bilky asko wrote:Of course I'm within my rights to ask them to open it. I'm within my rights to ask them if I can play football with a couple of their products. That doesn't mean they have the legal duty to oblige. I can't see why any major store would set up a computer simply for a customer to try a new one, when the display model is the same, without the battery.
You're making this more complicated than it is.
"Legal obligations" don't come in to it, its simply a matter of allowing the customer to examine the merchandise - which is what has happened for hundreds of years.
I don't mean this in a rude way, but if you're too embarrassed (or you think its inappropriate) to ask them to open a box then don't. No skin off anyone else's nose.
I'm not, I have and I will again. It doesn't cause anyone any grief, and you get to ensure that the kit is immaculate and (if you want to see it operating) in working order - even if that only extends to booting up an operating system and hitting "cancel" before it goes into a setup wizard.
Merchandise can be opened and switched on, and then still be "new". If it has never left the shop premises and it hasn't been played with by every passing teenager with sticky fingers, then its absolutely fine.
And, of course, if you examine the product and you're happy with it, then you can purchase the one you've opened.
It happens in the retail industry, where I worked for many years - and also in the trade industry with highly expensive pieces of kit like moving lights, electronic show controls, LED colour changers etc etc.
If you've been into a Curry's or John Lewis, you'll have seen the PCs and laptops which are on display - some of which are in a pretty bad state - I've seen Sony Vaios with bent keyboard keys and all kinds of schmutz on the casing. More often than not they're tethered to the shelf and have no battery (like the Inspector said), so you've really got no idea what its going to feel like to carry and use it.
It may be a modern sensibility to not "inconvenience" the retailer; but I'm slightly older than some and remember when shops used to have long counters where staff would ask "can I help you?", before bringing you the item you wanted to look at. Now its about browsing all by yourself and if you don't see it, you assume they don't have it. [/nostalgia]. That was only 15-20 years ago, mind.
Stock is routinely opened and placed on display in windows
So that's a display model.
Display models are the ones left running either on the shelf or in the window. A retailer can sell
as new an item that's been unboxed and put in the window if its not been running for days/weeks/months.