No Deductibles | Fully Transferable | All Labor | All Parts | Factory Service | 800# for Service
Extend the original Manufacturer's Product Warranty for up to 5 years and receive up to 50% Merchandise Credit Back if you don't use it.
| 2 YEAR* GET 10% CREDIT BACK |
| 3 YEAR* GET 20% CREDIT BACK |
| 4 YEAR* GET 25% CREDIT BACK |
| 5 YEAR* GET 50% CREDIT BACK |
No Check-Ups or Repairs, Get Up To 50% Of Cost of Warranty Plus Coverage Towards Your Next Major Electronics or Appliance Purchase, 90 Days To Redeem For Merchandise Credit, Call Our Toll Free Number.
*including Manufacturer's Warranty
ABC Warehouse offers Extended Warranty Plans on the item(s) listed below. Please select from the following Warranty Options to include with your purchase.
If there is a bachelor living in the family or a husband working late, the evening story involves tiffin delivery. A hot meal wrapped in a cloth bag, carried by a delivery boy or a sent by a neighbor's son. This unspoken community support system is fading but not yet gone.
This article is an invitation to step through the figurative door of a typical middle-class Indian home. We will follow the sun from dawn to dusk, listening to the sounds, smelling the aromas, and living the stories that define 1.4 billion people. Before the stories begin, we must understand the stage. An Indian home—whether a chawl in Mumbai, a kothi in Delhi, or a flat in Bangalore—revolves around specific non-negotiable spaces.
It is also the hour of secrets. The mother calls her sister for a "private" conversation in the storeroom. The father sneaks a 20-minute nap on the sofa, newspaper covering his face. The domestic help, Didi, arrives. She is not a servant but a part of the family story; she knows everyone's birthdays and the house's secret recipes. As the sun softens, the home wakes up again. By 6 PM, the chaiwallah on the corner is busy. The scent of ginger tea and samosas fills the air.
The local sabzi mandi (vegetable market). The family doesn't buy groceries; they experience them. They argue with the vendor over two rupees. They inspect tomatoes like they are diamonds. This is a family outing, not a chore.
In the kitchen, leftovers are transformed. Yesterday’s roti becomes today’s masala toast. Nothing is wasted. This frugality is a core pillar of the Indian lifestyle—a legacy of scarcity turned into an art of abundance.