he intends to lie by omission, and just tell them he was prying a small staple out of a piece of pine, and his "brand new" blast broke.
I don't think the guy ought to lie about it. Send the tool in for repair, explaining the circumstances honestly. Chances are Leatherman will fix it up for free. (It would be more hassle for them to try to determine the abuse and try to bill the customer for the repair, etc) No need to lie about it.
And how many people pay for the complimentary sharpening?
Quote from: Rodion on September 01, 2008, 09:54:14 PMAnd how many people pay for the complimentary sharpening?Most of the time i do it for free, as an extra service for our customers who had their tool repaired.But there are also quite a few users, about 10 to 15 a month, who send their tools in just for sharpening, and they pay 7,50 Euro or 10,95 dollars.In this case it doesn't matter if they can't sharpen themselves or are too lazy to do it.
Just for reference kwakster, about how many Leathermans get sent to you in a month?
It varies, but in general 70 to 100 a week,Just for reference kwakster, about how many Leathermans get sent to you in a month?