EU261 - Denying compensation because of a 'hidden manufacturing error'

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tdimdad

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A question to the brain trust about a "hidden manufacturing error" being an extraordinary circumstance. Would this kind of situation be within the airline's maintenance department's realm and therefore seen as a technical problem rather than extraordinary safety (or any other) issue?
 

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Hmmm. IIRC i think finnair has pulled this excuse before? It’s very rare for an airline to try and rely on it.

I think you have two options here... either try and pursue it yourself by asking finnair for further details (exactly what is the supposed defect, and proof that it was a hidden error), or, go through one of the claims companies.

They have direct access into the airlines’ systems so know exactly what and why a delayed occurred. They’ll take 25-33% of your claim, but might be worthwhile (and if they say it’s an error, then you know it actually is one).
 
Given Finnair, then I'd take @MEL_Traveller 's advice.

Although, with case law, "Mechanical" is not necessarily "Extraordinary" and in general isn't.



This thread is on the BA FlyerTalk forum and is BA related but had a lot of useful information:

The 2020 BA compensation thread: Your guide to Regulation EC261/2004 - FlyerTalk Forums

Also, this decade old thread: Mechanical Failure - extraordinary?
 
Lot of good and clear reading in that. Thanks, Sertfy!

My friend has now outsourced this to one of those claim companies. Though, I think it's a sad situation if we have a whole service industry spun up around airlines trying to flout the regulation and it seems to have become the de facto direction that you better use them to obtain a compensation.
 
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Agree with serfty. What is unusual here is finnair a’s claim of a manufacturing defect... something which should really be outside normal wear and tear, outside of normal maintenance. Something caused by the manufacturing process itself. I guess things like the 787 battery issues, or weaknesses in fan blades which couldn’t be picked up through maintenance.

Claims companies have their uses... easy to lodge a claim, direct access to validate your claim, fast payment, useful in cases where airlines might be using an obscure exception, saves the passenger time.

But passengers can do it themselves. I had a claim drag on for just over 12 months. Got my full €600! but that involved around five emails back and forth with the airline, and two or three hours of my time. Was that worth the extra €200? for me it was but YMMV :)
 
Somewhat off topic but Choice Magazine points out complaints with Online retailer KOGAN in April 2009.
I then had Acer computer (.au) deny keyboard issues even though it is all over the internet, but for a different reason than say Apple. On Aliexpress my sat/H265 decoder box had an intermittent turn on, and I lost the appeal/claim because the pictures did not prove anything! Plenty of supermarket Android phones with no security updates. Making it difficult for consumers is a trend.
 
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