How silly.
Anyway, the retailer has offered to send it back and get it fixed,if that fix is not available,then you will get a new one.Not a perfect solution, but then life is not perfect.Such is.........
Edit...As for the American reference, perhaps that is why the rest of the civilised world thinks they are ,well, whatever.
Actually it's the same in Germany: I once saw a woman returned a whole china coffee service because one of the cups had a blemish in the glaze underneath the cup...
The salesgirl didn't even quibble - she looked at the blemish - and it was really minor - and said she'd replace the entire service as the cups couldn't be bought individually...
The rest of the world have higher expectations when it comes to service - not just in the USA, where they have raised it to an art-form (a mate of mine once worked part-time in a New York depatment-store as an IT geek, but one of his other 'jobs' was to get fired: if a customer was being ridiculously unreasonable, the department manager would call Greg down and for the benefit of the customer, rant at him for a few minutes then 'fire' him on the spot...Greg had to look suitably aghast as the implications of being unemployed sank in...then toddled off back to whatever mother-board he was geeking on...).
It's also extremely rare to tip staff in restaurants or cafes here in Germany, so much so that when I round up the bill by a couple of 's it's often quite embarassing the amount of gratitude it generates.
