Touche' well done! You must be a professional fisherman. Although my statement in whole reads a lot more accurately than the snip you took out of the middle.
No, he should rebuild the house if that is what makes him happy. Fix it, don't fix it, wabi-sabi either way. Rebuild the whole porch and then rope it off, never allow it to be used to walk on or put things on again, God forbid the sun hits it from any angle, should probably put a roof over it and a fence around it to just in case - lol.
BXExpanded did not damage anything of his was my point. BX Expanded did not order it and request it be sent to his house, he did.
But you trolled first, and he saw it for exactly what it was. I tried to ignore your ignorance, but he went troll trolling.
You are exactly correct that BXPanded didn't force me to buy from them, and somewhere, I think I even said as much myself. But they certainly have a good product, and do a lot of advertising for it. I paid a premium price for their bar, just like I did for the materials in my porch, for exactly the same reasons. I even over looked the fact that I was promised 2 week delivery, up until they had my credit card information. It bumped to 4 weeks that instant, and then actually took 8 weeks. Maybe COVID was making all their robotic welders and CNC machines sick or something. I don't have anything weird on my very standard 54" Kubota bucket, so the wonderful engineering that went into the bar has probably been done thousands of times. They made a lot of money with this bar on this sale. Once they're past the initial designs, the engineering costs disappear, and mass production can begin. That's good business practice in it's simplest form. No more complicated than that design is, I can't imagine them not having recovered their development costs within a few sales. The simplicity is exactly what I liked about it.
You're just being a jerk when you imply I don't understand the difference between careless destruction and normal wear and tear. I guess you're just ok with folks slamming their door into the side of your favorite vehicle, but perhaps you don't give a crap about what you drive or what you live in, nor how many times you have to pay to have nice things. I've worked a LONG time to be able to afford a few nice things, and I'll be damned if I'm going to just be 'wabi-sabi' about some idiot being careless with a dangerous product in irresponsible packaging. They could have put "We use the cheapest box we can find with no additional packing for you to have to throw away" in their advertising, and that might have swayed my purchase decision some. That kind of truth would be bad for business, wouldn't it? All I saw in my research was the raves about how good the bar was, and I reviewed at least a dozen different brands and styles before I selected their product. NO ONE said anything about cheap and inadequate shipping, mostly because the product is what was on their priority list, which actually, is also my top priority too. But that doesn't mean I should have to accept double the cost because they didn't include better packaging as part of their product. They're cutting corners for a few pounds of materials to reduce their shipping costs, I get it. I'm way too familiar with shipping stuff. Like it or not, they certainly share the responsibility for the damage to my porch.
Sure, if I did that kind of damage to my deck through my own carelessness, I'd HAVE to repair it at my own cost. But I DIDN'T DO IT, and it could have been avoided with more substantial packaging. THAT is the point. This was almost like pulling the pin halfway out on a claymore before putting it in a Walmart bag to ship it. It was doomed to fail.
You may think it petty to complain to the vendor about inadequate packaging or to seek compensation for damage done because of it, but if the next guy gets his blade delivered in a wooden crate and nothing gets damaged while handling it, I'll be pretty stoked for him. Too late for me to be happy about the delivery, that's for sure. The delivery is part of the purchase, like it or not. If no one complains about quality failures, nothing changes.