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#1
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I am making this posting in the hope of saving someone from going
through what I have been going through and to ensure that it gets the coverage it deserves amongst the gliding community. It revolves around a business transaction between myself and Ales Cebavs, the managing director of AMS-Flight in Slovenia. It began at the start of January 2010 when I made a Euro 3165.27 (about $5100 Australian dollars at the time) bank transfer to AMS- Flight on behalf of my local sailplane repair company, for a horizontal stabilizer for my LS3. This was after receiving a proforma invoice which confirmed that AMS-Flight agreed to the supply of this part. The terms and conditions required payment up front which I did in good faith. In mid-March, it was discovered that the wrong horizontal stabilizer had been manufactured. Fortunately this was discovered before AMS- Flight shipped the product although I have no proof that the wrong part was actually manufactured. I was then advised by Ales that he would need to try and find the correct mould needed for the manufacture. On 21 June 2010, I was advised by Ales that it would not be possible to provide the horizontal stabilizer and that my money would be refunded. I immediately provided Ales with my account details so that the refund could be processed. After that, all went quiet. He refused to respond to any of my e-mails requesting the status of my refund. After two frustrating months of trying to recover my money, on 18 August I made a posting here (http://www.aviationkb.com/Uwe/Forum.aspx/ soaring/12723/AMS-Flight-Out-of-business). It had the desired effect as suddenly Ales was communicating again and he was not happy, insisting that I remove that posting before he would consider returning "part" of my money. On 8 October I issued him with a deadline of 15 October to return my money in full which he chose to ignore. He seems to have lost sight of the fact that he, and AMS- Flight, have engaged in a contract with me to provide a part. Any legitimate and self-respecting company would refund the price in full if it was unable to meet that contract. Ales seems to think that he and AMS-Flight are above that and have no responsibility to do the right and legal thing. He is in direct breach of several articles in the Slovenian Consumer Protection Act and the Slovenian Trade Act and I have recently reported this to the Slovenian authorities. What really amazes me is that here is a supposedly legitimate manufacturing company, whose relatively small customer base is primarily made up of the gliding community, that shows no respect for that customer base and is quite willing to keep any money paid to it regardless of the outcome. No business can survive these days with that kind of attitude. Maybe one day Ales might be kind enough to offer an explanation for his irrational behaviour. I must point out that these comments are in no way intended to reflect badly on those companies listed as distributors on the AMS-Flight website. They are independent of AMS-Flight and I am certain they have their own issues with Ales. It would be very interesting to hear from others who have had a run-in with Ales and AMS-Flight. If there are enough of us then maybe we can bring some collective pressure to bear, whether that be in the form of a class action lawsuit or simply reporting these illegal and criminal activities to the Slovenian authorities. In any case, I will continue to fight to have Ales return my money. As an individual I certainly cannot afford to ignore someone who is effectively attempting to steal over AUD$5000 from me. Bob |
#2
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My club has had similar problems with AMS-flight.
On the 1st of March 2009 we sent a wire transfer to AMS for the purchase of canopy gas struts for a modification to our DG-505 and for a tail skid for the club's LS4. After waiting for over a year and receiving no response from Ales at AMS, I involved the Canadian representative for AMS, who communicated with Ales, he agreed to refund the money for the tail skid, (as after a year of waiting we sourced another) and send the gas struts for the 505. It is now Oct 2010 - 18 months later, and we still do not have the parts or the money refunded. As of about April or May, even his Canadian distributor was not getting answers to any email inquiries. The moral here - If you need parts from AMS - don't send them money until you get your parts. I would be happy to provide details in support of some sort of action against AMS. |
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On Oct 19, 4:02*pm, VH_VH wrote:
I am making this posting in the hope of saving someone from going through what I have been going through and to ensure that it gets the coverage it deserves amongst the gliding community. It revolves around a business transaction between myself and Ales Cebavs, the managing director of AMS-Flight in Slovenia. It began at the start of January 2010 when I made a Euro 3165.27 (about $5100 Australian dollars at the time) bank transfer to AMS- Flight on behalf of my local sailplane repair company, for a horizontal stabilizer for my LS3. This was after receiving a proforma invoice which confirmed that AMS-Flight agreed to the supply of this part. The terms and conditions required payment up front which I did in good faith. In mid-March, it was discovered that the wrong horizontal stabilizer had been manufactured. Fortunately this was discovered before AMS- Flight shipped the product although I have no proof that the wrong part was actually manufactured. I was then advised by Ales that he would need to try and find the correct mould needed for the manufacture. On 21 June 2010, I was advised by Ales that it would not be possible to provide the horizontal stabilizer and that my money would be refunded. I immediately provided Ales with my account details so that the refund could be processed. After that, all went quiet. He refused to respond to any of my e-mails requesting the status of my refund. After two frustrating months of trying to recover my money, on 18 August I made a posting here (http://www.aviationkb.com/Uwe/Forum.aspx/ soaring/12723/AMS-Flight-Out-of-business). It had the desired effect as suddenly Ales was communicating again and he was not happy, insisting that I remove that posting before he would consider returning "part" of my money. On 8 October I issued him with a deadline of 15 October to return my money in full which he chose to ignore. He seems to have lost sight of the fact that he, and AMS- Flight, have engaged in a contract with me to provide a part. Any legitimate and self-respecting company would refund the price in full if it was unable to meet that contract. Ales seems to think that he and AMS-Flight are above that and have no responsibility to do the right and legal thing. He is in direct breach of several articles in the Slovenian Consumer Protection Act and the Slovenian Trade Act and I have recently reported this to the Slovenian authorities. What really amazes me is that here is a supposedly legitimate manufacturing company, whose relatively small customer base is primarily made up of the gliding community, that shows no respect for that customer base and is quite willing to keep any money paid to it regardless of the outcome. No business can survive these days with that kind of attitude. Maybe one day Ales might be kind enough to offer an explanation for his irrational behaviour. I must point out that these comments are in no way intended to reflect badly on those companies listed as distributors on the AMS-Flight website. They are independent of AMS-Flight and I am certain they have their own issues with Ales. It would be very interesting to hear from others who have had a run-in with Ales and AMS-Flight. If there are enough of us then maybe we can bring some collective pressure to bear, whether that be in the form of a class action lawsuit or simply reporting these illegal and criminal activities to the Slovenian authorities. In any case, I will continue to fight to have Ales return my money. As an individual I certainly cannot afford to ignore someone who is effectively attempting to steal over AUD$5000 from me. Bob The moral of the story.....Pay with a credit card and you may have some recourse. PeterK |
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On Oct 20, 1:07*pm, PK wrote:
On Oct 19, 4:02*pm, VH_VH wrote: I am making this posting in the hope of saving someone from going through what I have been going through and to ensure that it gets the coverage it deserves amongst the gliding community. It revolves around a business transaction between myself and Ales Cebavs, the managing director of AMS-Flight in Slovenia. It began at the start of January 2010 when I made a Euro 3165.27 (about $5100 Australian dollars at the time) bank transfer to AMS- Flight on behalf of my local sailplane repair company, for a horizontal stabilizer for my LS3. This was after receiving a proforma invoice which confirmed that AMS-Flight agreed to the supply of this part. The terms and conditions required payment up front which I did in good faith. In mid-March, it was discovered that the wrong horizontal stabilizer had been manufactured. Fortunately this was discovered before AMS- Flight shipped the product although I have no proof that the wrong part was actually manufactured. I was then advised by Ales that he would need to try and find the correct mould needed for the manufacture. On 21 June 2010, I was advised by Ales that it would not be possible to provide the horizontal stabilizer and that my money would be refunded. I immediately provided Ales with my account details so that the refund could be processed. After that, all went quiet. He refused to respond to any of my e-mails requesting the status of my refund. After two frustrating months of trying to recover my money, on 18 August I made a posting here (http://www.aviationkb.com/Uwe/Forum.aspx/ soaring/12723/AMS-Flight-Out-of-business). It had the desired effect as suddenly Ales was communicating again and he was not happy, insisting that I remove that posting before he would consider returning "part" of my money. On 8 October I issued him with a deadline of 15 October to return my money in full which he chose to ignore. He seems to have lost sight of the fact that he, and AMS- Flight, have engaged in a contract with me to provide a part. Any legitimate and self-respecting company would refund the price in full if it was unable to meet that contract. Ales seems to think that he and AMS-Flight are above that and have no responsibility to do the right and legal thing. He is in direct breach of several articles in the Slovenian Consumer Protection Act and the Slovenian Trade Act and I have recently reported this to the Slovenian authorities. What really amazes me is that here is a supposedly legitimate manufacturing company, whose relatively small customer base is primarily made up of the gliding community, that shows no respect for that customer base and is quite willing to keep any money paid to it regardless of the outcome. No business can survive these days with that kind of attitude. Maybe one day Ales might be kind enough to offer an explanation for his irrational behaviour. I must point out that these comments are in no way intended to reflect badly on those companies listed as distributors on the AMS-Flight website. They are independent of AMS-Flight and I am certain they have their own issues with Ales. It would be very interesting to hear from others who have had a run-in with Ales and AMS-Flight. If there are enough of us then maybe we can bring some collective pressure to bear, whether that be in the form of a class action lawsuit or simply reporting these illegal and criminal activities to the Slovenian authorities. In any case, I will continue to fight to have Ales return my money. As an individual I certainly cannot afford to ignore someone who is effectively attempting to steal over AUD$5000 from me. Bob The moral of the story.....Pay with a credit card and you may have some recourse. PeterK- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Thanks for your input and hindsight is always 20/20. However there is more here than the issue of the method of payment and I was certainly unaware of any credit card option with AMS. Looking at the bigger picture, we as the gliding community see many manufacturers struggling and coming up with new and creative ways to generate revenue or at least cover their costs. The last thing we need is a corrupt operator thrown into the mix and, as a matter of principle, we need to stick together and make it known in no uncertain terms that this behaviour is unacceptable, will not be tolerated, and that any money owed must be returned to the rightful owner and without delay. |
#5
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On Oct 20, 5:38*am, VH_VH wrote:
On Oct 20, 1:07*pm, PK wrote: On Oct 19, 4:02*pm, VH_VH wrote: I am making this posting in the hope of saving someone from going through what I have been going through and to ensure that it gets the coverage it deserves amongst the gliding community. It revolves around a business transaction between myself and Ales Cebavs, the managing director of AMS-Flight in Slovenia. It began at the start of January 2010 when I made a Euro 3165.27 (about $5100 Australian dollars at the time) bank transfer to AMS- Flight on behalf of my local sailplane repair company, for a horizontal stabilizer for my LS3. This was after receiving a proforma invoice which confirmed that AMS-Flight agreed to the supply of this part. The terms and conditions required payment up front which I did in good faith. In mid-March, it was discovered that the wrong horizontal stabilizer had been manufactured. Fortunately this was discovered before AMS- Flight shipped the product although I have no proof that the wrong part was actually manufactured. I was then advised by Ales that he would need to try and find the correct mould needed for the manufacture. On 21 June 2010, I was advised by Ales that it would not be possible to provide the horizontal stabilizer and that my money would be refunded. I immediately provided Ales with my account details so that the refund could be processed. After that, all went quiet. He refused to respond to any of my e-mails requesting the status of my refund. After two frustrating months of trying to recover my money, on 18 August I made a posting here (http://www.aviationkb.com/Uwe/Forum.aspx/ soaring/12723/AMS-Flight-Out-of-business). It had the desired effect as suddenly Ales was communicating again and he was not happy, insisting that I remove that posting before he would consider returning "part" of my money. On 8 October I issued him with a deadline of 15 October to return my money in full which he chose to ignore. He seems to have lost sight of the fact that he, and AMS- Flight, have engaged in a contract with me to provide a part. Any legitimate and self-respecting company would refund the price in full if it was unable to meet that contract. Ales seems to think that he and AMS-Flight are above that and have no responsibility to do the right and legal thing. He is in direct breach of several articles in the Slovenian Consumer Protection Act and the Slovenian Trade Act and I have recently reported this to the Slovenian authorities. What really amazes me is that here is a supposedly legitimate manufacturing company, whose relatively small customer base is primarily made up of the gliding community, that shows no respect for that customer base and is quite willing to keep any money paid to it regardless of the outcome. No business can survive these days with that kind of attitude. Maybe one day Ales might be kind enough to offer an explanation for his irrational behaviour. I must point out that these comments are in no way intended to reflect badly on those companies listed as distributors on the AMS-Flight website. They are independent of AMS-Flight and I am certain they have their own issues with Ales. It would be very interesting to hear from others who have had a run-in with Ales and AMS-Flight. If there are enough of us then maybe we can bring some collective pressure to bear, whether that be in the form of a class action lawsuit or simply reporting these illegal and criminal activities to the Slovenian authorities. In any case, I will continue to fight to have Ales return my money. As an individual I certainly cannot afford to ignore someone who is effectively attempting to steal over AUD$5000 from me. Bob The moral of the story.....Pay with a credit card and you may have some recourse. PeterK- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Thanks for your input and hindsight is always 20/20. However there is more here than the issue of the method of payment and I was certainly unaware of any credit card option with AMS. Looking at the bigger picture, we as the gliding community see many manufacturers struggling and coming up with new and creative ways to generate revenue or at least cover their costs. The last thing we need is a corrupt operator thrown into the mix and, as a matter of principle, we need to stick together and make it known in no uncertain terms that this behaviour is unacceptable, will not be tolerated, and that any money owed must be returned to the rightful owner and without delay.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - In December 2009, I took my ASW20BL to slovenia from the UK for a complete refinish. It was the first refinish AMS-Flight did for a UK glider (im told). It was there for about 12 weeks. Communicatrion was a little tricky but I later realised that there are not alot of staff and Ales seems to do alot of the work himself and is not really office bound. When we went to collect the glider, it wasnt quite ready so wwe had to wait for about 12 hours while they finished it. Ales and his staff worked really hard that day until very late at night to get it finished. Overall, I am really pleased with the refinish however, the wings have discoloured slightly and we are currently waiting for a response from AMS Flight as to what they are going to do about it under their 2 year warranty. We are also still waiting for the new instrument panel to be returned to us. Ales said he was going to try and modify it when it originally didnt fit the glider. I do not wish to influence people but all I would say about AMS Flight is, they seem to do a good job, we paid all the money up front for the regel due to VAT issues in the UK (to save money), and the job was done when they said it would be. I cannot explain the communication issue but Ales does speak good english so I would suggest telephoning him rather than email! Good luck Regards Terry Hatton |
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On Oct 21, 7:36*pm, Terry Hatton wrote:
On Oct 20, 5:38*am, VH_VH wrote: On Oct 20, 1:07*pm, PK wrote: On Oct 19, 4:02*pm, VH_VH wrote: I am making this posting in the hope of saving someone from going through what I have been going through and to ensure that it gets the coverage it deserves amongst the gliding community. It revolves around a business transaction between myself and Ales Cebavs, the managing director of AMS-Flight in Slovenia. It began at the start of January 2010 when I made a Euro 3165.27 (about $5100 Australian dollars at the time) bank transfer to AMS- Flight on behalf of my local sailplane repair company, for a horizontal stabilizer for my LS3. This was after receiving a proforma invoice which confirmed that AMS-Flight agreed to the supply of this part. The terms and conditions required payment up front which I did in good faith. In mid-March, it was discovered that the wrong horizontal stabilizer had been manufactured. Fortunately this was discovered before AMS- Flight shipped the product although I have no proof that the wrong part was actually manufactured. I was then advised by Ales that he would need to try and find the correct mould needed for the manufacture. On 21 June 2010, I was advised by Ales that it would not be possible to provide the horizontal stabilizer and that my money would be refunded. I immediately provided Ales with my account details so that the refund could be processed. After that, all went quiet. He refused to respond to any of my e-mails requesting the status of my refund. After two frustrating months of trying to recover my money, on 18 August I made a posting here (http://www.aviationkb.com/Uwe/Forum.aspx/ soaring/12723/AMS-Flight-Out-of-business). It had the desired effect as suddenly Ales was communicating again and he was not happy, insisting that I remove that posting before he would consider returning "part" of my money. On 8 October I issued him with a deadline of 15 October to return my money in full which he chose to ignore. He seems to have lost sight of the fact that he, and AMS- Flight, have engaged in a contract with me to provide a part. Any legitimate and self-respecting company would refund the price in full if it was unable to meet that contract. Ales seems to think that he and AMS-Flight are above that and have no responsibility to do the right and legal thing. He is in direct breach of several articles in the Slovenian Consumer Protection Act and the Slovenian Trade Act and I have recently reported this to the Slovenian authorities. What really amazes me is that here is a supposedly legitimate manufacturing company, whose relatively small customer base is primarily made up of the gliding community, that shows no respect for that customer base and is quite willing to keep any money paid to it regardless of the outcome. No business can survive these days with that kind of attitude. Maybe one day Ales might be kind enough to offer an explanation for his irrational behaviour. I must point out that these comments are in no way intended to reflect badly on those companies listed as distributors on the AMS-Flight website. They are independent of AMS-Flight and I am certain they have their own issues with Ales. It would be very interesting to hear from others who have had a run-in with Ales and AMS-Flight. If there are enough of us then maybe we can bring some collective pressure to bear, whether that be in the form of a class action lawsuit or simply reporting these illegal and criminal activities to the Slovenian authorities. In any case, I will continue to fight to have Ales return my money. As an individual I certainly cannot afford to ignore someone who is effectively attempting to steal over AUD$5000 from me. Bob The moral of the story.....Pay with a credit card and you may have some recourse. PeterK- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Thanks for your input and hindsight is always 20/20. However there is more here than the issue of the method of payment and I was certainly unaware of any credit card option with AMS. Looking at the bigger picture, we as the gliding community see many manufacturers struggling and coming up with new and creative ways to generate revenue or at least cover their costs. The last thing we need is a corrupt operator thrown into the mix and, as a matter of principle, we need to stick together and make it known in no uncertain terms that this behaviour is unacceptable, will not be tolerated, and that any money owed must be returned to the rightful owner and without delay.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - In December 2009, I took my ASW20BL to slovenia from the UK for a complete refinish. *It was the first refinish AMS-Flight did for a UK glider (im told). *It was there for about 12 weeks. *Communicatrion was a little tricky but I later realised that there are not alot of staff and Ales seems to do alot of the work himself and is not really office bound. *When we went to collect the glider, it wasnt quite ready so wwe had to wait for about 12 hours while they finished it. Ales and his staff worked really hard that day until very late at night to get it finished. *Overall, I am really pleased with the refinish however, the wings have discoloured slightly and we are currently waiting for a response from AMS Flight as to what they are going to do about it under their 2 year warranty. We are also still waiting for the new instrument panel to be returned to us. *Ales said he was going to try and modify it when it originally didnt fit the glider. I do not wish to influence people but all I would say about AMS Flight is, they seem to do a good job, we paid all the money up front for the regel due to VAT issues in the UK (to save money), and the job was done when they said it would be. *I cannot explain the communication issue but Ales does speak good english so I would suggest telephoning him rather than email! Good luck Regards Terry Hatton- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I much appreciate your feedback in this thread. It adds some necessary balance to the issue. I am certainly not questioning the quality of the work that AMS-Flight does. The club I belong to owns a DG-505 manufactured by AMS-Flight and I must say that she is a very fine machine. From what you described, you had the good fortune to be present, in person, whilst the glider was finished. The tyranny of distance did not give me that luxury. And the tyranny of distance has made it difficult to get my money back. I have made numerous phone calls, sent even more e-mails, and have only been able to speak with Ales on a few occasions, the outcome of which had been less than satisfactory. I have to give credit to Marinka though. She seemed like such a lovely lady who got stuck with the hard questions and handled it like a champion. Sadly there has only been an answering machine lately. I think the bottom line here is that Ales needs to come to the realisation that he is running a business and a business cannot continue with a growing queue of dissatisfied customers. Taking from one of your points, he is probably far too much ‘hands-on’. I wish you luck with your warranty and instrument panel. I sincerely hope that you do not end up in the same situation. |
#7
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You could always band together with other people who have had similar
problems, locate an attorney in Slovenia and arrange for legal pressure to be put on the company. If Slovenia is part of the EU there are other routes that can be explored. On Oct 19, 7:02*pm, VH_VH wrote: I am making this posting in the hope of saving someone from going through what I have been going through and to ensure that it gets the coverage it deserves amongst the gliding community. It revolves around a business transaction between myself and Ales Cebavs, the managing director of AMS-Flight in Slovenia. It began at the start of January 2010 when I made a Euro 3165.27 (about $5100 Australian dollars at the time) bank transfer to AMS- Flight on behalf of my local sailplane repair company, for a horizontal stabilizer for my LS3. This was after receiving a proforma invoice which confirmed that AMS-Flight agreed to the supply of this part. The terms and conditions required payment up front which I did in good faith. In mid-March, it was discovered that the wrong horizontal stabilizer had been manufactured. Fortunately this was discovered before AMS- Flight shipped the product although I have no proof that the wrong part was actually manufactured. I was then advised by Ales that he would need to try and find the correct mould needed for the manufacture. On 21 June 2010, I was advised by Ales that it would not be possible to provide the horizontal stabilizer and that my money would be refunded. I immediately provided Ales with my account details so that the refund could be processed. After that, all went quiet. He refused to respond to any of my e-mails requesting the status of my refund. After two frustrating months of trying to recover my money, on 18 August I made a posting here (http://www.aviationkb.com/Uwe/Forum.aspx/ soaring/12723/AMS-Flight-Out-of-business). It had the desired effect as suddenly Ales was communicating again and he was not happy, insisting that I remove that posting before he would consider returning "part" of my money. On 8 October I issued him with a deadline of 15 October to return my money in full which he chose to ignore. He seems to have lost sight of the fact that he, and AMS- Flight, have engaged in a contract with me to provide a part. Any legitimate and self-respecting company would refund the price in full if it was unable to meet that contract. Ales seems to think that he and AMS-Flight are above that and have no responsibility to do the right and legal thing. He is in direct breach of several articles in the Slovenian Consumer Protection Act and the Slovenian Trade Act and I have recently reported this to the Slovenian authorities. What really amazes me is that here is a supposedly legitimate manufacturing company, whose relatively small customer base is primarily made up of the gliding community, that shows no respect for that customer base and is quite willing to keep any money paid to it regardless of the outcome. No business can survive these days with that kind of attitude. Maybe one day Ales might be kind enough to offer an explanation for his irrational behaviour. I must point out that these comments are in no way intended to reflect badly on those companies listed as distributors on the AMS-Flight website. They are independent of AMS-Flight and I am certain they have their own issues with Ales. It would be very interesting to hear from others who have had a run-in with Ales and AMS-Flight. If there are enough of us then maybe we can bring some collective pressure to bear, whether that be in the form of a class action lawsuit or simply reporting these illegal and criminal activities to the Slovenian authorities. In any case, I will continue to fight to have Ales return my money. As an individual I certainly cannot afford to ignore someone who is effectively attempting to steal over AUD$5000 from me. Bob |
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On Oct 28, 3:10*am, Juan wrote:
You could always band together with other people who have had similar problems, locate an attorney in Slovenia and arrange for legal pressure to be put on the company. If Slovenia is part of the EU there are other routes that can be explored. On Oct 19, 7:02*pm, VH_VH wrote: I am making this posting in the hope of saving someone from going through what I have been going through and to ensure that it gets the coverage it deserves amongst the gliding community. It revolves around a business transaction between myself and Ales Cebavs, the managing director of AMS-Flight in Slovenia. It began at the start of January 2010 when I made a Euro 3165.27 (about $5100 Australian dollars at the time) bank transfer to AMS- Flight on behalf of my local sailplane repair company, for a horizontal stabilizer for my LS3. This was after receiving a proforma invoice which confirmed that AMS-Flight agreed to the supply of this part. The terms and conditions required payment up front which I did in good faith. In mid-March, it was discovered that the wrong horizontal stabilizer had been manufactured. Fortunately this was discovered before AMS- Flight shipped the product although I have no proof that the wrong part was actually manufactured. I was then advised by Ales that he would need to try and find the correct mould needed for the manufacture. On 21 June 2010, I was advised by Ales that it would not be possible to provide the horizontal stabilizer and that my money would be refunded. I immediately provided Ales with my account details so that the refund could be processed. After that, all went quiet. He refused to respond to any of my e-mails requesting the status of my refund. After two frustrating months of trying to recover my money, on 18 August I made a posting here (http://www.aviationkb.com/Uwe/Forum.aspx/ soaring/12723/AMS-Flight-Out-of-business). It had the desired effect as suddenly Ales was communicating again and he was not happy, insisting that I remove that posting before he would consider returning "part" of my money. On 8 October I issued him with a deadline of 15 October to return my money in full which he chose to ignore. He seems to have lost sight of the fact that he, and AMS- Flight, have engaged in a contract with me to provide a part. Any legitimate and self-respecting company would refund the price in full if it was unable to meet that contract. Ales seems to think that he and AMS-Flight are above that and have no responsibility to do the right and legal thing. He is in direct breach of several articles in the Slovenian Consumer Protection Act and the Slovenian Trade Act and I have recently reported this to the Slovenian authorities. What really amazes me is that here is a supposedly legitimate manufacturing company, whose relatively small customer base is primarily made up of the gliding community, that shows no respect for that customer base and is quite willing to keep any money paid to it regardless of the outcome. No business can survive these days with that kind of attitude. Maybe one day Ales might be kind enough to offer an explanation for his irrational behaviour. I must point out that these comments are in no way intended to reflect badly on those companies listed as distributors on the AMS-Flight website. They are independent of AMS-Flight and I am certain they have their own issues with Ales. It would be very interesting to hear from others who have had a run-in with Ales and AMS-Flight. If there are enough of us then maybe we can bring some collective pressure to bear, whether that be in the form of a class action lawsuit or simply reporting these illegal and criminal activities to the Slovenian authorities. In any case, I will continue to fight to have Ales return my money. As an individual I certainly cannot afford to ignore someone who is effectively attempting to steal over AUD$5000 from me. Bob- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Thanks Juan. That is actually in the plan however it is a last resort. I am trying to give Ales and AMS-Flight every opportunity to resolve this but if necessary, I will take court action. I personally hope it does not come to that. It is a sad statement about a company when that company shows such disregard for its customers that the customer has no other option but to go down that path. |
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On 2 nov, 05:21, VH_VH wrote:
On Oct 28, 3:10*am, Juan wrote: You could always band together with other people who have had similar problems, locate an attorney in Slovenia and arrange for legal pressure to be put on the company. If Slovenia is part of the EU there are other routes that can be explored. On Oct 19, 7:02*pm, VH_VH wrote: I am making this posting in the hope of saving someone from going through what I have been going through and to ensure that it gets the coverage it deserves amongst the gliding community. It revolves around a business transaction between myself and Ales Cebavs, the managing director of AMS-Flight in Slovenia. It began at the start of January 2010 when I made a Euro 3165.27 (about $5100 Australian dollars at the time) bank transfer to AMS- Flight on behalf of my local sailplane repair company, for a horizontal stabilizer for my LS3. This was after receiving a proforma invoice which confirmed that AMS-Flight agreed to the supply of this part. The terms and conditions required payment up front which I did in good faith. In mid-March, it was discovered that the wrong horizontal stabilizer had been manufactured. Fortunately this was discovered before AMS- Flight shipped the product although I have no proof that the wrong part was actually manufactured. I was then advised by Ales that he would need to try and find the correct mould needed for the manufacture. On 21 June 2010, I was advised by Ales that it would not be possible to provide the horizontal stabilizer and that my money would be refunded. I immediately provided Ales with my account details so that the refund could be processed. After that, all went quiet. He refused to respond to any of my e-mails requesting the status of my refund. After two frustrating months of trying to recover my money, on 18 August I made a posting here (http://www.aviationkb.com/Uwe/Forum.aspx/ soaring/12723/AMS-Flight-Out-of-business). It had the desired effect as suddenly Ales was communicating again and he was not happy, insisting that I remove that posting before he would consider returning "part" of my money. On 8 October I issued him with a deadline of 15 October to return my money in full which he chose to ignore. He seems to have lost sight of the fact that he, and AMS- Flight, have engaged in a contract with me to provide a part. Any legitimate and self-respecting company would refund the price in full if it was unable to meet that contract. Ales seems to think that he and AMS-Flight are above that and have no responsibility to do the right and legal thing. He is in direct breach of several articles in the Slovenian Consumer Protection Act and the Slovenian Trade Act and I have recently reported this to the Slovenian authorities. What really amazes me is that here is a supposedly legitimate manufacturing company, whose relatively small customer base is primarily made up of the gliding community, that shows no respect for that customer base and is quite willing to keep any money paid to it regardless of the outcome. No business can survive these days with that kind of attitude. Maybe one day Ales might be kind enough to offer an explanation for his irrational behaviour. I must point out that these comments are in no way intended to reflect badly on those companies listed as distributors on the AMS-Flight website. They are independent of AMS-Flight and I am certain they have their own issues with Ales. It would be very interesting to hear from others who have had a run-in with Ales and AMS-Flight. If there are enough of us then maybe we can bring some collective pressure to bear, whether that be in the form of a class action lawsuit or simply reporting these illegal and criminal activities to the Slovenian authorities. In any case, I will continue to fight to have Ales return my money. As an individual I certainly cannot afford to ignore someone who is effectively attempting to steal over AUD$5000 from me. Bob- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Thanks Juan. That is actually in the plan however it is a last resort. I am trying to give Ales and AMS-Flight every opportunity to resolve this but if necessary, I will take court action. I personally hope it does not come to that. It is a sad statement about a company when that company shows such disregard for its customers that the customer has no other option but to go down that path.- Masquer le texte des messages précédents - - Afficher le texte des messages précédents - Hi, I am also a victim of Ales Cebavs from AMS-Flight: 4.300 euros. The technique is always the same: send the money, you will receive your parts in 4 weeks, AND YOU NEVER RECEIVE YOUR ORDER ! You send e- mails and telephone calls that he never returns. This has to come to an end, and we have to stop Cebavs from continuing to defraud the international gliding community. I already consulted a law firm from the city where AMS is located, and I intend to stop this crook : everybody interested to join the civil lawsuit, and also have Cebavs arrested for international fraud, please contact me at my personnal e- mail: I am travelling regularly to Europe, and will make as many trips as needed to Slovenia to see him convicted, and make sure that all his victims are reimbursed. Some owners of CARAT motorgliders are devastated to hear about Cebavs criminal conduct ( go to CARAT MOTORGLIDER yahoo group), and Cebavs silence speaks for itself. He had the balls to write to me today that my order was ready, but that he won't send it because of what I wrote on CARAT yahoogroup: despicable ! |
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At 01:44 13 November 2010, Regent wrote:
On 2 nov, 05:21, VH_VH wrote: On Oct 28, 3:10=A0am, Juan wrote: You could always band together with other people who have had similar problems, locate an attorney in Slovenia and arrange for legal pressure to be put on the company. If Slovenia is part of the EU there are other routes that can be explored. On Oct 19, 7:02=A0pm, VH_VH wrote: I am making this posting in the hope of saving someone from going through what I have been going through and to ensure that it gets the coverage it deserves amongst the gliding community. It revolves aroun= d a business transaction between myself and Ales Cebavs, the managing director of AMS-Flight in Slovenia. It began at the start of January 2010 when I made a Euro 3165.27 (about $5100 Australian dollars at the time) bank transfer to AMS- Flight on behalf of my local sailplane repair company, for a horizontal stabilizer for my LS3. This was after receiving a proforma invoice which confirmed that AMS-Flight agreed to the supply of this part. The terms and conditions required payment up front which I did in good faith. In mid-March, it was discovered that the wrong horizontal stabilizer had been manufactured. Fortunately this was discovered before AMS- Flight shipped the product although I have no proof that the wrong part was actually manufactured. I was then advised by Ales that he would need to try and find the correct mould needed for the manufacture. On 21 June 2010, I was advised by Ales that it would not be possible to provide the horizontal stabilizer and that my money would be refunded. I immediately provided Ales with my account details so that the refund could be processed. After that, all went quiet. He refused to respond to any of my e-mails requesting the status of my refund. After two frustrating months of trying to recover my money, on 18 August I made a posting here (http://www.aviationkb.com/Uwe/Forum.asp= x/ soaring/12723/AMS-Flight-Out-of-business). It had the desired effect as suddenly Ales was communicating again and he was not happy, insisting that I remove that posting before he would consider returning "part" of my money. On 8 October I issued him with a deadline of 15 October to return my money in full which he chose to ignore. He seems to have lost sight of the fact that he, and AMS- Flight, have engaged in a contract with me to provide a part. Any legitimate and self-respecting company would refund the price in full if it was unable to meet that contract. Ales seems to think that he and AMS-Flight are above that and have no responsibility to do the right and legal thing. He is in direct breach of several articles in the Slovenian Consumer Protection Act and the Slovenian Trade Act and I have recently reported this to the Slovenian authorities. What really amazes me is that here is a supposedly legitimate manufacturing company, whose relatively small customer base is primarily made up of the gliding community, that shows no respect for that customer base and is quite willing to keep any money paid to it regardless of the outcome. No business can survive these days with that kind of attitude. Maybe one day Ales might be kind enough to offer an explanation for his irrational behaviour. I must point out that these comments are in no way intended to reflec= t badly on those companies listed as distributors on the AMS-Flight website. They are independent of AMS-Flight and I am certain they hav= e their own issues with Ales. It would be very interesting to hear from others who have had a run-i= n with Ales and AMS-Flight. If there are enough of us then maybe we can bring some collective pressure to bear, whether that be in the form o= f a class action lawsuit or simply reporting these illegal and criminal activities to the Slovenian authorities. In any case, I will continue to fight to have Ales return my money. As an individual I certainly cannot afford to ignore someone who is effectively attempting to stea= l over AUD$5000 from me. Bob- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Thanks Juan. That is actually in the plan however it is a last resort. I am trying to give Ales and AMS-Flight every opportunity to resolve this but if necessary, I will take court action. I personally hope it does not come to that. It is a sad statement about a company when that company shows such disregard for its customers that the customer has no other option but to go down that path.- Masquer le texte des messages = pr=E9c=E9dents - - Afficher le texte des messages pr=E9c=E9dents - Hi, I am also a victim of Ales Cebavs from AMS-Flight: 4.300 euros. The technique is always the same: send the money, you will receive your parts in 4 weeks, AND YOU NEVER RECEIVE YOUR ORDER ! You send e- mails and telephone calls that he never returns. This has to come to an end, and we have to stop Cebavs from continuing to defraud the international gliding community. I already consulted a law firm from the city where AMS is located, and I intend to stop this crook : everybody interested to join the civil lawsuit, and also have Cebavs arrested for international fraud, please contact me at my personnal e- mail: I am travelling regularly to Europe, and will make as many trips as needed to Slovenia to see him convicted, and make sure that all his victims are reimbursed. Some owners of CARAT motorgliders are devastated to hear about Cebavs criminal conduct ( go to CARAT MOTORGLIDER yahoo group), and Cebavs silence speaks for itself. He had the balls to write to me today that my order was ready, but that he won't send it because of what I wrote on CARAT yahoogroup: despicable ! Hi, It is now clear that chances to get our parts or our money back are near zero, since AMS-FLIGHT is not in business anymo the plant has been closed, all employees have been laid- off, and Ales Cebavs is now living from small repairs that he is doing by himself. We are in contact with slovenian authorities, and intend to continue our action to press criminal charges against Cebavs. |
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