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Firerouge | 1 year ago
Sol-Ark may not have pulled the trigger on bricking the inverters, but it certainly sounds like their legal actions pressed Deye's hand.
And then to shake down all the individuals who's inverters broke with a limited time opportunity to buy a brand new one from them....
greenthrow|1 year ago
jeroenhd|1 year ago
I can't really figure out what they did that was in breach of contract. As far as I understand it, they don't do business inside the areas affected, so there is no contract to speak of. Instead, their authorized resellers seem to be the ones installing for their hardware; I don't even think it's legal to sell their hardware if it doesn't comply with FCC/etc guidelines.
Is geo-blocking illegal? Am I entitled to a refund if I import American hardware that refuses to operate in my country?
I think people were risking a broken setup for a big discount, and now it's come back to bite them in the ass. If the units affected were official installations done by their American reseller, their reseller wouldn't be so ready to offer up free replacements.
kstenerud|1 year ago
Firerouge|1 year ago
Had there been no exclusivity agreement, I think we can agree that the inverters would not of been bricked for being located in the wrong regions.
I think the malice from Sol-Ark here is that they are only offering a limited time deal, which may pressure people to pay up before the courts clear this up.
Regardless of who shares the majority of the blame, Sol-Ark, Deye or 3rd party vendors, this could of been handled better by all parties involved, and should not have harmed end consumers in this way.
unknown|1 year ago
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