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John Rumm John Rumm is offline
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Default should DIY be a green cause

On 23/03/2016 13:31, charles wrote:
In article ,
wrote:
On Wednesday, 23 March 2016 12:07:20 UTC, michael adams wrote:
"John Rumm" wrote in message
o.uk...
On 23/03/2016 03:39, Bill Wright wrote:


In the interests of the conservation of materials and energy, should
not DIY, especially the repair of goods,

As far as repairing goods is concerned, the whole point of mass
production certainly since the Industrial Revolutiin is to manufacture
and assemble all goods as far as possible by machine with as little
labour input as possible. As its this that makes goods so cheap in the
first place.

Given economies of scale and labour costs its usually far more economic
to manufacture a new item from scratch than it is to train up
technicians to disassemble, diagnose and repair faults, maintain an
inventory of spares etc.Especially when new models might be introduced
on an annual basis.

In larger items such as cars these are often broken down into
sub-assemblies, headlights etc which need to be replaced entirely and
are imposible to repair.

Although this may be wastful of material, overall the cost saving in
labour is probably far greater than any labour costs incurred in
sourcing new material. For the present at least

This really is old stuff; going all the way back to Vance Packard and
the "Waste Makers" in the 50's/60's.


That's all half true. The reality is a considerable percentage of what's
faulty & what's thrown away is worth repairing. And much isn't.


There's also the cost of someone's time to be taken into account. DIY
repairs can be worth doing, but paying someone do to the job is most likely
uneconomic.


Indeed, which is why a DIYer with a little bit of knowledge can cost
effectively do many things that are not viable to others.

Just think how many electronic devices one can repair and carry on using
for the cost of a couple of capacitors, 10 minutes and some solder?


--
Cheers,

John.

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