E
Edward Felcher
Guest
I've had a lot of experience having R-D1's repaired by Epson in Indiana.
A few weeks ago I had the rangefinder of another one of my in-warranty refurbs go so badly out of alignment I could not adjust it myself.
My past experience was that they were now fixing the cameras rather than replacing them.
I sent my pristine, late serial number R-D1 via FedEx to Plainfield, Indiana, expecting them to fix it.
Two weeks later, I got back a camera that clearly was not mine, even though they had swapped the flash shoe to keep the same serial number.
The one they returned was pretty beat up, scratches, many signs of wear, and the original version firmware, not the the Version 2.0 upgraded camera that I had sent them.
By the numbering on the image files it had thousands more actuations then the one I sent.
However, the alignment on this one is dead-on perfect, after testing with several lenses and upgrading firmware again.
I guess I can't complain, but it appears they are replacing, not repairing R-D1's again.
A few weeks ago I had the rangefinder of another one of my in-warranty refurbs go so badly out of alignment I could not adjust it myself.
My past experience was that they were now fixing the cameras rather than replacing them.
I sent my pristine, late serial number R-D1 via FedEx to Plainfield, Indiana, expecting them to fix it.
Two weeks later, I got back a camera that clearly was not mine, even though they had swapped the flash shoe to keep the same serial number.
The one they returned was pretty beat up, scratches, many signs of wear, and the original version firmware, not the the Version 2.0 upgraded camera that I had sent them.
By the numbering on the image files it had thousands more actuations then the one I sent.
However, the alignment on this one is dead-on perfect, after testing with several lenses and upgrading firmware again.
I guess I can't complain, but it appears they are replacing, not repairing R-D1's again.