Extended Warrenty???


I recently puchased a 65" Mitsubishi big sceen TV. The dealer was really pushing the extended warrenty (5 years for about $350). Are these necessary? Helpful? Do you really need to clean/realine these every year? Any thoughts would be appreciated as I can still get in on it before the TV is delivered. Thanks!
revdog
Yes-Sony 36 XBR weighs 250lbs,latest version 450 has less
problems but they still seem to pop up AFTER basic waaranty.
But OH ! What a pix !
I work at an electronics store who sell about 15 different brands of hdtv;s mits, hitachi, and toshiba being our top line, around 3,000 for a 55"-60" hdtv's..and yes, we do make a commision off selling extended warranties, but if you didnt buy anything because the person makes money off of you, you'd have no house,car, diamond ring etc..that is assanine. Capitalism folks. if the warranties are full inhome with yearly checkups including convergence, its totally worth it for $80 dollars a year. if you spend 3 grand, its not worth $400 do make sure your tv is hassle free for 5 yrs.miked
If it includes yearly check-ups, get it in a heartbeat. If it includes pick-up and delivery or in-home service get it, but negotiate price. Otherwise, forget it. An in-home service call on my Loewe was quoted at $250 plus parts; the thing weighs 150 lbs so I can't imagine dragging it to the shop.
Normally no but for big ticket priced tv's yes.

My story. I bought the top of the line Sony XBR 53" five years ago and got a discount on the extended warranty. (Negotiate the price down for the max number of years is my policy.) I paid the three year price for five years of coverage. One month before the warrenty expired, the picuture tubes died. It took the service people almost three months for various parts to come in and be installed before it was determined "unable to restore to original specs". "Replacement" under the coverage was going to get me the current equivalent large screen rear projection Sony but it was almost half the price of what I originally paid. Instead of accepting the new mid-line Sony, I took the credit against a 65" Mitsubishi HDTV.

TV projection tubes have shorter lives than before. They'll give out about five years so if you get coverage pay for the five year coverage and negotiate the price. Any coverage under that time is playing into the game of paying for a service you'll likely not use.