use your laptop day in and day out as your major system, with half your life spent in airport terminals, you should consider adding as much extended warranty as you possibly can. Fortunately, unlike car warranties, laptop warranties don't put any restriction on mileage. laptop computers www.discount-notebooks.net David has been in the engineering field through to government, now getting up to speed with the new age technology laptop computers www.discount-notebooks.net


Related Tags: computers, accessories, dell, laptops, notebooks, verizon, compaq, toshiba, acer

from engineer to sales rep to government worker ,now getting up to speed with technology

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