Bob-23
Senior Member
After all, we're also talking about precious natural ressources and we might appreciate the human labor that's materialized in our products.
And about mountains of waste.
And about mountains of waste.
By "cycle", I think you mean "program". Wash, rinse, and spin are cycles; normal, delicate, bedding, perm press, etc. (+ half-dozen more) are programs.<rant>I don’t understand the need for a dozen or more wash and dry cycles and Wi-Fi. Why the eff does anyone need Wi-Fi on a washer or dryer. Someone needs to make a washer that just effing washes clothes and a dryer that just dries them. I don’t need or want to pay for all these fancy “features” I’ll never effing use.</rant>
My wife and I got a 1954 Chrysler fridge when we bought our first house in 1984. It worked for another 20 years without any service. We loved that the freezer was on the bottom and that the fridge shelves would rotate about a pole on the hinge side so you could get to the stuff at the back without having to rearrange things. What a great feature!My father has an International Harvester refrigerator my parents bought when they got married in 1957. I think they even bought it used. It has never been serviced and is still running perfectly today. It stays so cold he has to keep it on the warmest setting and it’ll still freeze stuff too close to the freezer section. It’s been the beer fridge in the garage for as long as I can remember.
Martin
I think any failure in what we use is stressful and cheap and easily solutions rarely exist. Our German dishwasher failed. It cost $600 to repair it that involved replacing a $20 part. They would even refuse to come to our house saying we were outside of their service area! This is a nearly $3,000 dishwasher which they happily sold us without saying they wouldn't want to service it. We have a second dishwasher from the same brand that cost $1000 and the service tech declared it instantly as not fixable and go get a new one! New one with install costs $1,500. We have barely used the broken one.
Our Samsung TV died. Everyone else would throw it out but I went through hell repairing it. Got a replacement board that was more faulty than the one I had. Of course picture quality is nowhere as good as new units so I wonder why I spent the time.
Have a POE switch that failed. Simple power supply problem but with surface mount parts, no way to repair it. Was just out of warranty. Did I want the hassle of sending back to them for repair even though they are in US? Nope. Bought another from Amazon.
Have emissions sensors failing in our Mercedes van. Thankfully they have extended warranty on it but otherwise would cost a few thousand dollars! And the problem is common as dirt. Took nearly two weeks just to get a hold of the local dealer and convince them to repair it. They then said it would be nearly a month before they could take it in!
In all the gear I have tested, I have had two failures: a Sony AVR and Devialet. Devialet actually had to go back to France. The Sony was $99 so not even worth bothering with warranty repair.
So I don't know that there is a good solution here. The days of a simple fuse going bad is long gone from our electronics....
All generalisations, including this one, are dangerous .Germans don't have a very good understanding of electronics, or even electricity.
You may lookup the history of Siemens & Halske.Germans don't have a very good understanding of electronics, or even electricity.
Did the topping faithful threaten a lynching?
Oh, I like that oneEdit: the toaster from red dwarf is closer than we fear.
Edit: the toaster from red dwarf is closer than we fear.
The faulty dishwashers I talked about are Miele. Ours has had fair number of issues. First its auto-close solenoid went bad. Paid something like $250 for the part from Miele even though the fault was a $30 German motor. Then the front panel went bad. Bought one used on ebay as new it was hundreds of dollars since the stupid thing is glued to the whole front facia! And then the final failure of it leaking and its safety feature for that kicking in. I took it all apart which was a pain in the neck. It was such a pain that I paid the repair guy to put it back together.As a german please let me say a word about Miele. Self we use a Miele washer (21 years old), vacuum cleaner (22 years), dryer (13 years) and dishwasher (3 years). Yes, they are pricey and not ever lasting error free, but most repairable. Cause of high serviceman costs I buy in case of a defect the spare parts self and make the maintence as DIY job.
The tital changed .
It's not that odd. In days of yore, engine crankcases were vented to atmosphere. This kept intake manifolds spotlessly clean, but polluted the atmosphere. PCV was introduced to route the crankcase breather vent to the intake manifold. This keeps the atmosphere clean, forcing the engine to burn the polluted vapor venting from the crankcase. But even with PCV, intake manifolds still stayed nice and clean. Why? Because fuel is an excellent solvent and the fuel vapor (whether carbureted or fuel injected) was introduced in the intake manifold.... Engines now hold only 100.000 miles, sometimes only 50.000 miles without defects, cause of coke and dirt in the intake manifold. Thats very odd.