A
Amnesia
Guest
Last August, we bought a Midea dehumidifier for almost $300. It worked well then. We didn't use it for a while and when we turned it on, it didn't work. The electronics were fine, but it wasn't dehumidifying. We think it leaked its refrigerant. So, we contacted customer support and they said we could exchange it at Home Depot. We did that.
When we tried to use the second dehumidifier, it also didn't work. This time, the unit was reading the room humidity wrong. It stayed between 30% and 37%. Well, we knew the room RH was in the mid 60s. This thing was about 30% wrong. That meant it wouldn't run automatically. It doesn't operate below 35%. So, in another session with their customer support, we were told we couldn't exchange it, but we could return it for a refund.
This is when an ordinary day became a bad day. We went through several layers of management at Home Depot, only to eventually be told they wouldn't let us return it. So, the Midea representative was wrong—or maybe just trying to get rid of us. We were mad at this point. So, instead of taking the unit home, we just parked it on a cart in front of the store. My thinking was we were out $300 and this was junk, so why not let the store do whatever is to be done with junk of this type. We walked away from it.
This is when a bad day became a good day. Once home, I opened the email that asked me to rate my customer service experience. Well... It was one of my best rants. Enough said. Within 10 or 15 minutes of me hitting the submit button, we received a call from Midea support. They were apologetic and offered to send us a check for the full cost of the dehumidifier. I felt bad about the lousy rating and victorious by not having lost $300. I do wonder what happened to the abandoned unit.
When we tried to use the second dehumidifier, it also didn't work. This time, the unit was reading the room humidity wrong. It stayed between 30% and 37%. Well, we knew the room RH was in the mid 60s. This thing was about 30% wrong. That meant it wouldn't run automatically. It doesn't operate below 35%. So, in another session with their customer support, we were told we couldn't exchange it, but we could return it for a refund.
This is when an ordinary day became a bad day. We went through several layers of management at Home Depot, only to eventually be told they wouldn't let us return it. So, the Midea representative was wrong—or maybe just trying to get rid of us. We were mad at this point. So, instead of taking the unit home, we just parked it on a cart in front of the store. My thinking was we were out $300 and this was junk, so why not let the store do whatever is to be done with junk of this type. We walked away from it.
This is when a bad day became a good day. Once home, I opened the email that asked me to rate my customer service experience. Well... It was one of my best rants. Enough said. Within 10 or 15 minutes of me hitting the submit button, we received a call from Midea support. They were apologetic and offered to send us a check for the full cost of the dehumidifier. I felt bad about the lousy rating and victorious by not having lost $300. I do wonder what happened to the abandoned unit.