Within any large number of anythung, there will a number of defective units.
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That's what I would do. 1) quickly triage each unit. 2) work on the ones that can be fixed the quickest. makes sense to me
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This seems so shady
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Would times are good, we don't fix things, it costs too much but if you are stuck, you make do. Not shady at all. They were put in storage as they had issues. Most, hopefully, were small, issues.
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Proud of my State.
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An adult alternative! Now set that as a real trend.
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1- 170 'defective' vents would (I imagine) be an FDA reportable event, vents don't become 'defective' in storage. 2- 'defective' life support equipment you would DEFINITELY hear about because EVERYONE would be looking at their own (of the same brand). I call BS.
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They weren’t defective. They needed new batteries.
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