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Ex-Rental Laptops & Business Equipment. Lenovo, Toshiba, Epson + More Australia Wide $33 Ship

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We are selling some Ex-rental laptops and business equipment.
The equipment is available until sold out or Monday 20/01/2014 5pm AEST and items do not include any Warranty. Shipping is $33 inc GST.

Some of the items available include:
Lenovo G560 i5 Laptop $220
Toshiba Tecra A11 i7 Laptop $250
Epson EB-W12 WXGA Projector $355

Related Stores

techrentals.com.au
techrentals.com.au

closed Comments

  • not seeing the specials here and there is no warranty with any of those products you listed so seems like a bad deal to me

    • How do we know that it isn't broken already? If it had even a 30 day warranty then it would be acceptable.

  • +3

    No warranty? Pity about the Australian Consumer law.

  • Buyer beware… NO WARRANTY and if the laptop batteries are stuffed (which after 2-3 years they will be), guess what no warranty. Shipping it also extremely high.

  • There needs to be some warranty or atleast a 30 day return policy for an Online Purchase.

  • You can have peace of mind knowing every item sold has the assurance of our warranty.

    If you have no warranty why do you have this in the description?

    Misleading and dubious practice.

  • what will you say when you got call from ACCC about no warranty offered?

  • I bought the Lenovo Edge E520 from there recently. Excellent laptop, the condition was like new. Got delivered the next day.

    Their prices seem to have gone up now though.

    • +1

      Their prices seem to have gone up now though.

      of course, there last deal was so popular they realised they could really cash in on the advertising potential of OzB…. without realising what OzB is actually all about.

      PS rep, new rules here are if you post 2 deals in a row with negs you cop yourself an automatic ban :) im looking forward to your next post.

  • -1

    Pretty sure that under consumer law there must be warranty,
    Googled:
    http://www.fairtrading.nsw.gov.au/ftw/Businesses/Selling_goo…

    • Good link… But none of that is a warranty. These are implied consumer rights that cannot be excluded by any seller or service provider.

  • -1

    No warranty, no deal dodgy

  • If you look at an individual laptop it says:
    Intel i5-520M (2.40GHZ) 3M
    4GB DDR3-1333MHZ
    <snip>

    NO WARRANTY
    If you don't see what you want please call or email. Virtually every product in our range is available on a rental purchase plan. And assets are continually being returned from rent which may be made available for sale.

    You can have peace of mind knowing every item sold has the assurance of our warranty.

  • Hi,
    To clarify some of the concerns being raised by the OzBargin community, we have contacted the ACCC to clarify. As per consumer rights and bohdans link to an Acceptable quality guarantee, equipment sold must be in working order. If by chance this is not the case, then a refund, or if possible a replacement will be provided.

    This differs from a warranty, which is an optional choice of the supplier/manufacturer to provide repairs and parts for an extended period of time. And with select equipment we are unable to provide a warranty.

    In regards to the state of the equipment listed, they have previously been rented out and used in the corporate/business environment. Price variances from previous offers can be due to the age of the equipment and amount of use.

    Apologies for any confusion.

    • Are batteries that are not holding full charge or close to it considered working order. What percentage of charge do you consider working order.

  • I thought law doesn't require warranty for second hand products sold.

  • i5-2450 $525 serious? You can get a new i5 4xxx for not under $600.

    • Can you link me please? I'm looking for a new laptop, current i5 or i7.

      • Try MSY for starters but also other places - a lot of bargains come up here - check the technology section regularly.

  • +1

    A seller does NOT have to provide a warranty under any circumstances. However, there are implied conditions and statutory rights that cannot be excluded.

    The seller had not tried to hide the condition of the goods. They're clearly second hand and the seller has noted this.

    The condition of the goods are clearly known to the buyer in advance and the buyer is aware of the state.

    I see no problem with this.

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