> I thought consumer law meant that the dealer is the person who > fixes the customer. The dealer then has to seek restitution from > the supplier and so on. That's how I'm sure it is in NZ. I'll find out tomorrow. I had a noisy fan in my PC and bought a new fancy PSU to get a quiet fan. I installed it and the PC stopped working. By swapping parts with another computer, I found that the motherboard, CPU, RAM & video card were all dead. Hmmm. I must have bumped something, or trapped a screw under the motherboard, I thought. (I also thought @#$%&). So I go and buy replacements, put it all together with the old PSU and we're back in business. Except the fan is noisy. No problem, in goes the new PSU, turn it on and smoke billows off the motherboard. Initially the shop were going to replace the parts that blew up the second time, but then changed their mind and offered just another PSU. So far, getting a quieter fan has cost me $1200 and a couple of days of work. We go to court tomorrow. Steve. _______________________________________________ http://www.piclist.com PIC/SX FAQ & list archive View/change your membership options at http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/piclist