• out of stock

Sunbeam 2200w Convection Panel Heater $18.15 @ David Jones

460

Showing as in stock for click and collect for me.

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David Jones
David Jones

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  • +2

    No stock in any NSW store for me.

  • Stock at 2 local stores for me at the start, now 1!

  • +3

    Think it may be a pricing error. Cached site shows price of $118.15

    • +1

      some one got the decimal point wrong

  • +1

    Managed to buy one via Click and Collect at Bourke Street Mall store VIC.

    Will see if DJ honour it

    • Out of stock when I tried :/ , congrats

    • +1

      it's not if they honour it. the question is do they really have it in stock at store??

      • +1

        Well it appears to be a pricing error too. DJs won't honour it.

        • +1

          They called state that "we cannot process your order" and offered a refund.

  • None in Canberra for click and collect.

  • +1

    Got one from Tuggerah, NSW. Not expecting it to be honoured but you never know.

    • I was checking out as i was on the train then got to the payment stage and lost signal, came back up and it was gone. Congrats hope it gets honoured

      • +5

        Got a confirmation email saying item is ready to collect!!

        • Did you get it?

  • +1

    Thanks Op. No stock in Victoria for me. All sold out.

  • +1

    Stock @ Pac fair.

    • ordered one

    • not any more

  • All Adelaide stores out of stock. :(

  • +1

    Out of stock in Victoria, either a price error or they had like 3 units all over Australia.

    Too bad as I'm looking for a heater at the moment

  • Bought one for c&c at Claremont Qtr, WA. Looks like stocks are still available from Karrinyup and Hay St. Not sure if they will honour this. RRP $139, amazing price if this deal is honored.

  • Sufficient stock for a deal?

    • There was, but sold very quickly.

  • How much electricity does this thing suck up?

    • +3

      2200w

      • +5

        Incorrect. 2200w is the output. It would be 2200w x efficiency.
        At 85% efficiency (guess) this would use 2600w. using for 120 days / 4 hours a day would cost $236 per year @ .19c per kwh.

        • Um, no, it's the input. Watts is not a unit type to measure heat energy.

          LOL at some people …

          Just got up. "unit type" looks retarded to me but I'm struggling to think of it's proper name :D

        • Lol!

          So many wrong.

        • @Diji1: Just "unit".

          Watts is not the unit used for heat energy.

        • +1

          i thought australian (domestic) power sockets only deliver 10A @ 240V?

          so how can you get 2600w from the socket? at most (excluding spikes) you'd get 2400w i think.

        • @Diji1:

          While I'm not a fan of the PC police, are you really that simple minded that you can't come up with a better word than retarded!

        • ummm yeh, i was joking. i got no idea about power consumption and costs related to it

        • +3

          Why is everyone upvoting this? This is why the internet makes people dumber.

          Electric heaters are at least 100% efficient. Electric heat pumps can be more than 100% efficient. But unless it's a light bulb or a speaker or putting out something apart from heat, it's 100% efficient.

          This heater uses 2200w. Our 10A sockets can only deliver 2400w anyway.

        • @bejahi: How can something be more than 100% efficient? How can something convert energy and end up with a higher output?

        • +2

          @sween64:

          Energy delivered divided by energy consumed.

          It often takes less electricity to move energy from one place to another than to convert it from electricity.

          The energy removed from the environment is ignored.

        • @sween64: as per s732, heat pumps like a reverse cycle air conditioner might be 3 or 400% efficient…I.e. they might draw 2000w to deliver the equivalent of 6000w of heating through transferring heat from outside air. Their efficiency depends on the temperature of the air outside.

        • +1

          @bejahi: Ah okay. So the energy is coming from somewhere other than the wall outlet. Cool.

    • +3

      Running cost is 59 cents per hour according to this site

      http://www.saveenergysavemoney.com.au/product-listing/heatin…

      • You can work out exactly what it would cost you by looking at your plan's tariffs easily enough. Well, assuming you aren't with a provider like AGL that has 4 different tariffs in order to make it as difficult as possible to make any kind of comparison.

  • Looks like a glitch in their matrix. Heaters look to be 15% off at the moment, $139 - 15% = $118.15. Hopefully it will get honoured as it didn't look like their was a lot of stock to begin with.

    • +1

      It was $118.15 if you looked at the cached version google have. it's def. a pricing error. hopefully they honour it for the people who got one though

  • It's showing out of stock in WA.

  • +3

    $18.15? Is that how much electricity it uses per hour ?

    • No. Per day

  • Nothing in vic

  • +2

    DJs won't honour this.

  • Thanks gofast, got one online click and collect from hay st perth, wa. As soon as I placed the order they appeared out of stock. fingers crossed they honour lol

  • +1

    I have just received an email confirming my order is ready to collect. Looks like it is being honoured.

    • +2

      And I just got a phone call from a very apologetic DJ staff member saying they have been told NOT to honour this price.

      • +7

        lol shouldn't have answered the phone and just rocked upto the store. Initiate angry customer scene level 4.

      • Me too, tried ringing the online people who fobbed me back to the store so I think there may be some discretion allowed, but I guess there is little incentive for them to honour this if it's a $100 loss.

        If you got the email for collection probably got a staff member who processed the order without questioning it. In that case I guess you should be ok.

        • Probably more like a $40 loss. What it costs them less your 20 Bob.

    • +1

      I'm not surprised if the store calls you to say no stock despite the email.this has happened to me several times.once the store said they dont even know they carried that item.another time they said inventory shown on website is not updated and in actual fact they have zero stock. Just happened to me again on Tuesday.I am still waiting for their refund as $ has been debited from my dj ccard.

      David Jones needs to work on their online shopping experience. On Tuesday I was even told that best I call individual stores to confirm that they actually have the item before I put in the order although online inventory says the store has it.So I retorted then what is online shopping if i need to call the stores?Stupid right???

      • Flys in the face of their Promise.
        At David Jones, we make a promise to our customers, that you can always shop at our stores and online with complete confidence.

      • Happened to me before with a TV bought online, incredible price but they called and said they can't honor due to price error.

        This is well known of David Jones, I'd u r lucky they honor in some cases.

        • "There's no other store like David Jones."

          … probably a good thing ;)

      • And even if you call the individual stores they'll check their computer based inventory and assure that there's stock. Unless they physically sight the item, I wouldn't believe them.

  • They have plenty of stocks @ DJ Highpoint :) and price is $118.15 and also scanned $118.15 :) Showed the lady online price and she said "its price error" :) can't do much eheh :)

  • Got the call and will get a refund.

  • If they really don't honour the price, why don't they update the web page immediately!

    • +1

      Lazy IT department

    • -1

      Under consumer law they have to honour the price until they correct the advertised price. As of 13:30 perth time it's still $18.

      Advertisements

      Where a seller advertises an item at the incorrect price or a price that’s lower than the in-store price, it is required under Australian Consumer Law to honour the advertised price until such time as the error has been corrected. Generally, for a correction to be valid it must be notified to customers by the same or similar method by which the price was originally advertised.

      • But their online shop isn't an advertisement. A catalogue would be…

      • The first place to look is the seller’s individual policies or conditions of sale. These may be displayed at the point of sale or, in the case of an online seller, in the ‘Terms & Conditions’ section of the website, and may detail the remedies offered by the seller in the case of an error in price.

        via

        Whilst we try and ensure that all details, descriptions and prices which appear on this website are accurate, errors may occur. We may choose to not fill any orders (or part of an order) that you have placed where the website contains errors or inaccuracies, including, without limitation, errors, inaccuracies or out-of-date information regarding pricing, shipping, payment terms, or return policies.

        via

  • Got a call and refund too.

  • its so easy for a business to dishonour price based on tech faults….

  • Any store credit as apology fr price error? I remember JB honored a price error power bank once, and gave $10 store credit for the Samsung washing machine.

  • So I'm just putting this out there.

    If David Jones is advising people there was a pricing error and have not changed the price on their website this is now false advertising??

    Consumer law says…
    Advertisements

    Where a seller advertises an item at the incorrect price or a price that’s lower than the in-store price, it is required under Australian Consumer Law to honour the advertised price until such time as the error has been corrected. Generally, for a correction to be valid it must be notified to customers by the same or similar method by which the price was originally advertised.

    For example, if the error was printed in a catalogue then a newspaper correction would be acceptable method of correction. For errors made in email newsletters, a correction sent via email would be sufficient. The notice is deemed to have been given to customers by it having been published or transmitted, despite the fact you may not have personally viewed the notice.

    • No. They have a reasonable amount of time to correct the error. ACCC will believe a reasonable time is longer than what you (or I) think.

  • Went in for the refund (Brisbane Queens Plaza) and there were 2 heaters sat behind the customer service desk, believe they were about to process them and got the call from head office. They certainly could not deny having stock…

    They still haven't updated the price on the website either… Slack

    Anyone get lucky???

  • They still havent refunded me my money.

    • Have they tried contacting you? As they don't have your full card details, you'll need to give them your card details over the phone in order to obtain the refund.

      • I paid with Paypal.

        • If you did a Click and Collect, they might not be able to refund you via PayPal and might send you a Gift Card instead. Did they tell you how they were going to refund you?

        • +1

          @kerfuffle: I paid by paypal, they contacted me and asked me for the credit card I paid with. I would ring the specific store.

        • @sparkyglo: Yes, that's what you should do @Orpheous. I know it's inconvenient but better getting your money back rather than a gift card.

        • I spoke to someone with the title of Store Support Co-Ordinator if that helps.

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