I few months back, I bought a Nokia 5100 from GSM Phone Source. The phone he sold me came from Europe (complete with a continental European power adapter, but an English-language manual). Well, the phone's been misbehaving a lot lately. You'll try to make a call and it will reboot itself right there in your hands. Other times, you'll just get a short sine-wave tone for a few seconds or until you hit the hang-up button. Then it will reboot. Once it gets into one of these "moods", nothing will fix it, not power cycling, etc. However, later on, sometimes at a different physical location, it will work great.
This could be a software problem or a hardware problem. Unfortunately, Nokia USA will not honor the warranty of the phone since it's not sold in the U.S. There's a local "official" Nokia repair shop that is apparently authorized to do software upgrades and to repair the microphone/speaker parts of the phone. What I think it might need is an upgraded RF section, which is, of course, beyond what they can do locally.
Now, I'm going to be in Belgium briefly on business this week (giving talks at the Belgium Java User's Group and K.U. Leuven). Would a European phone shop be able to do better than their American peers? I obviously don't have time for them to ship the phone off for repairs and wait for it to come back. Is there any chance my European warranty might be useful for me? Could I get a shop to upgrade the software without charging me?
Would I need to be in the country where the phone was originally purchased? The sticker says it was made in Germany, but that's not terribly helpful. And, the GSM Phone Source dude has been singularly unhelpful.