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Re: T&R Electric -A Fix ??



Original poster: "by way of Terry Fritz <teslalist-at-qwest-dot-net>" <Tesla729-at-cs-dot-com>

In a message dated 8/4/03 6:59:26 AM Pacific Daylight Time, 
tesla-at-pupman-dot-com writes:
>Team in the States
>
>If  a group of USA coilers produced a "sale and purchase agreement" that was
>properly made to fully protect T&R which could be offfered to them for
>standard use when selling to amateur users would this make them happy to
>re-enter the market.
>
>I'd imagine that to create such a document would require some work but maybe
>it's worth it to coliers in USA.


Hi Ted, all,

I would imagine that to write such a "purchase agreement" in
terms and wording that would suffice for use in all 50 states
would probably require the services of an attorney-at-law :^)
Who's willing to shell out the bucks to cover the exhorbitant
fees that such a professional would charge for this service?
And then you would have to consider that no matter how
well the purchase agreement document was written, there
would probably come along another "attorney-at(out)- law"
that would find some loophole that would void the sel-
ler from the legal protection that was obtained by the origi-
nal purchase agreement document :^( If state governments
can sue (and win) $billions from the tobacco companies,
for ruining the health of millions of tobacco users - who were
well aware of the health risk associated w/ tobacco use
(any tobacco product has a surgeon general's statement
printed plainly on the package) considering the tobacco
companies were only providing a product for which there
was a great demand, then I would suspect that a purchase
agreement would NOT be a cure-all for the legal issues
involved in the sell of potentially dangerous electrical
equipment.

Like many others have already stated, if you go into this
coiling hobby, then you must be aware of and prepared to
accept the risks involved w/ this particular activity. If you
blow off your hand or foot or electrocute (as in dead) your-
self, don't you (or your family survivors, if you die) go try to
sue the guy that sold you the transformer of the capacitor
anymore than you would go try to sue GM, Ford, Chrysler,
ect. if you run off of the road and injure yourself in a wreck
(when the wreck was clearly your own fault).

Now I'll get off of my soapbox :^0

David Rieben

PS - I'm not a tobacco user, either.