5 thoughts on “My diamond ring has dropped the claws together, and the rest of the ring is left. I do n’t know where it is. What is more than 100,000? Is this a workmanship problem? Is there any compensation?”
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This may be because you accidentally touched it, or it may be because of workmanship, but the phenomenon cannot be clarified to the merchant, so the possibility of compensation is very small.
The diamond ring has a noodle claw, and the rest is left. This may be a problem of workmanship, or maybe where we have been scratched in our usual life?
Pay content for time limit to check for freenAnswer If you can prove that it is not artificially damaged, it can be lost naturally. But the case you provide is troublesome.nThere are reasons for workmanship, and there are reasons for improper preservation ~ Sometimes it can be baked at high temperature, such as cooking, which may cause shedding.nYou can ask a lawyer to ask the lawyer to ask a professional diamond ring appraiser to identify the cause of the rings, and then apply for rights protection.n1 morenBleak
If the ring is intact, you can take the theory of the merchant! But it can only be said that there is a possibility of compensation!
No one will pay you to this kind of thing. People know how you drop it, saying that if such a merchant must die.