Rhodri and Lucy Owen and Rachel Treadaway-Williams investigate an alarm company, a jeweller, so called supermarket special offers and sat nav maps that leave out major new roads.
Rachel investigates the South Wales alarm company which promises to send a security guard to your home if you're burgled and assures you of a police response in an emergency. But some X-Ray viewers who paid thousands of pounds for this system say they've been misled. We put the firm's claims to the test. If you've ever splashed out on an engagement ring, you'll know how special and expensive it can be. We meet the Bridgend couple who paid almost three thousand pounds for their ring but their battle with their jeweller has really taken the shine off their big day. Do you love a bargain at the supermarket? When we see something on special offer, we may be tempted to fill up our trollies, believing we're getting a good deal. Back in November the Office of Fair Trading criticised the way some of the supermarket giants run their promotions. So have things improved? Lucy checks it out. And we meet a disgruntled driver from Anglesey who bought updated maps for his sat nav. But he was shocked to discover that two major sections of road which have been open since 2011 were missing.
Last on
Alarm over security system
Now if you’re buying a burglar alarm, what could be more re-assuring than the idea that a security guard will rush to your to door to check you’re okay the moment it goes off?
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That was the promise made to customers of Preferred Security UK Ltd, an alarm firm in Cardiff.
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Annette Taylor from Newport received a call out of the blue from them last September. Not only were they pushing their manguard service, but the company was also offering the alarm system free of charge, with installation for just £99 instead of £499.
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But when the salesman visited her, the price rocketed to £3,000 for the alarm, servicing and five years' monitoring – to be done by a separate company.
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When Annette said that was too much, the cost suddenly came down to £900, plus £100 a month for a year, so she signed on the dotted line.
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Annette said: “We would be monitored with a monitoring company and there would be a manguard service so that if the alarm went off and they could not get a response from either ourselves or our keyholders then the manguard would come.â€
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But just a few weeks later Annette discovered the deal might not be as good as she first thought.
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Mysterious charges appeared on her telephone bill. She later found out these were automatic calls from her alarm to the monitoring centre, although she says Preferred Security never warned her about them.
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More worrying were the problems with the alarm itself.
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Annette said: “It’s gone off several times. We’ve had no response. No manguard. We’ve got no proof of this manguard. No one seems to know what company it is or where they’re based, so as far as we’re concerned we haven’t got manguard cover.â€
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And Annette isn’t the only one who’s contacted X-Ray with concerns.
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In Bridgend, Donald Cole paid £2,000 to Preferred Security for his system in March.
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Like Annette, he says he wasn’t warned about those extra charges on his phone bill for calls to the monitoring centre. He said: “It was only about 23p a time, but there was quite a lot of them. They mount up.â€
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The big selling point for Donald was the manguard service, but he says the first time his alarm did go off there was no sign of a manguard.
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So X-Ray decided to test both Annette’s and Donald’s alarms, letting each one ring for half an hour. On both occasions there was no response from any guard.
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Preferred Security’s website makes a lot of big claims, including that they’re one of the “few companies in the UK that offer both police and Manguard response.â€
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Now some alarm companies do have the correct approval to get a police response to your home, but Preferred Security isn’t one of them.
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The current management of Preferred Security UK Ltd insist their manguarding service does exist.
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They say the reason Annette didn’t have a manguard turn up was that she’d cancelled her contract with them, although that was news to her.
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But they do admit there have been some problems, and they changed the company they used to provide the service in November.
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As for their promise of a police response in an emergency too, their explanation for that is that the manguard could call the police. The company have now promised to give both Annette and Donald their money back.
Supermarket special deals
Are you baffled by so-called bargains when you do your weekly shop?
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Last year theÌýdecided to do something about it and asked all the major supermarket chains to work together to make their offers more meaningful and fair for shoppers.
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A set of voluntary principles were drawn up and one of the main commitments was that supermarkets wouldn’t sell something at a lower discounted rate for longer than it had already been at its higher, original price.
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Eight of the supermarkets agreed to sign up, including two of the biggest players, Sainsbury’s and Tesco. However, Asda declined, saying it thought the principles would encourage yo-yo pricing.
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The principles were adopted at the end of last November, so X-Ray left it a few months and decided to test out how well they were being followed.
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We enlisted the help of independent pricing website mysupermarket.com, gave them 60 typical products you would find in the average shopping trolley and asked them to monitor their prices at Tesco, Sainsbury’s and Asda for three months, between 1st February and 30th April.
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Check out tonight’s programme to see how well they all did, or if you miss it catch it on for the next seven days.
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And don't miss about how a group of cheerleaders helped X-Ray to tell the story.
Credits
Role | Contributor |
---|---|
Presenter | Lucy Owen |
Presenter | Rhodri Owen |
Reporter | Rachel Treadaway-Williams |
Series Producer | Joanne Dunscombe |
Broadcast
- Mon 17 Jun 2013 19:30Â鶹Éç One Wales HD & Wales only