Steve
George joined the Trew Audio team in 2001. He is our lead
service repair technician, and he has traveled the world in the course
of his work. He spent six years in the Navy calibrating test equipment
as a Precision Electronics Measurement Specialist. He has worked for
Carver and NASA subcontractor EIL Instruments. Steve has a special
fondness for high end audio equipment and is also a Macintosh Computer
expert.
Q: What do you feel is
your most important contribution to Trew Audio?
Focusing the
service department on the equipment we sell. This narrower focus has
allowed us to become far more expert in our field, and more
efficient to the client’s needs.
Q: You possess other
helpful skills relevant to the operation of the business. What other
duties are integral to your role at Trew Audio?
I suppose my 10 years of computer repair are quite beneficial
here. I help manage our computer networks in both the US and Canada
locations, and I help keep the connection between the two systems
working smoothly. For instance, all of the consigned equipment is
kept on a single database both locations, making it better for both
sales departments, the webmaster, and, ultimately the customers.
Regarding audio repair, now that all the new recorders are
computer/disk based, my data recovery and drive diagnosis skills can
certainly be applied to that service.
Q: All modesty aside,
what is the highest compliment you have received from a Trew Audio
customer?
The threat of being kidnapped and whisked away to Hollywood to
perform repairs in captivity.
Q: In your estimation,
what would be the top ways customers could help make a smooth repair
transaction even smoother?
Call first to describe the problem. There may be ways to assist
over the phone. If the unit needs to be shipped in, get an “R.A.
Number” and include it with the shipment so that when it arrives
the problem will be documented and we can go right to work on it.
Think about what the conditions were under which the problem
occurred (environmental, powering, function enabled at time of
failure, etc.).
If first time to Trew, it can be helpful to list the unit’s
prior service history.
Include paper documentation as to contact info.
PROPERLY PACKAGE YOUR SHIPMENT. Some shippers balk at shipping
damage claims if the unit was being shipped for repair in the first
place!
Q: What do you like
most about your job?
I love Nagra repair. But also being afforded (and expected to
provide) the task of performing superbly high quality repairs on all
the equipment we service. My soldering and rework skills (developed
years ago for repairing precision test equipment) are once again
useful. I love soldering so much that I keep my work as good as or
better than the manufacturer. This craftsmanship provides an outlet
for my creative side, and although the customer will almost never
see the work, I know IT'S IN THERE. Had I been born a hundred years
ago I probably would have been a gunsmith or a clockmaker.
Q: What question are
you glad I didn't ask?
Now that the new recorders are like computers, where do you see
the future of their serviceability?
This one scares me. Will the future recorders become as
disposable as PC’s? Who knows? But for now I’m firmly in my
element and loving it.