We'd like to remind Forumites to please avoid political debate on the Forum... Read More »
We're aware that some users are experiencing technical issues which the team are working to resolve. See the Community Noticeboard for more info. Thank you for your patience.
📨 Have you signed up to the Forum's new Email Digest yet? Get a selection of trending threads sent straight to your inbox daily, weekly or monthly!
Am I wrong to fight this?
Options
Hi all,
I'm having a bit of an argument with Virgin Mobile. I have been with them for several years and have a couple of pay monthly contracts. I was recently "persuaded" to stay with them and they provided a "free" phone - a Blackberry Bold 9790 - this all happened in November 2012.
Around 2 weeks ago my daughter came home from school, with said phone, and 5 of the keyboard buttons had fallen off. Now, I know what you're all thinking (as this was my own first thought too!) but she assures me she hasn't done anything to break the keys.
VM are stating that the phone has physical damage to it which means the warranty is void - I have tried explaining to them that there is physical damage(the keys have come off!) and this is why I have sent it to them. Am I right to try and argue with VM that the phone is faulty and that it should be covered under the warranty or am I being naive and just trying to claim something for nothing?
Any advice appreciated please and many thanks in advance.
I'm having a bit of an argument with Virgin Mobile. I have been with them for several years and have a couple of pay monthly contracts. I was recently "persuaded" to stay with them and they provided a "free" phone - a Blackberry Bold 9790 - this all happened in November 2012.
Around 2 weeks ago my daughter came home from school, with said phone, and 5 of the keyboard buttons had fallen off. Now, I know what you're all thinking (as this was my own first thought too!) but she assures me she hasn't done anything to break the keys.
VM are stating that the phone has physical damage to it which means the warranty is void - I have tried explaining to them that there is physical damage(the keys have come off!) and this is why I have sent it to them. Am I right to try and argue with VM that the phone is faulty and that it should be covered under the warranty or am I being naive and just trying to claim something for nothing?
Any advice appreciated please and many thanks in advance.
0
Comments
-
Hi all,
I'm having a bit of an argument with Virgin Mobile. I have been with them for several years and have a couple of pay monthly contracts. I was recently "persuaded" to stay with them and they provided a "free" phone - a Blackberry Bold 9790 - this all happened in November 2012.
Around 2 weeks ago my daughter came home from school, with said phone, and 5 of the keyboard buttons had fallen off. Now, I know what you're all thinking (as this was my own first thought too!) but she assures me she hasn't done anything to break the keys.
VM are stating that the phone has physical damage to it which means the warranty is void - I have tried explaining to them that there is physical damage(the keys have come off!) and this is why I have sent it to them. Am I right to try and argue with VM that the phone is faulty and that it should be covered under the warranty or am I being naive and just trying to claim something for nothing?
Any advice appreciated please and many thanks in advance.0 -
5 buttons just miraculously stop working? i used to lie to my parents trust me she is to youWhat goes around-comes around0
-
I have had these phones for years, never had the keys drop like that and myn are abusedDon't put your trust into an Experian score - it is not a number any bank will ever use & it is generally a waste of money to purchase it. They are also selling you insurance you dont need.0
-
Hi all,
VM are stating that the phone has physical damage to it which means the warranty is void - I have tried explaining to them that there is physical damage(the keys have come off!) and this is why I have sent it to them.
The fact it is physical damage is exactly why it isn't a warranty issue.
Unfortunately your big problem is the fact you are being lied to, 5 buttons don't just fall off without external "help".
Good news is the keyboard is cheap, (it comes in one piece, another reason why it is extremely unlikely for 5 buttons to just fall out).
It looks like this
Shop around your unlocker type mobile shops, I'd expect it to cost around £20 fitted (the part is £8.95 delivered from eBay if you have anyone who can fit it for you).
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/GENUINE-BLACK-BOTTOM-ARABIC-KEYPAD-BLACKBERRY-BOLD-9790-QWERTY-KEYBOARD-BUTTONS-/181067545312?pt=UK_Replacement_Parts_Tools&hash=item2a28777ae0====0 -
I'm with the others on this, we've had many Blackberrys between us, probably in the region of 7-8, NEVER have keys 'come off' they just don't. As in the pic above, it's one unit, not individual keys.
Best ask your daughter what really happened to it.Accept your past without regret, handle your present with confidence and face your future without fear0 -
Why are you allowing your daughter to take a contract phone to school?
If the phone is lost or stolen, the thief will run up big bills until she notices the phone is missing and reports it.
Children can also sign up to expensive but useless subscription services.
If the phone is in your name, you are liable for all calls and subscriptions run up on it.
Would you give a child your credit card and pin?
So why are you allowing them unsupervised access to your contract phone?0 -
Why are you allowing your daughter to take a contract phone to school?
If the phone is lost or stolen, the thief will run up big bills until she notices the phone is missing and reports it.
Children can also sign up to expensive but useless subscription services.
If the phone is in your name, you are liable for all calls and subscriptions run up on it.
Would you give a child your credit card and pin?
So why are you allowing them unsupervised access to your contract phone?
This is a bit judgemental isn't it? Maybe it wouldn't be your choice, but in the real world lots of kids are given contract phones by their parents.
Also what has the lost / stolen = possible huge bills, got to do with a child taking it to school, this could happen anywhere and to anyone?
Also, perhaps the OP, gave her DD the phone with a PAYG sim in it?0 -
It sounds like the buttons have come off due to some damage to the phone. Your daughter may be lying as others have suggested (maybe she was worried about you being angry for damaging the phone) or maybe it got damaged in a way that she wasn't aware of - if it was in her bag and something happened to her bag for example. Either way, accidental damage is not covered by the warranty. You could probably try and replace the keys yourself or take them to someone who will fix the keyboard for you. You could also consider getting phone insurance for a few pounds a month which would cover things like this in future. But the phone company is probably in the right for refusing to cover this with the warranty.0
-
19lottie82 wrote: »This is a bit judgemental isn't it? Maybe it wouldn't be your choice, but in the real world lots of kids are given contract phones by their parents.
Also what has the lost / stolen = possible huge bills, got to do with a child taking it to school, this could happen anywhere and to anyone?
Also, perhaps the OP, gave her DD the phone with a PAYG sim in it?
There have been soooo many parents posting here because their phones have run up huge bills (thousands of £) because they gave the phone to their child who lost the phone and didn't report it promptly or else the child or their "friends" signed up the phone to dodgy expensive services.
Expensive phones also make children a target for muggers.
Many parents don't realise just how much they are putting their finances at risk by letting their children have contract phones.
Of course if the OP swapped the contract sim for a PAYG sim before giving it to the child, then this problem doesn't arise.0 -
There have been soooo many parents posting here because their phones have run up huge bills (thousands of £) because they gave the phone to their child who lost the phone and didn't report it promptly or else the child or their "friends" signed up the phone to dodgy expensive services.
Expensive phones also make children a target for muggers.
Many parents don't realise just how much they are putting their finances at risk by letting their children have contract phones.
Of course if the OP swapped the contract sim for a PAYG sim before giving it to the child, then this problem doesn't arise.
A BB Bold isn't really an "expensive phone" or a target for muggers, when compared to newer, top of the range handsets.
I understand your point, and I'm not saying that I disagree with you BUT the OP came on here asking a specific question (which seems to have been answered), not to be preached at about her choice of phone for her child, especially before you asked if the contract sim was in the phone, or how old her daughter actually is.
My OH's daughter is 13 and has a Galaxy S2 on contract. She is very mature / sensible and we trust her to have it, use her common sense about using it in public, not run up huge bills, and not to let other people use it, unless she knows them and it's an emergency.
His other daughter however, is 9 and has the common sense of a goldfish. There is no way we allow her same priviiledges (sp) just now, or even when she is the same age as her sister, unless we see drastic changes!0
This discussion has been closed.
Confirm your email address to Create Threads and Reply

Categories
- All Categories
- 351K Banking & Borrowing
- 253.1K Reduce Debt & Boost Income
- 453.6K Spending & Discounts
- 244K Work, Benefits & Business
- 598.9K Mortgages, Homes & Bills
- 176.9K Life & Family
- 257.3K Travel & Transport
- 1.5M Hobbies & Leisure
- 16.1K Discuss & Feedback
- 37.6K Read-Only Boards