@bluecaller This reminds me, we have scanners at work that the general labor workers use daily. My department also uses them daily. The workers keep partially disassembling the devices to swap the trigger position, but this exposes the metal pins which connect the trigger to the main body. Now we have many scanners that cannot scan. It's a growing issue as we filter the new model in and the old model out of use. The old model had a trigger that swiveled to match user preference, but the new ones don't.

I feel like I should say something, "Hey, these are breaking a lot and I know why they are breaking and what's broken" But I don't know if anyone would listen to or care or do anything at all. I'm tired of picking up broken scanners from the cart every morning.

@bluecaller I should add, the issue is the pins break as the workers swap the trigger. It's not meant to be opened up on a daily basis like this, only for maintenance. And the pins end up breaking off or bending so they don't contact as the workers handle the device with no caution or concern. They don't even make a note, they just toss it back on the charger like nothing happened.

I've actually been told I'm the only person who leaves detailed notes on damages equipment. At best people write "Broken" or "Won't scan" often just no note at all