Re: Jaegher Cycles
Tristan, I understand you wanting to make sense of the situation, but let's take a quick gander at how that could have played out: buyer specifies he will be using eTap, wireless shifting [check], seatstay bridge with rear-brake mount installed [check], cable stops for non-existant shifter cables installed [check], vertical drop-outs [check]... "oh yeah, he's probably looking to run this fixed gear with no rear brake."
I do not for one second believe that this was an error in a communication chain. This is an error in production, which along with the improperly threaded bottom bracket makes it an unusable product. The fact that I had to argue to get him to pay for return shipping, and the fact that he brushed it off as not a big deal, is the part that really irks me. If the response had been an immediate, "Wow, I can't believe we screwed up. Please rebox the frame, I have arranged for FedEx to pick it back up tomorrow and you will be bumped to the front of the que for a fast repair, repaint and turnaround" I would not even be posting this thread. But that was not the response. Instead the (belated, lackadaisical) response was "hmm, can you send us a picture?" followed by an eventual (days later), "Okay, ship it back to us and we'll see what we can do. Don't worry, shipping shouldn't be too expensive."
So in the end, combined with the other notes I have no read, it sounds like they have a real problem with a) quality control and b) communication/relations. The bottom line is: this is not how you run a business that relies on personal interactions, large up-front investments, and customized products.
"Do you want ants? Because that's how you get ants."
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