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Fredxx[_4_] Fredxx[_4_] is offline
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Default 'Right to repair' law to come in this summer

On 10/03/2021 11:28, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
On 10/03/2021 10:40, Tim+ wrote:
Jeff Layman wrote:
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-56340077

Will this make any practical difference? If an SMD integrated circuit
goes wrong in a TV, will making the SMD itself available make the TV
"more repairable"? How much will it cost? How much would the complete
circuit board with SMD already fitted cost? Isn't the latter what's done
at present? It seems to me the manufacturers will just charge what they
see fit for the replacement part, no doubt with an exorbitant P&P to
cover "administrative costs".


On the down side I think it might just put prices up and stifle
innovation
but on the up side, it could lead to products designed around more
€śgeneric€ť components rather than custom ones.Â* This would reduce the cost
of providing a spares service.


It already has done that in the car industry - where pattern parts are
de jure...

All that has happened is that the price of new cars and service labour
has increased, as a result.


Can you cite any link to show that to be the case?

The consumer hasn't really won


It makes repair much easier and cheaper if there are multiple
independent sources of the same component, rather than being a dealer
only part.