For me it was when I last bought a new car like 12 years ago when Chrysler was still doing lifetime extended warranties. It was like an extra 4k and a couple people said I was foolish for it, “just learn to fix it yourself blah blah blah”.

In the 12 years since, I’ve had an estimated $15k worth of work on it, to include a full transmission rebuild at a whopping out of pocket cost of just a couple hundred bucks (it’s like a $50 deductible each time or something).

I’ve gotten my money’s worth many times over IMO, and it even saved my ass during a long road trip once.

Ofc it was actually good, so Chrysler stopped doing new ones lmao

  • toiletobserver@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    I know a lady who bought a jeep with one of those forever warranties. She’s had everything but the frame replaced at some point and refuses to let the dealership buy her out with a new car.

  • Zonetrooper@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    Bought a “gaming laptop” (needed it at the time. Not the best call in retrospect). Bought an extended warranty for 5 years, at it was fairly expensive.

    Mere days after the manufacturer warranty ran out, one of the keyboard keys stopped working. I sent it in for repairs. They estimated 2 weeks, including shipping both ways.

    Weeks later, they finally claimed they couldn’t find replacement parts (for a laptop less than 1 year old?) and refunded me the entire cost of the laptop. The warranty itself cost roughly ~20% of the laptop cost, so I figure I effectively “leased” a laptop for a year instead of buying it.

    Hey, they also sent me back the HDD, which went on to serve for another few years in the desktop I built with the returned funds.

  • fuckwit_mcbumcrumble@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    7 months ago

    My mom bought a Jeep. It paid out over what the car was worth in warranty repairs. After the warranty was up the car became mostly reliable for the next 5-6 years.

    I think the real pro tip is just never buy a Jeep.

    • jqubed@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      Don’t buy anything in the Chrysler family of brands, or get the extended warranty if you do

  • Donjuanme@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    Both times with the new car.

    Both times transmission within a thousand miles of the warranty being over (both times on the wrong side of the warranty, but they were cool about it).

  • Redredme@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    Never. I sold these things long ago and learned quickly back then they are just scams.

    You being lucky is an edge case.

  • InfiniteHench@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    I usually get AppleCare on my stuff since I’ve had great experiences with it. They cover accidental damage and replace the device for a small fee.

    Last time I needed it was 2021 when I messed up my iPad Pro during lockdown. Apple chat me online, ran a diagnostic, charged me only $100 and a new replacement was on my doorstep in 36 hours. A+ experience

  • Today@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    American Home Shield, which usually sucks, just came through with $920 to replace a 10 year old washing machine.

  • jordanlund@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    Put a bunch of money in my pocket when I was selling them, that worked out pretty well. 😁

  • roofuskit@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    Literally every time I’ve purchased one for my child’s or wife’s electronic devices, especially those with large glass screens.

  • Fondots@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    I had one of the earlier model iPod Touches, maybe 2nd Gen? It was the first one to include Bluetooth (if memory serves, and it may not, I vaguely remember at launch Bluetooth that was disabled and I had to jailbreak it to use it, pretty sure Apple eventually enabled Bluetooth with a software update)

    Around that time I’d also gotten my first job and had purchased a new laptop for myself, and sprung a little extra to get one with Bluetooth.

    I saw the future, I was sick of wires and dongles, I got a Bluetooth mouse, a pair of Bluetooth over the ear headphones, and for my iPod I went to Best buy and got a pair of rocket fish “earbuds” (it doesn’t feel right calling them earbuds, since they were connected with a rigid band around the back of your head, but that’s what they were calling them) and sprung an extra couple bucks for the warranty because why not.

    Those earbuds were a piece of crap. They worked fine, but they weren’t rugged enough to deal with everyday life. Getting knocked off a coffee table onto a carpeted floor was enough to break them.

    So for a couple months it became almost a weekly ritual for me to go back to best buy to exchange them, until they just stopped stocking them and gave me my money back.

    In those days, there weren’t many options for smaller profile Bluetooth headphone, you could get bulky over the ear models that were never really my thing, or you could get a mono earpiece. I’m pretty sure that those were literally the only model I could find at any reasonable price point.

    It actually kind of soured me on Bluetooth headphones until fairly recently, and honestly if my phone still had a jack I’d probably still be using the Shure 215 earbuds I bought after that.

    (Also, if you’re in the market for wired earbuds, I’m no audiophile, but I do not regret getting the shures one bit, they definitely sounded better than the Skullcandy buds I upgraded from back then, and they are damn-near indestructible, there may very well be better, cheaper, and more rugged earbuds out there, but for the $100 or so I spent over a decade ago, mine have gone through the laundry a couple times and had just about every other kind of abuse you could imagine inflicted upon them and they’re no worse for wear, and the wire is replaceable if that ever gets fucked up but I’m still on the original)

  • m-p{3}@lemmy.ca
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    7 months ago

    I bought the extended warranty on an mp3 player I really liked at the time (3 years instead of the usual 1), and I got lucky enough that it dies 2 weeks before the end of the warranty.

    Got a sweet upgrade out of it.

  • Brown5500@sh.itjust.works
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    7 months ago

    Not an answer to your question, but years ago I used to work at best buy. My employee discount was 5% over cost. I could purchase their $200 service plan on an appliance for about $15. With the discount, definitely worth it.

    • Chozo@fedia.io
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      7 months ago

      Honestly, Best Buy’s service plans are slept on. I had to use them for a couple TVs that both started failing a few months after the manufacturer warranty ended. Ended up getting a free upgrade on both units because they stopped making that particular model (I wonder why) so they replaced both TVs with a slightly bigger display.

      • cm0002@lemmy.worldOP
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        7 months ago

        I bet it was the backlight, they always cheap out on the LED backlight strips on those cheap TVs. Easy, but delicate fix (you have to basically teardown the entire TV, panel, light filters everything)

        • Chozo@fedia.io
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          7 months ago

          Yup! One of them had a backlight issue, where the bottom third of the screen was dim. The other one had a speaker go out. Last time I buy Insignia.

  • keys42@literature.cafe
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    7 months ago

    When RadioShack was still a thing. I was in a band that used in ear monitors. I bought a pair of decent earbuds there for $25 with a $5 extra warranty, which states I’d have to pay $5 for a replacement. Between jumping on stage, forgetting they were plugged in or just plain blowing them out, I went thru 6 pairs jn 3 years, each time paying 10$ (5 for the replacement and 5 for the warranty)

    • mic_check_one_two@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      7 months ago

      Wow, you must’ve been an early adopter for IEMs. There wasn’t a lot of crossover in the timelines between RadioShack and IEMs. IEMs were just starting to get economical enough (and durable enough) for live shows when RadioShack was going through their big “let’s pivot hard into selling cellphone contracts”. And that was what put the company into a death spiral. You must’ve gotten on the trend pretty early.

      • keys42@literature.cafe
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        7 months ago

        We were early-ish adapters, but these also weren’t true in ears. Our guitarist had a professional quality soundboard with a bunch of out channels, so we each bought a cheap soundboard and used the output from the main one as our monitor channel. My setup cost me $125 and that’s still cheaper than decent in ears today lol. (And I’ve used the soundboard for jazz trio gigs so it’s paid me back in spades!)