As far as I can see, the stated facts simply don't add up:
- We have reports of people needing more than one motor from 50C.
- 50C say that there's only 6 people ever that needed a new motor.
- Just about all of the regular members of the forum that had one of those motors had a failure.
I went to university and studied statistics, but you shouldn't need that to figure out that something isn't right unless it's a coincidence that all 6 failures belonged to forum members and 50C are totally useless or cheated when replacing the motors. Alternatively, all the forum members are liars, and never had bad motors.
I don't like it when facts don't add up. It makes me want to get to the truth.
A few years ago, I was Quality Manager for a premium brand caravan manufacturer, and I noticed we were getting an uncomfortable number of reports of our new cheap brand tyres blowing. Our Customer Services asked them if the caravan was over-loaded, which they always are, so they got fobbed off, but I didn't feel comfortable about it until I saw a letter in a magazine saying that across several brands of caravan in his club, many of those tyres had blown at exactly the same mileage. A couple of guys had a blowout, replaced the tyre with the spare and then had a blow-out on the other side within a couple of miles. I had heard that same story from one of our customers.
I contacted the tyre importers, who told me that they had only ever had two reports of blow-outs, but I knew that our customer services had referred at least 5 examples. Unfortunately, he didn't keep any records. I spoke with other manufacturers QA, who were reluctant to give any details, but each gave a hint that they had seen the problem too.
Finally, face to face, after lots of nasty stuff, the importer admitted that there were problems. His exact words were, "We're not proud of that first batch". Luckily there weren't too many of them as far as we were concerned, so not too bad for us to deal with, but I lost a lot of sleep thinking about all the people with trailers and whatever getting random blow-outs.
Since then, I would never trust any statistics that a supplier gives about problem rates.
As an aside, the other thing I used to get as a quality manager was, "we send these things all over the world and you're the only one complaining", so I'd put one on the table and say, "Is that how it's supposed be?". "No", "then fix it please". Or, "We make 10,000 a month and we have only two complaints, both from you, which is a defect rate of only 0.0001%". Me, "Can I come to your factory and check your stores to see what the actual defect rate is?" Sometimes they said yes (Salesmen/MDs don't have a clue) and later got totally embarrassed when we had all the defects laid out in their store. BTW, that was a good technique for getting improvement if any readers are budding QA guys.