Scarpa NA customer service
so Saturday I was at Mt Slow with the mini animal ripping up the bunny hill. Due to a variety of reasons among them being our late arrival and the general PITA that is attempting to carry 2 year old in ski boots + his skis + my skis I decided to go light (F1's, Dynafits, and TM:X's) so there'd be less weight to deal with. Besides it's not like Mt Snow's bunny hill has mandatory 40 footers that require alpine boots and 18+ DIN metal binders.
Plan was working to perfection until midway through the day when I noticed that there was a whole lot more slop in the left boot then the right. Figuring I just hadn't engaged the ski/walk lever properly, and the boot must have popped back into walk mode. No biggie right? Well turns out that at some point in the day the little bar that fits in the groove had either snapped or worked loose so the boot will not lock into ski mode.
I return home on Saturday night and fire off an e-mail to Scarpa NA explaining the problem and how it occurred. I ask nicely if there is simply a replacement pin or if I have to replace the entire latch assembly. Late Monday morning I receive a reply that they believe they have a replacement latch that they will send me, so I'm stoked, but they want to know how long ago I purchased the boots. The second part of the e-mail worries me, because it can only mean a couple of things, none of which are good. I bought the boots secondhand and I'm pretty sure they're from the years that BD was the distributer. I'm betting the second part of the e-mail means that either they're not going to warranty them because I'm not the original owner or they're going to weasel out and pass the buck to BD because they weren't the distributer.
I send an e-mail back saying that I bought them in October, and I think they're either last year's model or the year before. I also ask if there is any difference in the model year(which would necessitate the asking of the "what year question") I get no response to my second e-mail by the end of the day Monday, I figure I'll get a response some time Tuesday morning.
Well after waiting most of the day Tuesday I decide to get on the phone to see whats up. Talk to one of the warranty reps, and apparently my names not even in the system yet. I'm vexed, rep says he'll get in touch with the rep who e-mailed me and someone will give me a call ASAP. At 3pm I get an e-mail from the original rep saying that I can send my boots to Scarpa and if they deem it to be a worthy of warranty they'll fix it, otherwise its gonna cost me $75 for a new lever because I can't just replace the pin.
I'm over a barrel here because I'd planned to head up to the ADK's next weekend and really need the boots so the thought of sending them to Scarpa and waiting for them to decide in all probability that they won't warranty them and I'll be out the $75 plus whatever the shipping winds up being. So I decide to sack up and just eat the $75 and make sure the part is here(plus I need an extra pair of TLT classic shims so it'd make sense to get it all at once). Call up Scarpa and explain the dilemma, ask why I have to send my boots back when its just a tiny little pin and what kind of abuse could I have possibly inflicted upon it that would irregardless of warranty cause Scarpa not to stand behind the craftsmanship of their boots that such an important mechanism could fail within the lifespan of the boots. I tell the rep that I'm sure they won't warranty them due to the circumstances of my purchase and it'd just be easier to have a 3rd ski/walk lever around to cannibalize for parts should "anything else fail".
He understands my plight and for my hassles offers to sell me the ski/walk lever at cost and throw in the two shims. Fair deal, so credit card # and shipping addresses are given and the part should be on its way tomorrow AM so I'll have it in time for my trip.
I get home tonight to find an answering machine message from Scarpa
"sorry we don't have any ski/walk levers" give us a call tomorrow morning
to be continued.....
For sure, you have to be lost to find a place that can't be found, elseways everyone would know where it was
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