I'm not sure that's what CJ's saying Philly?
F@ck-ups happen, we all know they do, and from what I've read so far, these guys are owning up, taking responsibility, and making an offer of restitution. And a somewhat better offer than many organisations we all come across would make (as I understand it so far - they'll fix it to the best of their ability, they won't charge, and, er, here's a free guitar as well...)
I don't think anyone's suggesting a licence to be incompetent here - they'll know what a mess they've made - and the erk that did it is either going to learn from his mistake, or they'll get rid of him if he keeps f@cking up (hopefully they've spoken to him in a fashion that encourages him to take responsibility).
Yeah, yeah, kind of. I suppose my reply to CJ's comment comes across as "Outraged of Tunbridge Wells" when I was mostly just having a sarcastic dig. Lowest form of wit. Sorry.
But coming back to Jonny's case, they haven't really done all they could. They have owned up - eventually, after seemingly using "wiring problems" as an excuse for a week or so. And they've offered to repair the cracks - but NOT do a respray.
The free guitar is a nice gesture, but it's probably one they haven't been able to sell so not really a big deal to them. If it was me, I wouldn't want the guitar and even if they offered an equivalent discount against something else, I'd still end up having to spend £500 (or whatever) I hadn't planned on spending.
CJ suggested we're more concerned with our instruments' value than playability - I shouldn't think anyone here gives a sh!t about resale value. We just don't expect a guitar to come
back from the repair shop with problems it didn't have when it went in.
The thing that really bothers me is the trust aspect. I do most work on my own guitars. I'd only go to a pro if I wanted something done that I'd be afraid to tackle myself - a refret maybe. I'd want to feel
confident they'd do a better job than I could myself. I wouldn't expect them to say "the refret's fine, but we ripped some chunks out of the fretboard. It's OK, you can hardly see the Ronseal wood filler, we got a colour that almost matches." Of course mistakes can happen, but it's not unreasonable to expect someone to take care to avoid them. Measure twice, cut once and all that.