Demand a Home Inspector That Checks for Appliance Recalls

as a Free Service

It Can Save You Expensive Repairs or Maybe Even Prevent a Fire   

Checking Appliances for Recalls is outside of ALL of the Standards of Practice. 
However, over 20% of Home Inspectors offer this service 
FREE with a home inspection.


There are over 200 million recalled appliances in the homes of unsuspecting Americans. It is not a surprise that it has become fairly common to see appliance recalls in the news. Recalled appliances are a major consumer problem.


Approximately 20% to 25% of homes that have had all of their
appliances checked for recalls have had at least one recalled appliance.


The first time a homeowner may be aware of an appliance recall is when a fire marshal tells them about the
recall after a house fire. According to the CPSC, “more than 80% of appliance recalls are the result of improperly installed wiring, overheating motors/relays or other component failures that you can’t see.”


There are two great reasons to check appliances for recall.

                ·         Avoid expensive repairs because the manufacturer will pay to repair or replace the                           defective appliance

                 ·        Avoid dangerous defects and safety risks 

Rest assured, by the time you see an appliance recall, more than a couple of these appliances have failed. Some may have started fires, or a bunch of them have stopped working for one reason or another and cost consumers a pile of money.


The real story is not any of the appliances in a single recall, but the vast number of undiscovered
recalled appliances now in American homes, and the difficulty of a consumer to checking if you are living with any of them.


Every type of an appliance you can name in a home has had a Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) recall. We can use dishwashers as an example to understand the problem, but your range, refrigerator, microwave, and every other appliance you can name has some models that are recalled. Instead of “Russian Roulette,” you can play “Appliance Roulette.”

Maytag’s spring 2010 voluntary dishwasher recall announced by the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) was featured in almost every news outlet when it occurred. It was one of the largest recalls of appliances since the CSPS started announcing recalls in 1974. The information was important and timely, but not many consumers ran over to their appliances and checked if their make and model of dishwasher was “on the list.”


In that recall, consumers were advised to visit
https://repair.maytag.com to determine if the dishwasher in their home is one of the 1.7 million potential fire hazard dishwasher units under this specific recall.


The big surprise, if you looked at the dishwasher and said “nope, not a Maytag and I do not need to worry” is that the Maytag brand is sold under
multiple manufacturer names. .A consumer would need to recognize that this same dishwasher could have been sold with any of the brand names including Maytag®, Amana®, Jenn-Air®, Admiral®, Magic Chef®, Performa by Maytag® and Crosley®. In case you are scratching your head wondering why all these makes are the same exact manufacturer, these multiple names allow competing retailers to offer products without fear of price comparisons.


The Consumer Product Safety Commission website home page assures consumers that “You can find
information on product recalls and recall alerts using the various searches on this page”. That is true. The problem with the manufacturer and CPSC sites is that a consumer must wade through each of the individual recalls for that type of appliance to find out if their particular appliance is a potential hazard. This type of search is like searching the list of phone numbers in a phone book to find a specific name instead of looking up the name of the person.


America is a beautiful country, the land of opportunity and invention. It became obvious that there is a market for a database search that worked backwards from the make, model, and serial number for appliances. This service identifies appliances under CPSC Recall with a simple entry into an online data sheet.

         

The RecallChek solution allows consumers to search for recalls on all of their household appliances including heating, cooling, hot water, laundry and built in kitchen appliances in one, easy location. This can be a free service from your home inspector or purchased from a dealer for a single fee. Think of this database as your “phone book” for recalls.


The appliance manufacturer’s sites, CPSC and RecallChek portals each provide important information. Once you know that your appliance is recalled, you need to know “what comes next”.

If there is a defect, the recall will include information about the nature of the recall and outlets where the product was sold. It will also include how to remedy the defect and the process of having the item repaired or replaced, usually for free. The recall report also includes the manufacturer’s contact details, the business hours of the manufacturer and what to do if the manufacturer fails to respond to a claim.

Every appliance has a make, model and serial number. These will be found somewhere on a plate on the appliance. Once you have those numbers, there are three ways to check an individual appliance for recalls.

               ·         Use Google, Bing or other search engine to find news stories about that brand name                              and model number. Read those stories and look for the range of serial numbers that                                are affected if recalled. This is a free method

                ·        Go to the Consumer Product Safety Council website www.CPSC.gov and search each                          of the recalls in that category of appliance for the make, model and serial number range                          of your appliance. This is another free service. With multiple names for each appliance, it                        often requires reading through many recalls for the same type of appliance. 

       ·        Copy the name plate information and enter your make, model and serial numbers on a                            portal service for recalls available on the internet such as                                                                           www.ApplianceRecallCheck.com. There is a onetime charge of approximately $30.00                             for all of the appliances in a home. This fee includes  a monthly update of recalls at no                            additional cost

              ·         Hire a home inspector who uses the RecallChek Service and receive the service                           at no cost to you.

 

When comparing home inspection fees, remember that you are saving $30.00 and the work of collecting each of your appliances model and serial numbers with a RecallChek Inspector.

 

Appliances play a major role in our lives. Checking on a broken appliance before repairs can save you a bundle. Checking all of the appliances in a home could also help keep your family safe.

Insist on Realtors with the Certified Client Protection Expert designation to make sure that your home inspector is qualified to offer the Termite Protection Plan

 

RELATED LINKS

Appliance Recall Check   www.appliancerecallcheck.com Appliance Recall Check is a service to identify recalled appliances in consumer's homes including furnaces, dishwashers,refrigerators,stoves 

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PDF Copy of A Full Article About This Program  

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