Anyone who has read my latest build, Revell German Half Track, will know that I had problems with the tracks. One was too long, one was too short and was not clear in the instructions which glue to use on the tracks.
So I contacted Revell Customer service, and they advised using their Contacta adhesive on the tracks, which I then did.
This basically ruined the tracks into a soft gooey mess and did not stick them together either!
I managed to (sort of) resolve the issue by using CA glue, but the tracks were still ruined and if you look close the join is totally bodged and, every time i look at it I can see the issue, so its bugging me that the model will never be as good as it should be.
Subsequently I decided to email and complain to Revell, based on the fact that their direct advice to me resulted in the model being damaged, and thus my enjoyment of it. Also bear in mind how much time we spend on these things, in this case I've been building this model for a good couple of week and that equates to many, many hours, so all wasted time too. I did ask for a refund, but....
I know in the great scheme of things a slightly damaged model is not really a major issue for anyone, and its a first World problems and all that. Yes, yes, I know. But I am the type of person who is not afraid of complaining, or pointing out when a product or service is of sub par quality or otherwise does not meet expectations. (And the older I get, the more grumpy I get, the more exacting my standards get, etc, etc, and I fully embrace that, Lol).
If no-one says anything, then everything just gets worse, standards drop, product quality and QC suffers, etc, etc. As long as the complaint is polite, concise and asks for a reasonable resolution, then I don't see a problem.
Anyway long story short, Revell have replied and offered me a free kit as some sort of mitigation/compensation. Only offered me one of two kits mind, I opted for a T26 tank. So another one for the shelf.
The moral of this story, if it ain't right.....complain!
So I contacted Revell Customer service, and they advised using their Contacta adhesive on the tracks, which I then did.
This basically ruined the tracks into a soft gooey mess and did not stick them together either!
I managed to (sort of) resolve the issue by using CA glue, but the tracks were still ruined and if you look close the join is totally bodged and, every time i look at it I can see the issue, so its bugging me that the model will never be as good as it should be.
Subsequently I decided to email and complain to Revell, based on the fact that their direct advice to me resulted in the model being damaged, and thus my enjoyment of it. Also bear in mind how much time we spend on these things, in this case I've been building this model for a good couple of week and that equates to many, many hours, so all wasted time too. I did ask for a refund, but....
I know in the great scheme of things a slightly damaged model is not really a major issue for anyone, and its a first World problems and all that. Yes, yes, I know. But I am the type of person who is not afraid of complaining, or pointing out when a product or service is of sub par quality or otherwise does not meet expectations. (And the older I get, the more grumpy I get, the more exacting my standards get, etc, etc, and I fully embrace that, Lol).
If no-one says anything, then everything just gets worse, standards drop, product quality and QC suffers, etc, etc. As long as the complaint is polite, concise and asks for a reasonable resolution, then I don't see a problem.
Anyway long story short, Revell have replied and offered me a free kit as some sort of mitigation/compensation. Only offered me one of two kits mind, I opted for a T26 tank. So another one for the shelf.
The moral of this story, if it ain't right.....complain!
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