News Feed › Forums › Stairlifts › Facebook’s (public) Acorn Stairlift Users Group helpful? Acorn engineers: NO › Reply To: Facebook’s (public) Acorn Stairlift Users Group helpful? Acorn engineers: NO
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I see. This is good to know, thank you. Btw, I experienced a sudden catastrophic knee failure 3 years ago. Cured myself using mainly by TDP lamps made by Leawell (bought 4 brands, Leawell was the most effective) and diy Nikkei magnet therapy, and eating lots of collagen powder. I also eat ground up egg shells — a big UN study says two egg shells daily needed.<div>
I did not go to a “duck tour”, even though I was unable to walk. Eventually, healed meeself, eventually able to run, and now can run without knee braces, thanks to the Universe.
The FB users group has a lot of people looking for independent repairs guys all over UK. Are they going to break the law? What is the penalty? These disabled people include Londoners.
In Canada, one Acorn engineer posted [alleged] on Indeed that Acorn Canada ‘absolutely has no training’ for their “engineers”. Have also noticed that US Acorn engineer Youtubers keep on replacing relays over short time periods — this is not what I do.
One other reason I do not publicize how I program the Acorn 180 curve stairlift Datum is the possibility of a newbee (someone who does not have old-school experience with motors, amp, capacity, voltages, suge currents) destroying the stairlit’s relay.
Just earlier today, I succesfully diagnosed a diy’d Acorn 180 stairlift in another province, via text messages. For $225. I would like to invite retired tinkerers, retired inventors, retired makers in 79 countries (not including UK) to do what I do. I can be their technical adviser. A retired Boing mechanic could make $8K to $15K working 2 to 4 days a week, per month, reselling decommissioned Acorn 180 stairlifts. In US and Canada, circa 71% of Acorn customers are upset with the the Acorn company. So, 800,000 stairlifts installed .. that is a huge potential customer base.
Any comments or suggestions? Have the best day ever, Kevin.
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