Recommended Posts
skybytch 273
QuoteIf they want to control who, how, why, where, and when these rigs are used, why bother selling them and just lease them.
They've always wanted to control who, how, why, where and when the rigs are used. I was told that in a previous version of the user agreement it was stated that RWS could take the gear back if an end user was found to have violated one of the many factory-imposed regulations on usage of the gear.
They aren't going to lease them, because leasing would put them in the list of defendants twice - once as the manufacturer and again as the gear owner.
QuoteParagraph 3 states NO WARRANTY EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED but Paragraph 4 addressed the WARRANTIES listed in #3 but there are no warranties.
The statement in paragraph 3 is pretty much word for word the same statement that is made in every US built container/canopy owner's manual (btw, if anyone is interested, you can find the user agreement in full on RWS' website - http://www.relativeworkshop.com). By using any sport rig sold in the US you are agreeing to the same terms. For tandem equipment, since the liklihood of a lawsuit in a case of injury or death is higher per tandem rig than per sport rig, I can totally understand why RWS would want those terms to be explicitly agreed with - i.e. by the end user's signature.
The user agreement is just legal stuff. As long as you exercise "due diligence" (by having a rigger inspect the parts before installing them according to the manufacturer's instructions, etc.), you won't have a problem. What happens in the real world is they take care of their end users. If you did receive a defective part, all it would take to get a replacement would be a phone call.
I'm so not a lawyer, but paragraph 4 sounds to me like a way of reiterating that the gear is sold with no warranty of any kind - even those normally assumed ("Including without limitation any warranty of merchantability... blah blah blah")
billvon 2,991
>What if Bill Booth sells RWS and the new people are a bunch of a-
>holes.
This is a very valid concern. Know the people you're dealing with. The skydiving industry is small enough that you can call George Galloway if you have questions about a Raven-MZ, or John Leblanc if you have questions about a sabre II. If you call a manufacturer and get the runaround, chances are you'll get the same runaround if you have a problem
In fact, I'd place a lot more importance on who I was dealing with at a company than what I had to sign. In this industry, at least, the big names (with a few exceptions) seem to have a lot of integrity, and I'd rely on that far sooner than I'd try to rely on any perceived legal protection I got from refusing to sign something,
>holes.
This is a very valid concern. Know the people you're dealing with. The skydiving industry is small enough that you can call George Galloway if you have questions about a Raven-MZ, or John Leblanc if you have questions about a sabre II. If you call a manufacturer and get the runaround, chances are you'll get the same runaround if you have a problem
In fact, I'd place a lot more importance on who I was dealing with at a company than what I had to sign. In this industry, at least, the big names (with a few exceptions) seem to have a lot of integrity, and I'd rely on that far sooner than I'd try to rely on any perceived legal protection I got from refusing to sign something,
AndyMan 7
QuoteThey aren't going to lease them, because leasing would put them in the list of defendants twice - once as the manufacturer and again as the gear owner.
Didn't RWS do exactly this at one time - lease the tandem rigs to the DZ/instructor?
_Am
__
You put the fun in "funnel" - craichead.
You put the fun in "funnel" - craichead.
>The manufacturers are covered in the waiver that we sign at the dz.
Right... the same waiver thats cost RWS hundreds of thousands in lawyer fees and settlements defending them selfs in lawsuits in the recent past? Talk to a recent RWS/Jumpshack/who ever Tandem Examiner about the things that they can pull a rating for ever since the tandem program was changed from expermintal to governed by the USPA...
If you want to thank anyone for this type of situation... the USPA ws the driving force in changing the tandem program in the FAA's eyes.
And tomorrow is a mystery
Parachutemanuals.com
Share this post
Link to post
Share on other sites