If you have experienced Powerbeats2 battery issues with your wireless headphones, you may be able to file a lawsuit and receive compensation for your trouble.
A number of people who own Powerbeats2 or Powerbeats3 wireless headphones are coming forward with complaints about the device’s battery. According to consumer complaints, the headphones come with substantial Powerbeats2 battery issues. Some users have noted that the wireless headphones would simply stop working and would be unable to accept a charge. Customers claim that these Powerbeats2 battery issues can occur even before the warranty period is up.
Powerbeats2 headphones, owned by Apple, come with a one-year limited warranty. The warranty claims to protect “against defects in materials and workmanship,” but customers claim that the warranty just provided them with a new product that was also defective.
Powerbeats2 Battery Issues
Although Powerbeats2 is a fairly new, complaints about Powerbeats2 battery issues abound. While the wireless headphones retail for $199, customers claim that it takes a matter of only a few months before the product fails to hold a charge.
According to one Amazon reviewer, he’s had to have his Powerbeats2 replaced twice already — in just the seven months he’s owned it. “Same thing happens every time, I get 2-3 months of use then they just shut off one day and won’t ever turn back on no matter how long they are charged. Then I spend 2 weeks working with Apple ‘care’ … Finally, I have to wait for a box to be sent, then mail them in, then weeks later get a replacement pair. Then the whole cycle starts over again.”
Another reviewer claimed that the product lasted just 3-4 months, saying that “the light blinks red, will not charge, whatever is going on they simply do not power up anymore.”
While it may be expected that products that are treated harshly may become damaged, Powerbeats 2 customers claim that they treated their wireless headphones with a normal amount of care.
Some customers have speculated that the failure was caused by damage from sweat while working out. However, the product has been advertised as usable during a workout. Ads featured NBA basketball star LeBron James working out in a pair of Powerbeats2 headphones, and ads called the product “sweat and water resistant.”
The Apple One-Year Limited Warranty program offers three ways to address a defective product, of Apple’s choosing: repairing the product, exchanging the product, or offering a refund.
Indeed, Powerbeats2 customers who have already attempted to contact Apple about these Powerbeats2 battery issues say that they were given a replacement product, but the replacements themselves had Powerbeats2 battery issues as well. This resulted in the new pair failing in the same way, after a few months of normal use.
Filing a Lawsuit Over Powerbeats2 Battery Issues
If you have purchased Powerbeats2 wireless headphones and the product stopped holding a charge within the one-year warranty period, you are not the only one experiencing these Powerbeats2 battery issues. You may even be able to file a class action lawsuit over Powerbeats2 battery issues.
Join a Powerbeats2, Powerbeats3 Wireless Headphone Class Action Lawsuit Investigation
If you purchased Powerbeats2 or Powerbeats3 wireless headphones that failed to hold a charge while still under the one-year warranty, you may qualify to file a Powerbeats2 or Powerbeats3 class action lawsuit investigation.
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