It's interesting how there are targets for complaints. In the world of wood turning, everyone's favorite target for complaints about service, price, quality of merchandise, etc, seems to be PSI. However, my experience with PSI has been excellent.
Take response time for example. I placed a web order with PSI at 9:42am this past Monday morning. I received an immediate confirmation of the order, and on Tuesday afternoon, I received a notification that the package had been shipped. It arrived on Thursday.
Unfortunately, one of the items I had ordered was backordered, and the notice in the package gave an ETA for restocking of April 4. But in fact, I received an e-mail on Thursday advising that the backordered items had shipped, and the package arrived in the mail today (Saturday, April 2).
To be quite honest, the only possible way I could have received the merchandise any faster would have involved driving to Philadelphia and buying it over the counter.
Or take customer service. The first time I placed an order, I selected an item based on the specification of my lathe as printed in the instruction book that came with it. Later, I questioned that accuracy of the specification, and went downstairs to actually measure the critical dimension on the lathe. Turns out that the specification in the lathe instruction book was wrong (and the manufacturer later acknowledged their error). I sent PSI a quick e-mail advising of MY error, and when I received the merchandise, they had substituted the correct item to match the actual dimensions of my lathe.
I'm sure that there are anecdotal stories where PSI has had problems. Well, guys, I've got news for you - - - every dealer of any kind of merchandise has fulfillment problems, errors, mistakes, etc. The issue is not whether they have these issues, but rather how they address them when a customer complains. I've had good response from PSI in that arena also.
Everyone likes to complain. But wouldn't it be nice if we could not always pick the same targets.