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Does daily use of my TV increase it's expected life?
distar97 wrote:
Hi guys... I've noticed over the years some of my consumer electronic items are going way beyond what might be considered a normal life span. I've seen recent threads about bad caps in computers, malfunctioning microwave displays etc. that make me wonder about component design and the other things that affect a products life, specifically usage patterns. My good example is my JVC model# 3070 a 2-1/2" portable B&W TV. I got it in 1975. Since I'm nearsighted, I use it to watch late-night TV while it sits on my night table. The picture is like new and very sharp, as small b&w CRT's can be. I keep the brightness turned down a bit to reduce stress on the system. It frequently stays on after I fall asleep. So it is on from 2-8 hours a day, nearly every day for 30 years. My question is, do you think the components are lasting this long because they are used every day as opposed to infrequent use? What if the same TV sat in storage for years, rarely used, would the caps fail sooner? I guess I'll find out, I found the same model on ebay, I'm keeping it in storage as a backup. Dennis Harper/Bronxville NY Some parts will fail from sitting, but use kills most things. Sometimes you get lucky and a piece of crap will run for decades, but that's not usually the case. I doubt you'll find a modern TV that will last as long as one made in 1975, the cathodes are so thin that the tube will go soft long before it's that old. |
Does daily use of my TV increase it's expected life?
distar97 wrote:
Hi guys... I've noticed over the years some of my consumer electronic items are going way beyond what might be considered a normal life span. I've seen recent threads about bad caps in computers, malfunctioning microwave displays etc. that make me wonder about component design and the other things that affect a products life, specifically usage patterns. My good example is my JVC model# 3070 a 2-1/2" portable B&W TV. I got it in 1975. Since I'm nearsighted, I use it to watch late-night TV while it sits on my night table. The picture is like new and very sharp, as small b&w CRT's can be. I keep the brightness turned down a bit to reduce stress on the system. It frequently stays on after I fall asleep. So it is on from 2-8 hours a day, nearly every day for 30 years. My question is, do you think the components are lasting this long because they are used every day as opposed to infrequent use? What if the same TV sat in storage for years, rarely used, would the caps fail sooner? I guess I'll find out, I found the same model on ebay, I'm keeping it in storage as a backup. Dennis Harper/Bronxville NY I think charging up electrolytic capacitors for at least a few minutes every six months or so will tend to prolong their life because it re-grows the insulating layer inside the capacitor, or in other words, if you were to let the TV stay off for 10 years and then try to use it, there would be a risk that some of the caps would have become leaky and might even overheat or burst. On the other hand, leaving the TV on all day could shorten the life of the electrolytics if they run fairly warm, and would be certain to make the tube lose some emission. I am in favour of switching things off when they are not being used because of the pollution / intractable waste caused by the normal means of power generation. I think that your TV might be lasting well because it was made at a time when people really cared about how to build a good CRT TV. I think that each appliance has a 'golden age' when the profit margins are still good enough that it's worth putting good engineers on the project, the components are new enough that engineers are taught how they work, and the appliance is still expensive enough to be worth making it repairable, but after the initial bugs with the basic technology have been sorted out. Once the item becomes regarded as a disposable commodity, they don't try to compete on good design or quality any more. Therefore a cassette walkman from the early '80s or a VCR from the late '80s will be far better made and even better performing than what you can get now. Chris |
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