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gonzoguy24

macrumors member
Original poster
Oct 31, 2010
98
24
Let me give you all a brief history of my experiences:

I purchased my first Macbook Air and had to have it replaced after one day of use because it would not wake up from sleep. Spent several hours on the phone troubleshooting with Apple and then brought into store to have them confirm it was broken. Another 5 hours later and I have to give the Apple Store my CTO Air in replace for a 1,400 dollar gift card. I re-purchased my air right there in the store.

A week later I get my second Air. This one is noticeably a much poorer build. Actually a nick in the aluminum by the track pad. No big deal but then the thing started to creak like a real cheap piece of hardware (this does not happen to my housemate's air). So i spend 30 min on the phone with an Apple Rep and they tell me there is no issue but I should bring it into the store to check it out.

I bring in my clickity Air and the Apple Genius says that, yes it is flexible and it creaks quite a bit, but that a replacement will do the same thing. I make enough of a fuss and explain the research I had done (poll on this forum) until he agrees to put a note in my account to have the online store to send me a replacement.

I get on the phone with the Apple Store Online Sales people and they come up with the solution of processing an "advanced replacement" since I have already put up with so much. This meant that I would have to pay up front with my credit card so they could send out a new Air without me having to send mine back first. This way I could still use my Air for work.

I then explain that I originally was persuaded by the Apple Store people to open a 12 month interest free barclay card and that I do not have room enough on there but that I can put it on my Chase Visa Credit Card since it will be refunded once I send back my Air. I wanted to make sure the Apple Rep did not refund my Barclay Card and that they would refund my Chase card instead (gains interested if I carry a balance) once they received my defective macbook air. The Apple Rep assured me I would be refunded on my Chase Card.

I got my 3rd Macbook Air in the mail last week. Perfect build quality and an obvious improvement from the creaking, poorly built Air I had at the time. I sent back the creaky Air and then a few days later I went to make my first payment on the Barclay card only to notice that it had been refunded!

I now have a 1,400 dollar balance on my Chase Visa that I NEVER carry a balance on. If I keep the balance there I will most likely have to pay 100-150 dollars in interest over the next however many months. So I decided to call Apple Care again yesterday.

After explaining most of the story above three or four times, I finally got transferred to a sales rep's supervisor. He listened and explained that I had to call barclay customer service to see if Apple can put the charge back on the Barclay Card and restore the no interest for 12 months since I was now outside my original 30 day purchase period. He also explained that Apple should have never had me RE Purchase the laptop in order to process an advanced return and that they should have just had me sign some form or something that would make me pay only if they never got a machine returned. All of this mess could have been avoided from the start. Why did the rep make me buy another machine?

At this point I had spent 3-4 hours on the phone with Apple Care only to find out I now had to Call Barclay Customer Service. I am now deciding whether or not to Call barclay or just call apple care again to try and get my issue elevated. I do not want to deal with another customer service agency but it looks like I will have to! Ah!

Feel free to share advice or even laugh at my misfortune. :cool:
 

coelacanth

macrumors 6502
Jul 19, 2004
434
1
Apple (online) doesn't do real advance exchange like Amazon does. They might make an exception if you talk to the right person, but I was told so by two senior apple care specialists. I ended up returning my online order and buying in Apple retail store.

Unfortunately, I think what you were told by the manager guy about no-interest deal is true. Bank has the final say and Apple can't do much about it.

Call the Barclay and ask very very nicely. I don't know about this specific card, but bank/card people are quite flexible as long as you are making payments as you should, and ask very nicely.
 

psirix

macrumors member
Aug 14, 2009
95
0
Detroit, MI
I don't know if this applies to your situation, but...

I have had my Barclay card for about 2 years. Although the initial 12 months w/no interest deal has expired, I am constantly being offered to do a balance transfer with 12 months no interest. I was actually going to cancel my Barclay card until the rep reminded me of this deal and that it would make sense if I am considering purchasing an MBA. If your card has the same deal, you could just do a balance transfer from your Chase card to the Barclay card, obtain the no interest promotion, and save your self more hassle with customer service. Sorry to hear about your experience :( I hope everything works out for you!
 

KPOM

macrumors P6
Oct 23, 2010
18,311
8,324
It's a tricky situation. It's worth calling Barclaycard and asking them how to proceed. The best course may be to get to someone high enough at Apple customer support, and then patch in Barclaycard. Apple support should then reinstate your Barclaycard transaction, refund your Chase transaction, and tell Barclaycard to apply the "purchase" to the promotional balance.

I would not advise doing a balance transfer from Chase to Barclaycard, however. Even if they are nominally at 0% interest, there is usually a 3-4% fee for setting them up, so you really should try to get your initial deal back.

Of course, if you have the $1400 on hand, you might consider just paying off the Chase card and seeing if you can get Apple to give you a $25 iTunes gift card for all your trouble. It isn't like savings accounts are paying that much interest right now (about 1% from some online banks, before taxes).
 

psirix

macrumors member
Aug 14, 2009
95
0
Detroit, MI
Even if they are nominally at 0% interest, there is usually a 3-4% fee for setting them up, so you really should try to get your initial deal back.

I wasn't aware of the 4% fee, but you are right. But on a $1,400 purchase, the extra ~$56 could be worth the benefit of 12 months no interest if you don't have the cash flow, and the time wasted with customer service. That's only about another $4-5/a month, worth it IMO :D
 
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