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Sep 19, 2016 11:02 PM in response to Rasim Rakhmanovby jshire,★Helpfuldepending on which country you are in (US I assume) you should actually be covered under various consumer protection regulations & should now insist on a replacement machine. This fault is a manufacturing fault & as you've already had one repair that did not fix it you have a legal right to a replacement. That said I should advise that Apple do not tend to stick to their legal obligations in such instances (I know as I have a 13 inch macbook pro that had issues from day one & despite numerous repairs Apple still refuse to replace it - even though the law here & their own terms of sale clearly state it should have been). On another front any repair carried out on any product must perform as expected for a 'reasonable' amount of time. Again the definition depends on which country you are in but in Europe that is generally accepted as 6 years at best. good luck !
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Sep 19, 2016 11:02 PM in response to Rasim Rakhmanovby OGELTHORPE,★HelpfulRasim Rakhmanov wrote:
Can i replace my logic board again (it will be 2nd time) under this program?
There is no restriction in the replacement bulletin on the number of times that the logic board can be replaced, only an expiration date. Bring it back.
Ciao.
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Sep 19, 2016 3:40 AM in response to Rasim Rakhmanovby OGELTHORPE,Rasim Rakhmanov wrote:
Can i replace my logic board again (it will be 2nd time) under this program?
There is no restriction in the replacement bulletin on the number of times that the logic board can be replaced, only an expiration date. Bring it back.
Ciao.