LOL - when the P3 came out, the discussions of the P2 went into radio silence.And then we start this all over again... [emoji38]
LOL - when the P3 came out, the discussions of the P2 went into radio silence.And then we start this all over again... [emoji38]
Wow Ian.
Tha's pretty unusual behaviour for you.
Since when is a discussion defined as 1-sided dialog?
Didn't the OP end with a question?
Censoring decorum is one thing, opinions another.
This will void your warranty and shift all liability to you. Great idea!Yes we shouldn't have cracks to begin with. Sorry to hear about your stress cracks. A quick fix would be the liquid plastic cements hobby stores have, it melts the plastic and seals it.
Stress cracks are covered.DJI states the frame has no warranty.
If I/we have to "buy"/pay to replace shell, that is not a legally acceptable solution. At minimum, DJI should have at the very minimum, fixed the issue on new sales, when the problem was discovered to be a defect in manufacturing.Well first off they are fixing them, so there is a solution. If you do not like the turn time, which from what I read has gotten significantly less than 6-8 weeks, you can buy another shell. So a class action law suit would be difficult to do, you have prove that there is no response from the manufacturer. There is. Also the only people who gain anything is the attorneys involved who get paid first with any settlement, the rest gets divided. You will have to bring a law suit up to the courts first and then get the judge to make a class action by specifying specific data relating to mass failures. There is lots of squawking but hard to get real numbers as we have no idea of percentages of cracks vs units without. Class action suits takes years to resolve, there will be newer models or they will be discontinued long before there is any resolution. The quads are small change in real world numbers. The parent company is overseas, difficult if not impossible to prosecute or collect.
I agree there is a problem with the shells with some users. I have not seen cracks yet, that does not mean it will not happen. However there are solutions. This is a hobby item, it hardly stopping anyone from making a living so in the reality, get them to fix it for free, send it back. Take a vacation.
Alan
Actually, DJI does business here and has US interests and assets which can be attached if a court determines that damages must be paid.I'm no lawyer, but my experience with class action suits is that the stakes have got to be a lot higher in order to get a law firm to take this on. DJI isn't General Motors and, as someone else said earlier in the forum comments, they're a foreign owned company, so good luck getting any money out of them.
Interesting. Keep us informed please.Coincidentally, I got a voice mail yesterday from a law firm in NYC with regard to a class action suit against DJI. No idea what it's about but I will be checking in with them on Monday.
The turnaround time my have gotten better but the repair quality has dropped off considerably.Well first off they are fixing them, so there is a solution. If you do not like the turn time, which from what I read has gotten significantly less than 6-8 weeks, you can buy another shell. So a class action law suit would be difficult to do, you have prove that there is no response from the manufacturer. There is. Also the only people who gain anything is the attorneys involved who get paid first with any settlement, the rest gets divided. You will have to bring a law suit up to the courts first and then get the judge to make a class action by specifying specific data relating to mass failures. There is lots of squawking but hard to get real numbers as we have no idea of percentages of cracks vs units without. Class action suits takes years to resolve, there will be newer models or they will be discontinued long before there is any resolution. The quads are small change in real world numbers. The parent company is overseas, difficult if not impossible to prosecute or collect.
I agree there is a problem with the shells with some users. I have not seen cracks yet, that does not mean it will not happen. However there are solutions. This is a hobby item, it hardly stopping anyone from making a living so in the reality, get them to fix it for free, send it back. Take a vacation.
Alan
They are not stress cracks. The cracks are there from the factory. I had mine in for repair.I had to open the shell myself to repair their repairs. Keep in mind i only flew the craft less than 10 times from the time it was new until i had to send it in for repair. Having never flown a P3 before...i flew very cautiously which in turn caused no undo stress.After opening the shell i inspected the areas around where the screws go.The area where a lot of people are seeing cracks. The bottom half of the shell.Out of the 8 nubs ....4 of them have cracks.2 of them have 2 cracks and the other 2 have 1 crack. Its apparent they were cracked during manufacturing. No cracks around the outer most smaller 4 screws. And no cracks around the inner 4 bigger screws.DJI is clearly itching for a class action lawsuit for ignoring the stress crack issue with many of it's P3Ps. Rather than replace their defective product, they insist on "fixing" your bird over a period of 6-8 weeks. Unacceptable! Any lawyers out there with this problem? Who'll join me?
Ok. Suppose a buy a brand new P3.Open it up and show the cracks that are there from manufacturing. Would i win the lawsuit?The ONLY WAY you could win a lawsuit for cracked frames on a flying device is to prove that you NEVER EVER crashed it. With video you can film something and have proof when an even occurs but if you crash it they will just say you didn't provide the video of the crash, only the good flights.
Its impossible.
If you were a judge and a group of people turned claiming they had cracked frames from "stress" and you asked them all how many Phantoms crashed, hit walls, trees etc. How many people could say their Phantom never hit anything?
Not really. Had mine in for repair/replacement of hardware. I have cracks yet they ignored them.No
They are fixing the problem if one existed.
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