Australia / smartphone/OnePlus
Propriétaires de OnePlus smartphone en Australia.
4 droits statutaires, plus les canaux de réparation propres à OnePlus et les controverses connues.
Figure 01 — Canaux de réparation OnePlus
Pas d'auto-réparationCanaux de réparation OnePlus
Réparateurs agréés
www.oneplus.comÉchantillon de pièces
- OnePlus 12 display assemblyvoir la source
- OnePlus 12 batteryvoir la source
- OnePlus 12 charging port flexvoir la source
- OnePlus 12 rear camera modulevoir la source
Problèmes de réparation connus
- Merger with Oppo and loss of independent identity. In 2021 OnePlus formally merged its product, R&D, and software teams with Oppo under the BBK Electronics group. Critics argued this reduced OnePlus's ability to set its own repair, software, and sustainability policies independently of Oppo.
- Limited software/parts support windows compared to peers. OnePlus's update and parts-availability commitments have historically lagged behind Samsung, Google, and Fairphone, although the OnePlus 12 series narrowed the gap with a longer support window.
Figure 02 — Droits statutaires en Australia
Droits statutaires en Australia
- 01
Consumer guarantee of acceptable quality
Under the Australian Consumer Law (ACL, Schedule 2 of the Competition and Consumer Act 2010), goods sold to consumers must be of acceptable quality — fit for their ordinary purposes, free from defects, safe, durable and acceptable in appearance and finish — judged by what a reasonable consumer would expect given the price and how the goods were described.
Australian Consumer Law, s. 54 — Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth), Schedule 2 - 02
Right to refund, replacement or compensation for a major failure
If a product fails to meet a consumer guarantee and the failure is 'major' (the consumer would not have bought it had they known, the goods are unsafe, or the failure cannot be fixed within a reasonable time), the consumer can choose between a refund, an identical replacement, or keeping the goods and claiming compensation. Independent repair is allowed; the supplier still owes the remedy.
Australian Consumer Law, ss. 259-260 — Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth), Schedule 2 - 03
Right to repair or replacement for a minor failure
For non-major failures the supplier can choose the remedy — typically a free repair within a reasonable time. If the supplier refuses or takes too long, the consumer can have the goods repaired elsewhere and recover the cost, or treat the failure as major.
Australian Consumer Law, s. 259(2) — Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth), Schedule 2 - 04
Right to spare parts and repair facilities
Manufacturers must take reasonable steps to ensure that spare parts and repair facilities are available for a reasonable period after sale, unless they gave the consumer written notice before purchase that this would not be the case.
Australian Consumer Law, s. 58 — Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth), Schedule 2