HOW IT WORKS
The purpose of Bar-O-Abit™ is to help people find the bit that works best for them and their horse. Instead of buying a bit and trying it, only to find out that the bit does not work creating the need to repeat the process. Bar-O-Abit™ allows you to rent the bit before purchasing it, saving you time and money.
How Bar-O-Abit™, LLC works is you select a bit or bits from Bar-O-Abit™’s online inventory; add the bit to your shopping cart; complete our Terms and Conditions; and hit enter. Then, Bar-O-Abit™ will mail the bit to you. Bits may be rented for one week up to four weeks in one-week increments. Additional weeks can be added if you contact us and let us know that you would like to extend your rental. If you select to rent longer than one week your card on file will be ran each week for rental payments.
Once you have received your bit/bits your rental period begins the day after the tracking number says the bit is delivered to you. Once your rental period has expired and you are ready to return the bit. Please email us requesting a return shipping label be emailed to you. Put the items you are returning in the return shipping package, tape the label on the outside and dropping it in the mail. You will be charged for the return shipping when label is emailed to you. Be sure to include a tracking number on your return shipment if you ship directly from a store instead of requesting a return shipping label from us. We recommend that you get shipping insurance to cover the items value so you are not liable if the bit is lost, damaged or stolen.
All bits will have a tracking number on all packages so we can prevent any confusion on where the bit is during transit. If you have not received your bit when the tracking label had said it would arrive, please call us right away so we can make sure that it gets to you.
“…designed for people to decide on what bit or bits work best for them and their horse, before making an expensive purchase that potentially might not work out, leaving you with quite the collection of expensive bits you don’t necessarily need.”