When are they receiving?
I assume you never plan to sell the phone? If you ever sell it, the resale value will be significantly reduced.I won't be returning the phone ever. Gonna roll the dice on this one. And It's my understanding that the exploding devices were due to people using after market cables.
Also 35 cases world wide of exploding devices? Lets say each carrier shipped 10k devices for the WORLD. Sprint, AT&T, TMobile, Verizon and Telus. That's 50k devices, 35 exploded and none were in the US?
If my math is correct- 35÷50,000=.0007*100= .07%
That tells me I have a better chance of leaving my apartment, walking across the street and getting hit by a cement truck or contracting salmonella from one of my favorite restaurants before this phone will explode.
I won't be returning the phone ever. Gonna roll the dice on this one. And It's my understanding that the exploding devices were due to people using after market cables.
Also 35 cases world wide of exploding devices? Lets say each carrier shipped 10k devices for the WORLD. Sprint, AT&T, TMobile, Verizon and Telus. That's 50k devices, 35 exploded and none were in the US?
If my math is correct- 35÷50,000=.0007*100= .07%
That tells me I have a better chance of leaving my apartment, walking across the street and getting hit by a cement truck or contracting salmonella from one of my favorite restaurants before this phone will explode.
They was told 2 weeks!!! They will learn more in a few days.
I agree. No reason not to do the recall, since it's free and they are giving you a brand new phoneFlawed logic won't alleviate the risk or fix your battery.
Seriously people. This is risking personal safety and property damage. Do the recall.
Same here. This is what they said that they will hear in a few days or so about How Verizon going to send out the new phones. I am guessing the same way like I got my preorder in a box and return the old.That is what Tmobile told me. I'm holding onto mine and then swapping it out for a new Note 7. I ordered mine in store, but since it was an order from Tmobile I have to go through corporate. they said they would send me a new phone first and I then send old one back. I "might" look to exchange it for a V20 as the specs look really beefy, but with the G5 problems and being a big flop I'd hate to go to the V20 and have issues with that and end up with a device that is a failure when I could get a brand new note which overall the Note is a much better device most likely.
I won't be returning the phone ever. Gonna roll the dice on this one. And It's my understanding that the exploding devices were due to people using after market cables.
Also 35 cases world wide of exploding devices? Lets say each carrier shipped 10k devices for the WORLD. Sprint, AT&T, TMobile, Verizon and Telus. That's 50k devices, 35 exploded and none were in the US?
If my math is correct- 35÷50,000=.0007*100= .07%
That tells me I have a better chance of leaving my apartment, walking across the street and getting hit by a cement truck or contracting salmonella from one of my favorite restaurants before this phone will explode.
I won't be returning the phone ever. Gonna roll the dice on this one. And It's my understanding that the exploding devices were due to people using after market cables.
Also 35 cases world wide of exploding devices? Lets say each carrier shipped 10k devices for the WORLD. Sprint, AT&T, TMobile, Verizon and Telus. That's 50k devices, 35 exploded and none were in the US?
If my math is correct- 35÷50,000=.0007*100= .07%
That tells me I have a better chance of leaving my apartment, walking across the street and getting hit by a cement truck or contracting salmonella from one of my favorite restaurants before this phone will explode.
Yeah that's probably what the people that had the issue thought too. "Why did it catch on fire? It has never done that before."I'll keep mine at the very least until replacements become available in store. I'm not waiting for them to send me anything or going through a complicated return process with Verizon. When I can walk into a corporate store and walk out with a new Note 7 then I will consider it. The only time mine has gotten hot at all was when it downloaded the first security update the day I got it. Since then it has performed like an absolute champ.
Samsung is saying at least 1 million phones are at risk, that is a conservative number.I won't be returning the phone ever. Gonna roll the dice on this one. And It's my understanding that the exploding devices were due to people using after market cables.
Also 35 cases world wide of exploding devices? Lets say each carrier shipped 10k devices for the WORLD. Sprint, AT&T, TMobile, Verizon and Telus. That's 50k devices, 35 exploded and none were in the US?
If my math is correct- 35÷50,000=.0007*100= .07%
That tells me I have a better chance of leaving my apartment, walking across the street and getting hit by a cement truck or contracting salmonella from one of my favorite restaurants before this phone will explode.
The 35 people out of the couple of million you mean?Yeah that's probably what the people that had the issue thought too. "Why did it catch on fire? It has never done that before."
Why risk it? Samsung wouldn't do this recall without being very serious about the danger.How long can u wait to make a swap. My phone is working just fine. Really no heat, even in Fast Charge. It was made in Korea. I'll hold out as long as I can. Get some good use out of the phone and then make the swap, if there is no time limit.