That's a novel legal theory about different products. Bluntly, lol.
And no, warantee issues are totally, legally, separate from EULA ones. More, there is an assumption of fitness-for-purpose under UK law which means that even if technically disqualified for warantee repair, if the product was not not fit, it dosn't matter what the warantee says. Oh, and that statutory right extends for six years and is on the retailer who sold you the goods. (Although after six months, you have to prove fault, within six months they have it's not faulty after taking it back)
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