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Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
In my opinon...no.
I intentionally try to have older appliances, vehicles, machines to lower repair costs and keep overall ownership cost to a minimum. Your thoughts? TMT Irreparable damageBy Bryce Baschuk THE WASHINGTON TIMES January 9, 2007 Bill Jones, after 42 years, is finally closing the Procter Appliance Service shop in Silver Spring. "You can't make a good salary to survive on the way you could years ago," said the 61-year-old owner of the oven, refrigerator and washer-dryer repair shop. "Everything has changed in the appliance business." Mr. Jones recently sold his home in Laurel and is in the process of moving to Bluffton, S.C., with his wife, Jeannette. Mr. Jones is one of the many Washington-area repairmen who have struggled to stay afloat as residents replace, not repair, old appliances. "It's a dying trade," said Scott Brown, Webmaster of www.fixitnow.com and self-proclaimed "Samurai Appliance Repairman." The reason for this is twofold, Mr. Brown said: The cost of appliances is coming down because of cheap overseas labor and improved manufacturing techniques, and repairmen are literally dying off. The average age of appliance technicians is 42, and there are few young repairmen to take their place, said Mr. Brown, 47. He has been repairing appliances in New Hampshire for the past 13 years. In the next seven years, the number of veteran appliance repairmen will decrease nationwide as current workers retire or transfer to other occupations, the Department of Labor said in its 2007 Occupational Outlook Handbook. The federal agency said many prospective repairmen prefer work that is less strenuous and want more comfortable working conditions. Local repairmen said it is simply a question of economics. "Nowadays appliances are cheap, so people are just getting new ones," said Paul Singh, a manager at the Appliance Service Depot, a repair shop in Northwest. "As a result, business has slowed down a lot." "The average repair cost for a household appliance is $50 to $350," said Shahid Rana, a service technician at Rana Refrigeration, a repair shop in Capitol Heights. "If the repair is going to cost more than that, we usually tell the customer to go out and buy a new one." It's not uncommon for today's repairmen to condemn an appliance instead of fixing it for the sake of their customers' wallets. If they decide to repair an appliance that is likely to break down again, repairmen are criticized by their customers and often lose business because of a damaged reputation. Mr. Jones said he based his repair decisions on the 50 percent rule: "If the cost of service costs more than 50 percent of the price of a new machine, I'll tell my customers to get a new one." "A lot of customers want me to be honest with them, so I'll tell them my opinion and leave the decision making up to them," he said. In recent years, consumers have tended to buy new appliances when existing warranties expire rather than repair old appliances, the Department of Labor said. Mr. Brown acknowledged this trend. "Lower-end appliances which you can buy for $200 to $300 are basically throwaway appliances," he said. "They are so inexpensive that you shouldn't pay to get them repaired." "The quality of the materials that are being made aren't lasting," Mr. Jones said. "Nowadays you're seeing more plastic and more circuit boards, and they aren't holding up." Many home appliances sold in the United States are made in Taiwan, Singapore, China and Mexico. "Nothing is made [in the United States] anymore," Mr. Jones said. "But then again, American parts are only better to a point, a lot of U.S. companies are all about the dollar." Fortunately for the next generation of repairmen, some of today's high-end appliances make service repairs the most cost-effective option. The Department of Labor concurred. "Over the next decade, as more consumers purchase higher-priced appliances designed to have much longer lives, they will be more likely to use repair services than to purchase new appliances," said the 2007 Occupational Outlook Handbook. Modern, energy-efficient refrigerators can cost as much as $5,000 to $10,000, and with such a hefty price tag, throwing one away is not an option. In some cases, repairmen can help consumers reduce the amount of aggravation that a broken appliance will cause. Consider the time and effort it takes to shop for a new appliance, wait for its delivery, remove the old one and get the new one installed. In addition, certain appliances such as ovens and washing machines can be a bigger hassle to replace because they are connected to gas and water lines. "It takes your time, it takes your effort, and if you don't install the new appliance, you'll have to hire a service technician to install it anyways," Mr. Brown said. Some consumers bond with their appliances like old pets, and for loyalty or sentimental reasons, refuse to let them go. Mr. Rana said some of his clients have appliances that are more than 30 years old. It makes sense, he said. "A lot of old refrigerators are worth fixing because they give people good service. They just don't make things like they used to." |
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
Too_Many_Tools wrote:
In my opinon...no. I intentionally try to have older appliances, vehicles, machines to lower repair costs and keep overall ownership cost to a minimum. Your thoughts? TMT Irreparable damageBy Bryce Baschuk THE WASHINGTON TIMES January 9, 2007 Bill Jones, after 42 years, is finally closing the Procter Appliance Service shop in Silver Spring. "You can't make a good salary to survive on the way you could years ago," said the 61-year-old owner of the oven, refrigerator and washer-dryer repair shop. "Everything has changed in the appliance business." This raises an apparent contradiction. Most people believe that appliances were built much better in the past than they are now and yet in the past a whole industry survived on doing appliance repairs. Perhaps they only seemed to be built better in the past because we kept them longer and the only reason we kept them longer is because we repaired them instead of replacing them. The flipside of that same coin is that perhaps today's appliances only seem to be inferior because we replace them more often and the only reason we replace them more often is because we don't repair them. |
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
On 14 Jan 2007 09:30:59 -0800, "Too_Many_Tools"
wrote: snip I intentionally try to have older appliances, vehicles, machines to lower repair costs and keep overall ownership cost to a minimum. Your thoughts? snip While I like this approach, it is getting harder all the time. Maintainability and lowest initial cost are not generally compatible design objectives for products with significant volume. Products are increasingly non-reparable in that the components are permanently attached/sealed, and replacement items, other than the most basic standard hardware such as screws, are not readily available. Most people are unwilling or unable to have an appliance such as a stove or refrigerator down for repair for an extended period waiting on parts. The increasing complexity of many new products also presents problems, particularly those with "computer" control. Unka' George [George McDuffee] ................................ On Theory: Delight at having understood a very abstract and obscure system leads most people to believe in the truth of what it demonstrates. G. C. Lichtenberg (1742-99), German physicist, philosopher. Aphorisms "Notebook J," aph. 77 (written 1765-99; tr. by R. J. Hollingdale, 1990). |
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
In article ,
"Rick Brandt" wrote: This raises an apparent contradiction. Perhaps you've not been adequately involved with your appliances to see that there is not a contradiction, even "apparently". The old ones were, for the most part, designed to be repairable. "This part always breaks eventually, we'll isolate it and make it easy to replace". The new ones are, for the most part, designed NOT to be repairable, and/or parts prices/availability are manipulated to render them effectively non-economic to repair. "This part will (by design) break about 1 year after the warranty runs out - let's put in in a monolithic module containing all the most expensive parts of the machine." The appliance industry would much rather sell you a new one than have you fix the old one, and they have taken steps to ensure that only the maddest of mad hatters will stubbornly stick to repair; and when they do, the industry will still profit mightily due to inflated pricing. But not making the parts at all will knock even the mad hatters into line soon enough, so long as they keep all the parts adequately non-standard that it's not economic for anyone to second-source them. The same logic is driving the production of hybrid cars that are less fuel efficient than some non-hybrid cars. When the battery pack dies in 8-10 years, the car will be junk (non-economic to repair), clearing the way for more new car sales. -- Cats, coffee, chocolate...vices to live by |
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
Rick Brandt wrote:
Too_Many_Tools wrote: In my opinon...no. I intentionally try to have older appliances, vehicles, machines to lower repair costs and keep overall ownership cost to a minimum. Your thoughts? TMT Irreparable damageBy Bryce Baschuk THE WASHINGTON TIMES January 9, 2007 Bill Jones, after 42 years, is finally closing the Procter Appliance Service shop in Silver Spring. "You can't make a good salary to survive on the way you could years ago," said the 61-year-old owner of the oven, refrigerator and washer-dryer repair shop. "Everything has changed in the appliance business." This raises an apparent contradiction. Most people believe that appliances were built much better in the past than they are now and yet in the past a whole industry survived on doing appliance repairs. Perhaps they only seemed to be built better in the past because we kept them longer and the only reason we kept them longer is because we repaired them instead of replacing them. The flipside of that same coin is that perhaps today's appliances only seem to be inferior because we replace them more often and the only reason we replace them more often is because we don't repair them. Yes. |
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
nonrepairable is not the same as planned obsolescense. A new product may be
impossible to repair because it uses custom electronics and special assembly techniques but that doesn't mean it's planned to quit working in 3 years. If you buy a new good quality stove, you could expect decades of service from it - I am still using a stove dated 1947, I'm sure others have older ones, but the only improvements in stoves since the introduction of natural gas are the electric igniters (reduces gas usage and heat load in teh summer) and improved insulation. I am still using an Amana microwave bought in 1972 - again, newer products have no advantages (and personally I prefer an analog timer). But, I buy a new computer occasionally as technology changes, and I just replaced a perfectly good 17" high end monitor with a flat panel LCD monitor because it's larger and uses less desk space - that's an upgrade, not really obsolescense (by the way, anyone need a really nice monitor?). Planned obsolescense might be something designed to actually wear out and be dead in an amount of time - like the printer ink cartriges that, even if full, cannot be used more than XXX days after you open them. my two cents bill (www.wbnoble.com) "Too_Many_Tools" wrote in message ups.com... In my opinon...no. I intentionally try to have older appliances, vehicles, machines to lower repair costs and keep overall ownership cost to a minimum. Your thoughts? snip________________ -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
Ecnerwal wrote:
In article , "Rick Brandt" wrote: This raises an apparent contradiction. Perhaps you've not been adequately involved with your appliances to see that there is not a contradiction, even "apparently". The old ones were, for the most part, designed to be repairable. "This part always breaks eventually, we'll isolate it and make it easy to replace". The new ones are, for the most part, designed NOT to be repairable, and/or parts prices/availability are manipulated to render them effectively non-economic to repair. [snip] What you say speaks to the issue of why did we repair in the past and why don't we repair now, but it says nothing about the comparable reliability. If appliances in the past were "built to be repaired" that can be interpretted to mean that failures were expected. If failures were expected and people could make a living performing those repairs then that suggests that the appliances were not that reliable. |
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
"Rick Brandt" ) writes:
This raises an apparent contradiction. Most people believe that appliances were built much better in the past than they are now and yet in the past a whole industry survived on doing appliance repairs. Perhaps they only seemed to be built better in the past because we kept them longer and the only reason we kept them longer is because we repaired them instead of replacing them. The flipside of that same coin is that perhaps today's appliances only seem to be inferior because we replace them more often and the only reason we replace them more often is because we don't repair them. But what you had was a relative handful of items, that people took great care in deciding about before purchasing, and cost quite a bit, and of course when they needed repair the parts were generally generic, because the items were generic. No, the whole household is loaded with things. INstead of buying a few things that you expected to last pretty much forever, and you'd want to get the most out of, you buy something cheap because it might be nice to have that sandwich maker or that $15 rotary tool. The things have become cheap in part because demand has lowered costs (design costs and profit can be spread over far more units), but also by cutting out the expensive stuff. So a tv set forty years ago was handwired (I have no clue whether that was a good or bad thing, but it was costly) on a heavy metal chassis, and was a significant purchase for most households. But when something broke, the cost of repair was low compare to the cost of replacement, to that tv set would be taken to the local repair shop. But, pretty much all the parts in that tv set were generic, so that repair shop did not have to be in some relationship with the manufacturer, and the parts could be had at the local electronics store (and since those stores were selling to all kinds of people, the same general parts to repair that tv set were also used by they hobbyist and even the professional, the stores could survive with a relatively small stock that was bought by many), so the repair shop often didn't need to keep a lot of stock, especially not a lot of specialized stock. But in order to increase the market, manufacturers had to lower prices so those who couldn't afford before could now. So they shifted to printed circuit boards, and when ICs came along they started using them, which allowed for higher integration (ie fewer overall parts). The smaller parts meant no heavy chassis, which would have gone anyway because that cost money, not just to buy the metal but you had to ship it to the store near the consumer. The price goes down. But the cost of repair stays the same, or goes up, because tracking down the problem is labor intensive. Manufacturers often switch to replacing boards, which keeps labor costs down but means you aren't paying for a fifty cent part but the whole board. So if you paid a thousand dollars for that color tv set in 1966 (just a figure I pulled out of the air), the repair cost was a small percentage of the cost of buying a new one. Plus, it was easier to pay out a little here and a little there than to come up with another thousand to buy a new tv set. But if you paid a hundred dollars for that tv set today, you'd be paying a good percentage of that cost in having a repairman try to find the problem. That tips things in favor of buying new. Plus, in order to get that tv set price so low, the parts aren't generic, and the repairman has to deal with the manufacturer to get the replacement parts. That ends up being problematic, or requires some sort of contract with the manufactuer (and added cost). The tv sets are no longer as generic as they were forty years ago, so the repairman finds it harder to figure out what is wrong, often requiring service material from the manufacturer, again an extra cost. The cheaper something is to manufacture, the less sturdy it will be mechanically, since that is one way to cut cost. Hence things are less likely to last as long, even if people were willing to spend the money to repair them rather than buy new. And I want to add something about "planned obsolescence" because it is often misused. If people are choosing to buy cheap, it's hardly that the manufacturers are making things so they will break. The consumer often wants that cheaper tv set or VCR. And there is the issue of just plain obsolescence. Forty years ago, there'd hardly be any electronic items around the house. A tv set or two, some radios, maybe a stereo. But look around now, and everything is electronic. It's either been invented in the past forty years (not even that long in many cases), or at the very least could not have been a consumer item until recently. Once you have consumers buying the latest thing, things are bound to go obsolete. Buy early, and things still have to develop, which means the things really may become obsolete in a few years. It's not the manufacturer doing this to "screw the consumer", it's a combination of new developments and consumer demand. If my computer from 1979 had been intended to last forever, it would have been way out of range in terms of price. Because they'd have to anticipate how much things would change, and build in enough so upgrading would be doable. So you'd spend money on potential, rather than spending money later on a new computer that would beat out what they could imagine in 1979. And in recent years, it is the consumer who is deciding to buy a new computer every few years (whether a deliberate decision or they simply let the manufacturer lead, must vary from person to person.) Michael |
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
Ecnerwal wrote: In part .................. The new ones are, for the most part, designed NOT to be repairable, and/or parts prices/availability are manipulated to render them effectively non-economic to repair. "This part will (by design) break about 1 year after the warranty runs out - let's put in in a monolithic module containing all the most expensive parts of the machine." .. Maybe that's stating it rather strongly? Although recent discussion/discovery that IPods will exhaust their batteries in approximately one to two years do clearly raise the question? "Designed to fail?". But it's the same reason that I continue to accept and use old appliances that I can repair myself. For example I refuse to buy a stove that incorporates a digital timer/clock; they are virtually unrepairable! Eventually can see myself, however, ending up with one of those and deliberately disconnecting the digital timer clock or modifying the stove to use one my older (saved) clock/timers or just dong away with the timer altogether. |
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
Things are built differently now for reasons other than
cost. At one time you changed a thermostat in your car twice a year (if you lived in the midwestern U.S.) and had the carbon cleaned out at 50,000 miles. You got a tune-up and spark plugs every 15,000 miles. The spark plugs on new vehicles are rated for $ 50,000 and up. A computer takes care of the tune-up for you, and the regular maintenance involves basically adding or changing fluids. On your old clothes dryer you were supposed to oil the drum bearings and motor every so often. That's no longer considered necessary. Amazingly, these "cheaply built" appliances and vehicles are awfully reliable considering how little maintenance and attention they get. Most refrigerators actually still cool when they're scrapped. It's the inside door trim, or door gasket, or a clogged vent that causes people to throw them away. Too_Many_Tools wrote: In my opinon...no. I intentionally try to have older appliances, vehicles, machines to lower repair costs and keep overall ownership cost to a minimum. Your thoughts? |
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
being in the service industry myself fixing office equiptement, much
isnt designed to be easily repaired. ever wonder why nearly every copier has white covers? so the look shabby in a couple years to encourage you to buy a new one..... some manufactuers intentially make their products expensive and hard to repair........ turned service parts into a profit department since theres low margins on new machine sales |
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
terry wrote:
Maybe that's stating it rather strongly? Although recent discussion/discovery that IPods will exhaust their batteries in approximately one to two years do clearly raise the question? "Designed to fail?". But it's the same reason that I continue to accept and use old appliances that I can repair myself. For example I refuse to buy a stove that incorporates a digital timer/clock; they are virtually unrepairable! Eventually can see myself, however, ending up with one of those and deliberately disconnecting the digital timer clock or modifying the stove to use one my older (saved) clock/timers or just dong away with the timer altogether. I think another big factor is the ratio of cost on parts versus labor. In the "old days" you might have a repair that was 70% parts and 30% labor cost-wise. Nowdays those percentages would be reversed and that just irks people who just don't see the value of anyone's labor (other than their own of course). You see posts about this all the time. "Called a guy to come out and do foo and couldn't believe what he wanted to charge me!" Labor really induces a lot of sticker shock these days. |
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
Too_Many_Tools wrote:
In my opinon...no. I dont believe it happens in the sense that its actually possible to design something to fail early and still have a viable product. And there is plenty of stuff that clearly aint anything to do with planned obsolescence at all. Most obviously with stuff as basic as bread knives which are all metal. Those wont even need to be replaced when the handle gives out. And heaps of kitchen stuff is now stainless steel, which will last forever compared with the older tinplate crap. I intentionally try to have older appliances, vehicles, machines to lower repair costs and keep overall ownership cost to a minimum. Your thoughts? Works fine with some things, but can bite. I just replaced the switch in the vaccuum cleaner which is about 40 years old. Cost peanuts and was very easy to find a new one. The big 9¼" hand held circular saw that I built the house with 35 years ago has just seen the power switch fail and that is no longer available from the manufacturer. Fortunately its failed on so the saw is still usable tho more dangerous. It uses blades with a 1?" hole. The current blades have 1" holes with washers which allow smaller shafts but no easy way to use them on my old saw. There doesnt appear to be any readily available source of different collets for that. Just had the chain adjuster failed on a dirt cheap relatively new electric chainsaw. I assumed that they wouldnt bother to supply parts like that, but I was wrong, readily available and in fact free. Clearly no planned obsolescence there. And power tools are now so cheap that they are very viable to buy even for just one job. I had to cut a copper pipe thats buried in the ground and it costs peanuts to buy a very decent jigsaw to cut it, just to avoid having to dig a bigger hole around where I needed to cut it. Its been fine for other stuff since, no evidence that its going to die any time soon. Could well get 40 years out of that too like I did with most of the power tools that I used to build the house. Cars in spades. I've just replaced my 35 year old car that I was too stupid to fix the windscreen leak with which eventually produced rust holes in the floor which wont pass our registration check. While its possible to plate the holes, I cant be bothered, I intended to drive that car into the ground and decided that that had happened. No evidence that the replacement new car wont last as long. Its certainly got more plastic, most obviously with the bumper bars that the new one doesnt have, but that mostly due to modern crumple zones, not due to planned obsolescence and might save my life etc. People were raving on about planned obsolescence when I built the house and I've had very little that has ever needed replacement apart from basic stuff like light bulbs and the occassional failure of stuff like elements in the oven etc. More below. Irreparable damage By Bryce Baschuk THE WASHINGTON TIMES January 9, 2007 Bill Jones, after 42 years, is finally closing the Procter Appliance Service shop in Silver Spring. That isnt planned obsolescence, thats the fact that its a lot cheaper to pay a very low wage asian to make you a new one than it ever is to pay a first world monkey to repair your existing one with all but quite trivial faults. "You can't make a good salary to survive on the way you could years ago," said the 61-year-old owner of the oven, refrigerator and washer-dryer repair shop. "Everything has changed in the appliance business." It has indeed, but not because of planned obsolescence. Mr. Jones recently sold his home in Laurel and is in the process of moving to Bluffton, S.C., with his wife, Jeannette. Sob sob. Mr. Jones is one of the many Washington-area repairmen who have struggled to stay afloat as residents replace, not repair, old appliances. Because its generally better value to replace. "It's a dying trade," said Scott Brown, Webmaster of www.fixitnow.com and self-proclaimed "Samurai Appliance Repairman." Wota ****ing ******. Bet he doesnt disembowel himself when he ****s up. The reason for this is twofold, Mr. Brown said: The cost of appliances is coming down because of cheap overseas labor and improved manufacturing techniques, So much for your silly line about planned obsolescence. and repairmen are literally dying off. They arent in other industrys that are still viable, most obviously with cars and trucks and houses. The average age of appliance technicians is 42, and there are few young repairmen to take their place, said Mr. Brown, 47. He has been repairing appliances in New Hampshire for the past 13 years. He should have had a clue 13 years ago. The writing was on the wall long before that. In the next seven years, the number of veteran appliance repairmen will decrease nationwide as current workers retire or transfer to other occupations, the Department of Labor said in its 2007 Occupational Outlook Handbook. Must be rocket scientist shinybums. The federal agency said many prospective repairmen prefer work that is less strenuous and want more comfortable working conditions. They actually prefer a decent income. That claimed 'prefer work that is less strenuous and want more comfortable working conditions' clearly hasnt affect car, truck or house repair and the construction industry etc. Tho there will always be some of that with a 5% unemployment rate. Local repairmen said it is simply a question of economics. "Nowadays appliances are cheap, so people are just getting new ones," Yep, only a fool wouldnt if the new one costs about the same as the cost of repairing the old one. said Paul Singh, a manager at the Appliance Service Depot, a repair shop in Northwest. "As a result, business has slowed down a lot." "The average repair cost for a household appliance is $50 to $350," said Shahid Rana, a service technician at Rana Refrigeration, a repair shop in Capitol Heights. "If the repair is going to cost more than that, we usually tell the customer to go out and buy a new one." Must be rocket scientist apes. It's not uncommon for today's repairmen to condemn an appliance instead of fixing it for the sake of their customers' wallets. If they decide to repair an appliance that is likely to break down again, repairmen are criticized by their customers and often lose business because of a damaged reputation. Mr. Jones said he based his repair decisions on the 50 percent rule: "If the cost of service costs more than 50 percent of the price of a new machine, I'll tell my customers to get a new one." What makes a lot more sense is to factor in the failure rate of that appliance. "A lot of customers want me to be honest with them, so I'll tell them my opinion and leave the decision making up to them," he said. In recent years, consumers have tended to buy new appliances when existing warranties expire rather than repair old appliances, the Department of Labor said. Hardly surprising given that they are now so cheap. Mr. Brown acknowledged this trend. "Lower-end appliances which you can buy for $200 to $300 are basically throwaway appliances," he said. "They are so inexpensive that you shouldn't pay to get them repaired." "The quality of the materials that are being made aren't lasting," Pig ignorant silly stuff. Mr. Jones said. "Nowadays you're seeing more plastic I had some reservations about my 35 year old dishwasher that does have a plastic liner. Its lasted fine. and more circuit boards, and they aren't holding up." Bull****. Many home appliances sold in the United States are made in Taiwan, Singapore, China and Mexico. And now china. "Nothing is made [in the United States] anymore," Mr. Jones said. "But then again, American parts are only better to a point, a lot of U.S. companies are all about the dollar." Fortunately for the next generation of repairmen, some of today's high-end appliances make service repairs the most cost-effective option. The Department of Labor concurred. "Over the next decade, as more consumers purchase higher-priced appliances designed to have much longer lives, they will be more likely to use repair services than to purchase new appliances," said the 2007 Occupational Outlook Handbook. Bet that will have **** all effect on the employment prospects. Modern, energy-efficient refrigerators can cost as much as $5,000 to $10,000, Pig ignorant drivel. You can buy plenty of modern energy efficient fridges for a hell of a lot less than that. I've done just that a month ago. and with such a hefty price tag, throwing one away is not an option. Bet the fools stupid enough to buy those will anyway. In some cases, repairmen can help consumers reduce the amount of aggravation that a broken appliance will cause. Consider the time and effort it takes to shop for a new appliance, wait for its delivery, remove the old one and get the new one installed. I did mine in 30 mins total, literally. In addition, certain appliances such as ovens and washing machines can be a bigger hassle to replace because they are connected to gas and water lines. Just changed washing machines over too, with a free one I inherited. Changing the water over took minutes too. "It takes your time, it takes your effort, and if you don't install the new appliance, you'll have to hire a service technician to install it anyways," Mr. Brown said. Only the incompetant fools that cant change the washing machine over. Some consumers bond with their appliances like old pets, and for loyalty or sentimental reasons, refuse to let them go. Mr. Rana said some of his clients have appliances that are more than 30 years old. It makes sense, he said. "A lot of old refrigerators are worth fixing because they give people good service. Wrong, those are normally lousy energy efficiency. They just don't make things like they used to." Yeah, they make them much better today energy efficiency wise. And much better design wise too with the shelves and bins etc too. |
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
M Berger wrote:
Things are built differently now for reasons other than cost. At one time you changed a thermostat in your car twice a year (if you lived in the midwestern U.S.) and had the carbon cleaned out at 50,000 miles. You got a tune-up and spark plugs every 15,000 miles. The spark plugs on new vehicles are rated for $ 50,000 and up. A computer takes care of the tune-up for you, and the regular maintenance involves basically adding or changing fluids. On your old clothes dryer you were supposed to oil the drum bearings and motor every so often. That's no longer considered necessary. Amazingly, these "cheaply built" appliances and vehicles are awfully reliable considering how little maintenance and attention they get. Most refrigerators actually still cool when they're scrapped. It's the inside door trim, or door gasket, or a clogged vent that causes people to throw them away. The planned obselescence theory has one huge flaw. If I intentionally design my product so you will have to replace it rather than repair it and (even more deviously) intentionally design it so it will not have a long life (just past the warranty period) I have no reason to believe that the replacement you purchase will be my product. In fact it is way more likely that you will purchase the other guy's product next time. A far more plausible theory is that building the most reliable "whatevers" at the lowest cost just happens to result in manufacturing methods that produce goods that are not as repairable as they were in the past. No need to introduce any big conspiracies. |
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
Rod Speed wrote: Too_Many_Tools wrote: In my opinon...no. I dont believe it happens in the sense that its actually possible to design something to fail early and still have a viable product. And there is plenty of stuff that clearly aint anything to do with planned obsolescence at all. Most obviously with stuff as basic as bread knives which are all metal. Those wont even need to be replaced when the handle gives out. And heaps of kitchen stuff is now stainless steel, which will last forever compared with the older tinplate crap. I intentionally try to have older appliances, vehicles, machines to lower repair costs and keep overall ownership cost to a minimum. Your thoughts? Works fine with some things, but can bite. I just replaced the switch in the vaccuum cleaner which is about 40 years old. Cost peanuts and was very easy to find a new one. The big 9¼" hand held circular saw that I built the house with 35 years ago has just seen the power switch fail and that is no longer available from the manufacturer. Fortunately its failed on so the saw is still usable tho more dangerous. It uses blades with a 1?" hole. The current blades have 1" holes with washers which allow smaller shafts but no easy way to use them on my old saw. There doesnt appear to be any readily available source of different collets for that. Just had the chain adjuster failed on a dirt cheap relatively new electric chainsaw. I assumed that they wouldnt bother to supply parts like that, but I was wrong, readily available and in fact free. Clearly no planned obsolescence there. And power tools are now so cheap that they are very viable to buy even for just one job. I had to cut a copper pipe thats buried in the ground and it costs peanuts to buy a very decent jigsaw to cut it, just to avoid having to dig a bigger hole around where I needed to cut it. Its been fine for other stuff since, no evidence that its going to die any time soon. Could well get 40 years out of that too like I did with most of the power tools that I used to build the house. Cars in spades. I've just replaced my 35 year old car that I was too stupid to fix the windscreen leak with which eventually produced rust holes in the floor which wont pass our registration check. While its possible to plate the holes, I cant be bothered, I intended to drive that car into the ground and decided that that had happened. No evidence that the replacement new car wont last as long. Its certainly got more plastic, most obviously with the bumper bars that the new one doesnt have, but that mostly due to modern crumple zones, not due to planned obsolescence and might save my life etc. People were raving on about planned obsolescence when I built the house and I've had very little that has ever needed replacement apart from basic stuff like light bulbs and the occassional failure of stuff like elements in the oven etc. More below. Irreparable damage By Bryce Baschuk THE WASHINGTON TIMES January 9, 2007 Bill Jones, after 42 years, is finally closing the Procter Appliance Service shop in Silver Spring. That isnt planned obsolescence, thats the fact that its a lot cheaper to pay a very low wage asian to make you a new one than it ever is to pay a first world monkey to repair your existing one with all but quite trivial faults. "You can't make a good salary to survive on the way you could years ago," said the 61-year-old owner of the oven, refrigerator and washer-dryer repair shop. "Everything has changed in the appliance business." It has indeed, but not because of planned obsolescence. Mr. Jones recently sold his home in Laurel and is in the process of moving to Bluffton, S.C., with his wife, Jeannette. Sob sob. Mr. Jones is one of the many Washington-area repairmen who have struggled to stay afloat as residents replace, not repair, old appliances. Because its generally better value to replace. "It's a dying trade," said Scott Brown, Webmaster of www.fixitnow.com and self-proclaimed "Samurai Appliance Repairman." Wota ****ing ******. Bet he doesnt disembowel himself when he ****s up. The reason for this is twofold, Mr. Brown said: The cost of appliances is coming down because of cheap overseas labor and improved manufacturing techniques, So much for your silly line about planned obsolescence. and repairmen are literally dying off. They arent in other industrys that are still viable, most obviously with cars and trucks and houses. The average age of appliance technicians is 42, and there are few young repairmen to take their place, said Mr. Brown, 47. He has been repairing appliances in New Hampshire for the past 13 years. He should have had a clue 13 years ago. The writing was on the wall long before that. In the next seven years, the number of veteran appliance repairmen will decrease nationwide as current workers retire or transfer to other occupations, the Department of Labor said in its 2007 Occupational Outlook Handbook. Must be rocket scientist shinybums. The federal agency said many prospective repairmen prefer work that is less strenuous and want more comfortable working conditions. They actually prefer a decent income. That claimed 'prefer work that is less strenuous and want more comfortable working conditions' clearly hasnt affect car, truck or house repair and the construction industry etc. Tho there will always be some of that with a 5% unemployment rate. Local repairmen said it is simply a question of economics. "Nowadays appliances are cheap, so people are just getting new ones," Yep, only a fool wouldnt if the new one costs about the same as the cost of repairing the old one. said Paul Singh, a manager at the Appliance Service Depot, a repair shop in Northwest. "As a result, business has slowed down a lot." "The average repair cost for a household appliance is $50 to $350," said Shahid Rana, a service technician at Rana Refrigeration, a repair shop in Capitol Heights. "If the repair is going to cost more than that, we usually tell the customer to go out and buy a new one." Must be rocket scientist apes. It's not uncommon for today's repairmen to condemn an appliance instead of fixing it for the sake of their customers' wallets. If they decide to repair an appliance that is likely to break down again, repairmen are criticized by their customers and often lose business because of a damaged reputation. Mr. Jones said he based his repair decisions on the 50 percent rule: "If the cost of service costs more than 50 percent of the price of a new machine, I'll tell my customers to get a new one." What makes a lot more sense is to factor in the failure rate of that appliance. "A lot of customers want me to be honest with them, so I'll tell them my opinion and leave the decision making up to them," he said. In recent years, consumers have tended to buy new appliances when existing warranties expire rather than repair old appliances, the Department of Labor said. Hardly surprising given that they are now so cheap. Mr. Brown acknowledged this trend. "Lower-end appliances which you can buy for $200 to $300 are basically throwaway appliances," he said. "They are so inexpensive that you shouldn't pay to get them repaired." "The quality of the materials that are being made aren't lasting," Pig ignorant silly stuff. Mr. Jones said. "Nowadays you're seeing more plastic I had some reservations about my 35 year old dishwasher that does have a plastic liner. Its lasted fine. and more circuit boards, and they aren't holding up." Bull****. Many home appliances sold in the United States are made in Taiwan, Singapore, China and Mexico. And now china. "Nothing is made [in the United States] anymore," Mr. Jones said. "But then again, American parts are only better to a point, a lot of U.S. companies are all about the dollar." Fortunately for the next generation of repairmen, some of today's high-end appliances make service repairs the most cost-effective option. The Department of Labor concurred. "Over the next decade, as more consumers purchase higher-priced appliances designed to have much longer lives, they will be more likely to use repair services than to purchase new appliances," said the 2007 Occupational Outlook Handbook. Bet that will have **** all effect on the employment prospects. Modern, energy-efficient refrigerators can cost as much as $5,000 to $10,000, Pig ignorant drivel. You can buy plenty of modern energy efficient fridges for a hell of a lot less than that. I've done just that a month ago. and with such a hefty price tag, throwing one away is not an option. Bet the fools stupid enough to buy those will anyway. In some cases, repairmen can help consumers reduce the amount of aggravation that a broken appliance will cause. Consider the time and effort it takes to shop for a new appliance, wait for its delivery, remove the old one and get the new one installed. I did mine in 30 mins total, literally. In addition, certain appliances such as ovens and washing machines can be a bigger hassle to replace because they are connected to gas and water lines. Just changed washing machines over too, with a free one I inherited. Changing the water over took minutes too. "It takes your time, it takes your effort, and if you don't install the new appliance, you'll have to hire a service technician to install it anyways," Mr. Brown said. Only the incompetant fools that cant change the washing machine over. Some consumers bond with their appliances like old pets, and for loyalty or sentimental reasons, refuse to let them go. Mr. Rana said some of his clients have appliances that are more than 30 years old. It makes sense, he said. "A lot of old refrigerators are worth fixing because they give people good service. Wrong, those are normally lousy energy efficiency. They just don't make things like they used to." Yeah, they make them much better today energy efficiency wise. And much better design wise too with the shelves and bins etc too. did you know theres all qualitys of stainless, some will last literaLLY FOREVER not so for kitchen stainless, try a magnet on stainless the better quality is non magnetic |
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
Unfortunately, you have to plan for Planned Obsolescence several years
behind. For instance: my Kenmore washer/dryer set is 16 years old. Still going strong. No repairs. Lots of posts in S.E.R (and here) on current W/D models puking after 2 or so years. My JC Penney (Eureka) canister vac is 22 years old. Only thing replaced was power head belt a couple years ago. New vacs are garbage. I could go on and on.... JR Dweller in the cellar Too_Many_Tools wrote: In my opinon...no. I intentionally try to have older appliances, vehicles, machines to lower repair costs and keep overall ownership cost to a minimum. Your thoughts? TMT Irreparable damageBy Bryce Baschuk THE WASHINGTON TIMES January 9, 2007 Bill Jones, after 42 years, is finally closing the Procter Appliance Service shop in Silver Spring. "You can't make a good salary to survive on the way you could years ago," said the 61-year-old owner of the oven, refrigerator and washer-dryer repair shop. "Everything has changed in the appliance business." Mr. Jones recently sold his home in Laurel and is in the process of moving to Bluffton, S.C., with his wife, Jeannette. Mr. Jones is one of the many Washington-area repairmen who have struggled to stay afloat as residents replace, not repair, old appliances. "It's a dying trade," said Scott Brown, Webmaster of www.fixitnow.com and self-proclaimed "Samurai Appliance Repairman." The reason for this is twofold, Mr. Brown said: The cost of appliances is coming down because of cheap overseas labor and improved manufacturing techniques, and repairmen are literally dying off. The average age of appliance technicians is 42, and there are few young repairmen to take their place, said Mr. Brown, 47. He has been repairing appliances in New Hampshire for the past 13 years. In the next seven years, the number of veteran appliance repairmen will decrease nationwide as current workers retire or transfer to other occupations, the Department of Labor said in its 2007 Occupational Outlook Handbook. The federal agency said many prospective repairmen prefer work that is less strenuous and want more comfortable working conditions. Local repairmen said it is simply a question of economics. "Nowadays appliances are cheap, so people are just getting new ones," said Paul Singh, a manager at the Appliance Service Depot, a repair shop in Northwest. "As a result, business has slowed down a lot." "The average repair cost for a household appliance is $50 to $350," said Shahid Rana, a service technician at Rana Refrigeration, a repair shop in Capitol Heights. "If the repair is going to cost more than that, we usually tell the customer to go out and buy a new one." It's not uncommon for today's repairmen to condemn an appliance instead of fixing it for the sake of their customers' wallets. If they decide to repair an appliance that is likely to break down again, repairmen are criticized by their customers and often lose business because of a damaged reputation. Mr. Jones said he based his repair decisions on the 50 percent rule: "If the cost of service costs more than 50 percent of the price of a new machine, I'll tell my customers to get a new one." "A lot of customers want me to be honest with them, so I'll tell them my opinion and leave the decision making up to them," he said. In recent years, consumers have tended to buy new appliances when existing warranties expire rather than repair old appliances, the Department of Labor said. Mr. Brown acknowledged this trend. "Lower-end appliances which you can buy for $200 to $300 are basically throwaway appliances," he said. "They are so inexpensive that you shouldn't pay to get them repaired." "The quality of the materials that are being made aren't lasting," Mr. Jones said. "Nowadays you're seeing more plastic and more circuit boards, and they aren't holding up." Many home appliances sold in the United States are made in Taiwan, Singapore, China and Mexico. "Nothing is made [in the United States] anymore," Mr. Jones said. "But then again, American parts are only better to a point, a lot of U.S. companies are all about the dollar." Fortunately for the next generation of repairmen, some of today's high-end appliances make service repairs the most cost-effective option. The Department of Labor concurred. "Over the next decade, as more consumers purchase higher-priced appliances designed to have much longer lives, they will be more likely to use repair services than to purchase new appliances," said the 2007 Occupational Outlook Handbook. Modern, energy-efficient refrigerators can cost as much as $5,000 to $10,000, and with such a hefty price tag, throwing one away is not an option. In some cases, repairmen can help consumers reduce the amount of aggravation that a broken appliance will cause. Consider the time and effort it takes to shop for a new appliance, wait for its delivery, remove the old one and get the new one installed. In addition, certain appliances such as ovens and washing machines can be a bigger hassle to replace because they are connected to gas and water lines. "It takes your time, it takes your effort, and if you don't install the new appliance, you'll have to hire a service technician to install it anyways," Mr. Brown said. Some consumers bond with their appliances like old pets, and for loyalty or sentimental reasons, refuse to let them go. Mr. Rana said some of his clients have appliances that are more than 30 years old. It makes sense, he said. "A lot of old refrigerators are worth fixing because they give people good service. They just don't make things like they used to." -- -------------------------------------------------------------- Home Page: http://www.seanet.com/~jasonrnorth If you're not the lead dog, the view never changes Doubt yourself, and the real world will eat you alive The world doesn't revolve around you, it revolves around me No skeletons in the closet; just decomposing corpses -------------------------------------------------------------- Dependence is Vulnerability: -------------------------------------------------------------- "Open the Pod Bay Doors please, Hal" "I'm sorry, Dave, I'm afraid I can't do that.." |
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
In my opinon, it is a symptom of a larger problem....
Companies are setting up the situation that you are forced to buy new versus repair the used applicance, car, electronics, computers, cell phones....because they make a larger profit. The MBAs that are crafting the company policy are behind this. And the consumer is being left holding the bill...including paying for the cost of disposal. TMT Too_Many_Tools wrote: In my opinon...no. I intentionally try to have older appliances, vehicles, machines to lower repair costs and keep overall ownership cost to a minimum. Your thoughts? TMT Irreparable damageBy Bryce Baschuk THE WASHINGTON TIMES January 9, 2007 Bill Jones, after 42 years, is finally closing the Procter Appliance Service shop in Silver Spring. "You can't make a good salary to survive on the way you could years ago," said the 61-year-old owner of the oven, refrigerator and washer-dryer repair shop. "Everything has changed in the appliance business." Mr. Jones recently sold his home in Laurel and is in the process of moving to Bluffton, S.C., with his wife, Jeannette. Mr. Jones is one of the many Washington-area repairmen who have struggled to stay afloat as residents replace, not repair, old appliances. "It's a dying trade," said Scott Brown, Webmaster of www.fixitnow.com and self-proclaimed "Samurai Appliance Repairman." The reason for this is twofold, Mr. Brown said: The cost of appliances is coming down because of cheap overseas labor and improved manufacturing techniques, and repairmen are literally dying off. The average age of appliance technicians is 42, and there are few young repairmen to take their place, said Mr. Brown, 47. He has been repairing appliances in New Hampshire for the past 13 years. In the next seven years, the number of veteran appliance repairmen will decrease nationwide as current workers retire or transfer to other occupations, the Department of Labor said in its 2007 Occupational Outlook Handbook. The federal agency said many prospective repairmen prefer work that is less strenuous and want more comfortable working conditions. Local repairmen said it is simply a question of economics. "Nowadays appliances are cheap, so people are just getting new ones," said Paul Singh, a manager at the Appliance Service Depot, a repair shop in Northwest. "As a result, business has slowed down a lot." "The average repair cost for a household appliance is $50 to $350," said Shahid Rana, a service technician at Rana Refrigeration, a repair shop in Capitol Heights. "If the repair is going to cost more than that, we usually tell the customer to go out and buy a new one." It's not uncommon for today's repairmen to condemn an appliance instead of fixing it for the sake of their customers' wallets. If they decide to repair an appliance that is likely to break down again, repairmen are criticized by their customers and often lose business because of a damaged reputation. Mr. Jones said he based his repair decisions on the 50 percent rule: "If the cost of service costs more than 50 percent of the price of a new machine, I'll tell my customers to get a new one." "A lot of customers want me to be honest with them, so I'll tell them my opinion and leave the decision making up to them," he said. In recent years, consumers have tended to buy new appliances when existing warranties expire rather than repair old appliances, the Department of Labor said. Mr. Brown acknowledged this trend. "Lower-end appliances which you can buy for $200 to $300 are basically throwaway appliances," he said. "They are so inexpensive that you shouldn't pay to get them repaired." "The quality of the materials that are being made aren't lasting," Mr. Jones said. "Nowadays you're seeing more plastic and more circuit boards, and they aren't holding up." Many home appliances sold in the United States are made in Taiwan, Singapore, China and Mexico. "Nothing is made [in the United States] anymore," Mr. Jones said. "But then again, American parts are only better to a point, a lot of U.S. companies are all about the dollar." Fortunately for the next generation of repairmen, some of today's high-end appliances make service repairs the most cost-effective option. The Department of Labor concurred. "Over the next decade, as more consumers purchase higher-priced appliances designed to have much longer lives, they will be more likely to use repair services than to purchase new appliances," said the 2007 Occupational Outlook Handbook. Modern, energy-efficient refrigerators can cost as much as $5,000 to $10,000, and with such a hefty price tag, throwing one away is not an option. In some cases, repairmen can help consumers reduce the amount of aggravation that a broken appliance will cause. Consider the time and effort it takes to shop for a new appliance, wait for its delivery, remove the old one and get the new one installed. In addition, certain appliances such as ovens and washing machines can be a bigger hassle to replace because they are connected to gas and water lines. "It takes your time, it takes your effort, and if you don't install the new appliance, you'll have to hire a service technician to install it anyways," Mr. Brown said. Some consumers bond with their appliances like old pets, and for loyalty or sentimental reasons, refuse to let them go. Mr. Rana said some of his clients have appliances that are more than 30 years old. It makes sense, he said. "A lot of old refrigerators are worth fixing because they give people good service. They just don't make things like they used to." |
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
Too_Many_Tools wrote:
In my opinon, it is a symptom of a larger problem.... Companies are setting up the situation that you are forced to buy new versus repair the used applicance, car, electronics, computers, cell phones....because they make a larger profit. Only if the same company sells me the replacement. For the theory to work entire industries would need to collude on this. I don't buy it. The MBAs that are crafting the company policy are behind this. Nah, cooking the books maybe, but not making design decisions. And the consumer is being left holding the bill...including paying for the cost of disposal. Actually newer laws are holding manufacturers accountable for any "special" disposal costs required of their products. That could put a whole new spin on this topic. |
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
Ecnerwal wrote
Rick Brandt wrote This raises an apparent contradiction. Perhaps you've not been adequately involved with your appliances to see that there is not a contradiction, even "apparently". Or perhaps you havent. The old ones were, for the most part, designed to be repairable. Yes. And so are the current ones too with the exception of plug packs etc. "This part always breaks eventually, we'll isolate it and make it easy to replace". That is just plain silly with domestic appliances. There is bugger all except light bulbs that cant be designed to last indefinitely. And even that has changed just recently too. The new ones are, for the most part, designed NOT to be repairable, Oh bull****. and/or parts prices/availability are manipulated to render them effectively non-economic to repair. More bull****. I've done just that fine with a modern electric chainsaw. "This part will (by design) break about 1 year after the warranty runs out - Not even possible. let's put in in a monolithic module containing all the most expensive parts of the machine." That in spades. The appliance industry would much rather sell you a new one than have you fix the old one, Sure, but what they would rather and what is possible design wise are two entirely different animals. and they have taken steps to ensure that only the maddest of mad hatters will stubbornly stick to repair; Utterly mindless conspiracy theory. and when they do, the industry will still profit mightily due to inflated pricing. Completely off with the fairys now. But not making the parts at all will knock even the mad hatters into line soon enough, so long as they keep all the parts adequately non-standard that it's not economic for anyone to second-source them. Thats always been the case with domestic appliances. The same logic is driving the production of hybrid cars that are less fuel efficient than some non-hybrid cars. Nope, that isnt due to any conspiracy, thats just the usual design stupidity. When the battery pack dies in 8-10 years, the car will be junk (non-economic to repair), Another fantasy. clearing the way for more new car sales. That happens even when the cars are economic to repair. Just because new cars are cheap enough to allow that. Domestic appliances in spades. |
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
terry wrote
Ecnerwal wrote: The new ones are, for the most part, designed NOT to be repairable, and/or parts prices/availability are manipulated to render them effectively non-economic to repair. "This part will (by design) break about 1 year after the warranty runs out - let's put in in a monolithic module containing all the most expensive parts of the machine." Maybe that's stating it rather strongly? Although recent discussion/discovery that IPods will exhaust their batteries in approximately one to two years do clearly raise the question? "Designed to fail?". Doesnt explain stuff like cordless phones that use standard batterys. But it's the same reason that I continue to accept and use old appliances that I can repair myself. That can mean that you have to do without some of the most elegantly usable appliances tho. For example I refuse to buy a stove that incorporates a digital timer/clock; they are virtually unrepairable! Mindlessly silly. My microwave is still going fine 30 years later. Eventually can see myself, however, ending up with one of those and deliberately disconnecting the digital timer clock or modifying the stove to use one my older (saved) clock/timers or just dong away with the timer altogether. Or get a clue and only bother with that if it actually does fail. And get the benefit of a decent modern design when it doesnt. I've never actually had a single digital clock in any system ever fail and I've got heaps of them, plenty 30+ years old. |
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
Rick Brandt wrote:
terry wrote: Maybe that's stating it rather strongly? Although recent discussion/discovery that IPods will exhaust their batteries in approximately one to two years do clearly raise the question? "Designed to fail?". But it's the same reason that I continue to accept and use old appliances that I can repair myself. For example I refuse to buy a stove that incorporates a digital timer/clock; they are virtually unrepairable! Eventually can see myself, however, ending up with one of those and deliberately disconnecting the digital timer clock or modifying the stove to use one my older (saved) clock/timers or just dong away with the timer altogether. I think another big factor is the ratio of cost on parts versus labor. In the "old days" you might have a repair that was 70% parts and 30% labor cost-wise. Nowdays those percentages would be reversed and that just irks people who just don't see the value of anyone's labor (other than their own of course). You see posts about this all the time. "Called a guy to come out and do foo and couldn't believe what he wanted to charge me!" Labor really induces a lot of sticker shock these days. Yep, and thats inevitable when first world wages are involved with repair and the alternative is some microwage monkey in an asian factory minimally involved in stamping out a new one hours wise. Even just the travel time for the repair is vastly more than any asian ever puts into making you a new one. |
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
Rick Brandt wrote:
Ecnerwal wrote: In article , "Rick Brandt" wrote: This raises an apparent contradiction. Perhaps you've not been adequately involved with your appliances to see that there is not a contradiction, even "apparently". The old ones were, for the most part, designed to be repairable. "This part always breaks eventually, we'll isolate it and make it easy to replace". The new ones are, for the most part, designed NOT to be repairable, and/or parts prices/availability are manipulated to render them effectively non-economic to repair. [snip] What you say speaks to the issue of why did we repair in the past and why don't we repair now, but it says nothing about the comparable reliability. If appliances in the past were "built to be repaired" that can be interpretted to mean that failures were expected. If failures were expected and people could make a living performing those repairs then that suggests that the appliances were not that reliable. Yes, my mother used her first clothes dryer for over 30 years. We replaced the belt three times. A new dryer might last five years, total. The washer lasted 18 years before the hard water ruined it, and it had a timer replaced when it was 12 years Old. You think that the new designs are an improvement? :( -- Service to my country? Been there, Done that, and I've got my DD214 to prove it. Member of DAV #85. Michael A. Terrell Central Florida |
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
Michael Black wrote
Rick Brandt ) wrote This raises an apparent contradiction. Most people believe that appliances were built much better in the past than they are now and yet in the past a whole industry survived on doing appliance repairs. Perhaps they only seemed to be built better in the past because we kept them longer and the only reason we kept them longer is because we repaired them instead of replacing them. The flipside of that same coin is that perhaps today's appliances only seem to be inferior because we replace them more often and the only reason we replace them more often is because we don't repair them. But what you had was a relative handful of items, that people took great care in deciding about before purchasing, Most didnt. and cost quite a bit, Readily affordable. and of course when they needed repair the parts were generally generic, You clearly aint ever been involved in the repair industry. because the items were generic. No they werent. No, the whole household is loaded with things. INstead of buying a few things that you expected to last pretty much forever, and you'd want to get the most out of, you buy something cheap because it might be nice to have that sandwich maker or that $15 rotary tool. The things have become cheap in part because demand has lowered costs (design costs and profit can be spread over far more units), Nope, because they are churned out in low labor cost countrys. but also by cutting out the expensive stuff. Nope, in fact they have more expensive stuff than they used to, most obviously with digital timers and clocks etc that are almost universal now. So a tv set forty years ago was handwired No it wasnt, that had stopped well before that. (I have no clue whether that was a good or bad thing, The use of tubes was the bad thing with those designs. but it was costly) on a heavy metal chassis, and was a significant purchase for most households. But when something broke, the cost of repair was low compare to the cost of replacement, to that tv set would be taken to the local repair shop. Yes. But, pretty much all the parts in that tv set were generic, so that repair shop did not have to be in some relationship with the manufacturer, and the parts could be had at the local electronics store (and since those stores were selling to all kinds of people, the same general parts to repair that tv set were also used by they hobbyist and even the professional, the stores could survive with a relatively small stock that was bought by many), so the repair shop often didn't need to keep a lot of stock, especially not a lot of specialized stock. But in order to increase the market, manufacturers had to lower prices so those who couldn't afford before could now. So they shifted to printed circuit boards, That had happened well before that. And the shift wasnt due to cost, it was due to the move to semiconductors. and when ICs came along they started using them, which allowed for higher integration (ie fewer overall parts). The smaller parts meant no heavy chassis, which would have gone anyway because that cost money, not just to buy the metal but you had to ship it to the store near the consumer. The shipping cost was a tiny part of the total retail price. The price goes down. But the cost of repair stays the same, or goes up, because tracking down the problem is labor intensive. Wrong. The repair cost dropped dramatically because the fault rate dropped dramatically with the change to semiconductors. ICs in spades. Manufacturers often switch to replacing boards, which keeps labor costs down but means you aren't paying for a fifty cent part but the whole board. You can always change the fifty cent part on the board. The real reason for the change is because it was much cheaper to stamp out a new board than to diagnose a fault using expensive first world skilled labor. Much cheaper to pay a much cheaper board stuffing monkey even when that was still not automated and done in the first world. So if you paid a thousand dollars for that color tv set in 1966 (just a figure I pulled out of the air), the repair cost was a small percentage of the cost of buying a new one. In fact by then they didnt need much repair. Plus, it was easier to pay out a little here and a little there than to come up with another thousand to buy a new tv set. But if you paid a hundred dollars for that tv set today, you'd be paying a good percentage of that cost in having a repairman try to find the problem. Yep, because it costs a lot less to pay a low wage asian to make you a new one than to pay a skilled first world tech to find what would mostly be a hard to find fault with an adequately designed modern TV which hardly ever fails. That tips things in favor of buying new. Plus, in order to get that tv set price so low, the parts aren't generic, The bulk of them still are. and the repairman has to deal with the manufacturer to get the replacement parts. Hardly ever. That ends up being problematic, or requires some sort of contract with the manufactuer (and added cost). Nope. The tv sets are no longer as generic as they were forty years ago, They also fail at a vastly lower rate too. so the repairman finds it harder to figure out what is wrong, Because a properly design modern TV doesnt fail due to routine faults anymore. often requiring service material from the manufacturer, That was always the case. again an extra cost. The cheaper something is to manufacture, the less sturdy it will be mechanically, since that is one way to cut cost. Wrong again, most obviously with modern plug packs and molded power cords. In spades with modern switch mode plug packs. Hence things are less likely to last as long, even if people were willing to spend the money to repair them rather than buy new. Thats just plain wrong, most obviously with TVs. And I want to add something about "planned obsolescence" because it is often misused. If people are choosing to buy cheap, it's hardly that the manufacturers are making things so they will break. The consumer often wants that cheaper tv set or VCR. Sure, but thats not planned obsolescence which isnt even possible. And there is the issue of just plain obsolescence. Forty years ago, there'd hardly be any electronic items around the house. Thats overstating it. A tv set or two, some radios, maybe a stereo. Hardly maybe on the stereo. But look around now, and everything is electronic. Not quite everything. And when the electronic stuff is much more reliable than the mechanical stuff ever was, there clearly aint any planned obsolescence involved. While there is certainly some stuff that is guaranteed to fail first, most obviously with rechargable batterys, those are used for the convenience of those, not for any 'planned obsolescence' reason. It's either been invented in the past forty years (not even that long in many cases), or at the very least could not have been a consumer item until recently. Once you have consumers buying the latest thing, things are bound to go obsolete. Buy early, and things still have to develop, which means the things really may become obsolete in a few years. It's not the manufacturer doing this to "screw the consumer", it's a combination of new developments and consumer demand. If my computer from 1979 had been intended to last forever, it would have been way out of range in terms of price. In practice most of them still work fine. Because they'd have to anticipate how much things would change, and build in enough so upgrading would be doable. Upgrade was doable, just not sensible. So you'd spend money on potential, rather than spending money later on a new computer that would beat out what they could imagine in 1979. And they did that anyway, most obviously with socketed cpus that hardly ever got changed. They're still doing that. And in recent years, it is the consumer who is deciding to buy a new computer every few years (whether a deliberate decision or they simply let the manufacturer lead, must vary from person to person.) And they're so cheap that is a perfectly sensible thing to do. In spades with laptops. |
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
JR North wrote:
Unfortunately, you have to plan for Planned Obsolescence several years behind. For instance: my Kenmore washer/dryer set is 16 years old. Still going strong. No repairs. Lots of posts in S.E.R (and here) on current W/D models puking after 2 or so years. My JC Penney (Eureka) canister vac is 22 years old. Only thing replaced was power head belt a couple years ago. New vacs are garbage. I could go on and on.... Lousy design is nothing like planned obsolescence. Most obviously with the modern approach of beltless direct drive systems which dont even have a belt that will ever need replacing. Too_Many_Tools wrote: In my opinon...no. I intentionally try to have older appliances, vehicles, machines to lower repair costs and keep overall ownership cost to a minimum. Your thoughts? TMT Irreparable damageBy Bryce Baschuk THE WASHINGTON TIMES January 9, 2007 Bill Jones, after 42 years, is finally closing the Procter Appliance Service shop in Silver Spring. "You can't make a good salary to survive on the way you could years ago," said the 61-year-old owner of the oven, refrigerator and washer-dryer repair shop. "Everything has changed in the appliance business." Mr. Jones recently sold his home in Laurel and is in the process of moving to Bluffton, S.C., with his wife, Jeannette. Mr. Jones is one of the many Washington-area repairmen who have struggled to stay afloat as residents replace, not repair, old appliances. "It's a dying trade," said Scott Brown, Webmaster of www.fixitnow.com and self-proclaimed "Samurai Appliance Repairman." The reason for this is twofold, Mr. Brown said: The cost of appliances is coming down because of cheap overseas labor and improved manufacturing techniques, and repairmen are literally dying off. The average age of appliance technicians is 42, and there are few young repairmen to take their place, said Mr. Brown, 47. He has been repairing appliances in New Hampshire for the past 13 years. In the next seven years, the number of veteran appliance repairmen will decrease nationwide as current workers retire or transfer to other occupations, the Department of Labor said in its 2007 Occupational Outlook Handbook. The federal agency said many prospective repairmen prefer work that is less strenuous and want more comfortable working conditions. Local repairmen said it is simply a question of economics. "Nowadays appliances are cheap, so people are just getting new ones," said Paul Singh, a manager at the Appliance Service Depot, a repair shop in Northwest. "As a result, business has slowed down a lot." "The average repair cost for a household appliance is $50 to $350," said Shahid Rana, a service technician at Rana Refrigeration, a repair shop in Capitol Heights. "If the repair is going to cost more than that, we usually tell the customer to go out and buy a new one." It's not uncommon for today's repairmen to condemn an appliance instead of fixing it for the sake of their customers' wallets. If they decide to repair an appliance that is likely to break down again, repairmen are criticized by their customers and often lose business because of a damaged reputation. Mr. Jones said he based his repair decisions on the 50 percent rule: "If the cost of service costs more than 50 percent of the price of a new machine, I'll tell my customers to get a new one." "A lot of customers want me to be honest with them, so I'll tell them my opinion and leave the decision making up to them," he said. In recent years, consumers have tended to buy new appliances when existing warranties expire rather than repair old appliances, the Department of Labor said. Mr. Brown acknowledged this trend. "Lower-end appliances which you can buy for $200 to $300 are basically throwaway appliances," he said. "They are so inexpensive that you shouldn't pay to get them repaired." "The quality of the materials that are being made aren't lasting," Mr. Jones said. "Nowadays you're seeing more plastic and more circuit boards, and they aren't holding up." Many home appliances sold in the United States are made in Taiwan, Singapore, China and Mexico. "Nothing is made [in the United States] anymore," Mr. Jones said. "But then again, American parts are only better to a point, a lot of U.S. companies are all about the dollar." Fortunately for the next generation of repairmen, some of today's high-end appliances make service repairs the most cost-effective option. The Department of Labor concurred. "Over the next decade, as more consumers purchase higher-priced appliances designed to have much longer lives, they will be more likely to use repair services than to purchase new appliances," said the 2007 Occupational Outlook Handbook. Modern, energy-efficient refrigerators can cost as much as $5,000 to $10,000, and with such a hefty price tag, throwing one away is not an option. In some cases, repairmen can help consumers reduce the amount of aggravation that a broken appliance will cause. Consider the time and effort it takes to shop for a new appliance, wait for its delivery, remove the old one and get the new one installed. In addition, certain appliances such as ovens and washing machines can be a bigger hassle to replace because they are connected to gas and water lines. "It takes your time, it takes your effort, and if you don't install the new appliance, you'll have to hire a service technician to install it anyways," Mr. Brown said. Some consumers bond with their appliances like old pets, and for loyalty or sentimental reasons, refuse to let them go. Mr. Rana said some of his clients have appliances that are more than 30 years old. It makes sense, he said. "A lot of old refrigerators are worth fixing because they give people good service. They just don't make things like they used to." |
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
Michael A. Terrell wrote:
Yes, my mother used her first clothes dryer for over 30 years. We replaced the belt three times. A new dryer might last five years, total. On what do you base this statement? To claim that (on average) a new dryer will only last five years is absurd. What, you once knew "a guy" who replaced a five year old dryer? The dryer has to be one of the simplest and most reliable things in the home. There just isn't that much to go wrong. The washer lasted 18 years before the hard water ruined it, and it had a timer replaced when it was 12 years Old. You think that the new designs are an improvement? :( How can anyone make a claim either way based on personal experience? He would have to have personal experience on *multiple* old appliances that lasted a long time (a mathematical impossibilty) and *multiple* newer ones that did not. Anything else boils down to "I once knew a guy... or Joe down at the appliance store once told me...". It is an absolute certainty that all of appliances that lasted a long time were manufactured a long time ago. That does not equate to "All of the appliances made a long time ago lasted a long time". Nobody knows how long the appliance they bought last month is going to last so how can a valid comparison be made? |
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
Too_Many_Tools wrote:
In my opinon, it is a symptom of a larger problem.... Nope. Companies are setting up the situation that you are forced to buy new versus repair the used applicance, car, electronics, computers, cell phones....because they make a larger profit. Mindless conspiracy theory. The MBAs that are crafting the company policy are behind this. Mindless conspiracy theory. And the consumer is being left holding the bill... including paying for the cost of disposal. The modern consumer pays a lot less for the dirt cheap modern appliances too. Too_Many_Tools wrote: In my opinon...no. I intentionally try to have older appliances, vehicles, machines to lower repair costs and keep overall ownership cost to a minimum. Your thoughts? TMT Irreparable damageBy Bryce Baschuk THE WASHINGTON TIMES January 9, 2007 Bill Jones, after 42 years, is finally closing the Procter Appliance Service shop in Silver Spring. "You can't make a good salary to survive on the way you could years ago," said the 61-year-old owner of the oven, refrigerator and washer-dryer repair shop. "Everything has changed in the appliance business." Mr. Jones recently sold his home in Laurel and is in the process of moving to Bluffton, S.C., with his wife, Jeannette. Mr. Jones is one of the many Washington-area repairmen who have struggled to stay afloat as residents replace, not repair, old appliances. "It's a dying trade," said Scott Brown, Webmaster of www.fixitnow.com and self-proclaimed "Samurai Appliance Repairman." The reason for this is twofold, Mr. Brown said: The cost of appliances is coming down because of cheap overseas labor and improved manufacturing techniques, and repairmen are literally dying off. The average age of appliance technicians is 42, and there are few young repairmen to take their place, said Mr. Brown, 47. He has been repairing appliances in New Hampshire for the past 13 years. In the next seven years, the number of veteran appliance repairmen will decrease nationwide as current workers retire or transfer to other occupations, the Department of Labor said in its 2007 Occupational Outlook Handbook. The federal agency said many prospective repairmen prefer work that is less strenuous and want more comfortable working conditions. Local repairmen said it is simply a question of economics. "Nowadays appliances are cheap, so people are just getting new ones," said Paul Singh, a manager at the Appliance Service Depot, a repair shop in Northwest. "As a result, business has slowed down a lot." "The average repair cost for a household appliance is $50 to $350," said Shahid Rana, a service technician at Rana Refrigeration, a repair shop in Capitol Heights. "If the repair is going to cost more than that, we usually tell the customer to go out and buy a new one." It's not uncommon for today's repairmen to condemn an appliance instead of fixing it for the sake of their customers' wallets. If they decide to repair an appliance that is likely to break down again, repairmen are criticized by their customers and often lose business because of a damaged reputation. Mr. Jones said he based his repair decisions on the 50 percent rule: "If the cost of service costs more than 50 percent of the price of a new machine, I'll tell my customers to get a new one." "A lot of customers want me to be honest with them, so I'll tell them my opinion and leave the decision making up to them," he said. In recent years, consumers have tended to buy new appliances when existing warranties expire rather than repair old appliances, the Department of Labor said. Mr. Brown acknowledged this trend. "Lower-end appliances which you can buy for $200 to $300 are basically throwaway appliances," he said. "They are so inexpensive that you shouldn't pay to get them repaired." "The quality of the materials that are being made aren't lasting," Mr. Jones said. "Nowadays you're seeing more plastic and more circuit boards, and they aren't holding up." Many home appliances sold in the United States are made in Taiwan, Singapore, China and Mexico. "Nothing is made [in the United States] anymore," Mr. Jones said. "But then again, American parts are only better to a point, a lot of U.S. companies are all about the dollar." Fortunately for the next generation of repairmen, some of today's high-end appliances make service repairs the most cost-effective option. The Department of Labor concurred. "Over the next decade, as more consumers purchase higher-priced appliances designed to have much longer lives, they will be more likely to use repair services than to purchase new appliances," said the 2007 Occupational Outlook Handbook. Modern, energy-efficient refrigerators can cost as much as $5,000 to $10,000, and with such a hefty price tag, throwing one away is not an option. In some cases, repairmen can help consumers reduce the amount of aggravation that a broken appliance will cause. Consider the time and effort it takes to shop for a new appliance, wait for its delivery, remove the old one and get the new one installed. In addition, certain appliances such as ovens and washing machines can be a bigger hassle to replace because they are connected to gas and water lines. "It takes your time, it takes your effort, and if you don't install the new appliance, you'll have to hire a service technician to install it anyways," Mr. Brown said. Some consumers bond with their appliances like old pets, and for loyalty or sentimental reasons, refuse to let them go. Mr. Rana said some of his clients have appliances that are more than 30 years old. It makes sense, he said. "A lot of old refrigerators are worth fixing because they give people good service. They just don't make things like they used to." |
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
On Sun, 14 Jan 2007 17:46:09 GMT, Rick Brandt wrote:
Too_Many_Tools wrote: In my opinon...no. I intentionally try to have older appliances, vehicles, machines to lower repair costs and keep overall ownership cost to a minimum. Your thoughts? TMT Irreparable damageBy Bryce Baschuk THE WASHINGTON TIMES January 9, 2007 Bill Jones, after 42 years, is finally closing the Procter Appliance Service shop in Silver Spring. "You can't make a good salary to survive on the way you could years ago," said the 61-year-old owner of the oven, refrigerator and washer-dryer repair shop. "Everything has changed in the appliance business." This raises an apparent contradiction. Most people believe that appliances were built much better in the past than they are now and yet in the past a whole industry survived on doing appliance repairs. Perhaps they only seemed to be built better in the past because we kept them longer and the only reason we kept them longer is because we repaired them instead of replacing them. The flipside of that same coin is that perhaps today's appliances only seem to be inferior because we replace them more often and the only reason we replace them more often is because we don't repair them. At least things were more repairable in the past. I routinely buy and repair various expensive industrial things, which usually can be repaired by doing very simple things. (like my recent experience with Cummins diesels). That stuff was designed to be modular and easy to repair. At the same time, most consumer equipment is absolutely not repairable. i |
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
Rick Brandt wrote:
Michael A. Terrell wrote: Yes, my mother used her first clothes dryer for over 30 years. We replaced the belt three times. A new dryer might last five years, total. On what do you base this statement? To claim that (on average) a new dryer will only last five years is absurd. What, you once knew "a guy" who replaced a five year old dryer? The dryer has to be one of the simplest and most reliable things in the home. There just isn't that much to go wrong. From dozens of relatives and friends who had major problems from 4 to 6 years. My stepmother replaced a GE washer and dryer pair that was less than two years old because they were crap. Not much to go wrong? cheap parts, poor designs and sloppy assembly work. Something is making noise and you find a broken weld, sheared off bolt or bad bearing that SHOULD NOT HAVE HAPPENED. The washer lasted 18 years before the hard water ruined it, and it had a timer replaced when it was 12 years Old. You think that the new designs are an improvement? :( How can anyone make a claim either way based on personal experience? He would have to have personal experience on *multiple* old appliances that lasted a long time (a mathematical impossibilty) and *multiple* newer ones that did not. Anything else boils down to "I once knew a guy... or Joe down at the appliance store once told me...". I didn't talk to the appliance repair guys any longer than it took to know they were either lying, or a thief. I bought parts I needed from the manufacturer, a distributor, or on line. Sears has a decent assortment of [parts for lots of brands, and the UPS truck or mailman drops them at your door. How many dryers have you repaired, or scrapped? I've repaired everything I can, for over 40 years. It didn't matter if it was an appliance, a car, a house, a broadcast transmitter, or even a radio for the space station, I fixed it. As you can see from my sig file, I live in Florida, and a LOT of poorly designed crap dies from nearby lightning strikes. It is an absolute certainty that all of appliances that lasted a long time were manufactured a long time ago. That does not equate to "All of the appliances made a long time ago lasted a long time". Nobody knows how long the appliance they bought last month is going to last so how can a valid comparison be made? A friend bought a brand new Neptune washer that didn't last a month. The dealer had to replace it TWICE before he had one that lasted over a month. -- Service to my country? Been there, Done that, and I've got my DD214 to prove it. Member of DAV #85. Michael A. Terrell Central Florida |
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
"Michael Black" wrote in message ...
So a tv set forty years ago was handwired (I have no clue whether that was a good or bad thing, but it was costly) on a heavy metal chassis, and was a significant purchase for most households. But when something broke, the cost of repair was low compare to the cost of replacement, to that tv set would be taken to the local repair shop. But, pretty much all the parts in that tv set were generic, so that repair shop did not have to be in some relationship with the manufacturer, and the parts could be had at the local electronics store (and since those stores were selling to all kinds of people, the same general parts to repair that tv set were also used by they hobbyist and even the professional, the stores could survive with a relatively small stock that was bought by many), so the repair shop often didn't need to keep a lot of stock, especially not a lot of specialized stock. Also because the failure rate was so high, most failures would be simply a burnt-out vacuum tube. These repairs were relatively easy to fix and a TV repairman could make a living charging for simple quick house calls. Most corner drugstores had a tube-tester for the DIY repairman and a stock of common tubes 12AU7, etc. Eventually and after replacing a lot of tubes the TV would need realignment. Modern TV's hardly ever need to be realigned. This is not the result of planned obselescence. It is the result of phasing-in new improvements in technology as it develops. For instance, it is just-as-easy to manufacture a chip with 100,000 transistors as with one or two. This means circuitry can be made extra-stable, and to some extent, self-healing, and self-aligning. Don |
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
"Rod Speed" wrote in message
... Just had the chain adjuster failed on a dirt cheap relatively new electric chainsaw. I assumed that they wouldnt bother to supply parts like that, but I was wrong, readily available and in fact free. Clearly no planned obsolescence there. Contrast my Sears Craftsman chainsaw (42 cc engine, 18" blade) regularly $C 250 discounted to $C 200. This required repair during the warranted one year (unexplained jingle, source not found when I took off various covers: Sears replaced the ignition module free.) After total 20 months intermittent use the saw would not start. Sears diagnosed that it needed a new cylinder and piston i.e. parts costing $180 plus $100 service time. This unit is marked "assembled in the USA" i.e. from imported components. This was my second, the first being a Husqvarna 325 in 1990. That too required warranty repairs early, and was kept running by a small family motor repair shop. When it finally stopped I did not want to pay for further repairs since the repairman had told me the Husqv 325 was a notoriously dud design, not manufactured for more than a year or two. I bought Sears since Consumer Reports flagged several models as a Best Buy. I guess the CR test system could not include length of service. -- Don Phillipson Carlsbad Springs (Ottawa, Canada) |
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
On Sun, 14 Jan 2007 21:57:51 GMT, the renowned "Michael A. Terrell"
wrote: Rick Brandt wrote: Michael A. Terrell wrote: Yes, my mother used her first clothes dryer for over 30 years. We replaced the belt three times. A new dryer might last five years, total. On what do you base this statement? To claim that (on average) a new dryer will only last five years is absurd. What, you once knew "a guy" who replaced a five year old dryer? The dryer has to be one of the simplest and most reliable things in the home. There just isn't that much to go wrong. From dozens of relatives and friends who had major problems from 4 to 6 years. My stepmother replaced a GE washer and dryer pair that was less than two years old because they were crap. Not much to go wrong? cheap parts, poor designs and sloppy assembly work. Something is making noise and you find a broken weld, sheared off bolt or bad bearing that SHOULD NOT HAVE HAPPENED. The washer lasted 18 years before the hard water ruined it, and it had a timer replaced when it was 12 years Old. You think that the new designs are an improvement? :( How can anyone make a claim either way based on personal experience? He would have to have personal experience on *multiple* old appliances that lasted a long time (a mathematical impossibilty) and *multiple* newer ones that did not. Anything else boils down to "I once knew a guy... or Joe down at the appliance store once told me...". I didn't talk to the appliance repair guys any longer than it took to know they were either lying, or a thief. I bought parts I needed from the manufacturer, a distributor, or on line. Sears has a decent assortment of [parts for lots of brands, and the UPS truck or mailman drops them at your door. How many dryers have you repaired, or scrapped? I've repaired everything I can, for over 40 years. It didn't matter if it was an appliance, a car, a house, a broadcast transmitter, or even a radio for the space station, I fixed it. As you can see from my sig file, I live in Florida, and a LOT of poorly designed crap dies from nearby lightning strikes. It is an absolute certainty that all of appliances that lasted a long time were manufactured a long time ago. That does not equate to "All of the appliances made a long time ago lasted a long time". Nobody knows how long the appliance they bought last month is going to last so how can a valid comparison be made? A friend bought a brand new Neptune washer that didn't last a month. The dealer had to replace it TWICE before he had one that lasted over a month. You sure it wasn't a Uranus washer? |
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
Spehro Pefhany wrote:
On Sun, 14 Jan 2007 21:57:51 GMT, the renowned "Michael A. Terrell" wrote: Rick Brandt wrote: Michael A. Terrell wrote: Yes, my mother used her first clothes dryer for over 30 years. We replaced the belt three times. A new dryer might last five years, total. On what do you base this statement? To claim that (on average) a new dryer will only last five years is absurd. What, you once knew "a guy" who replaced a five year old dryer? The dryer has to be one of the simplest and most reliable things in the home. There just isn't that much to go wrong. From dozens of relatives and friends who had major problems from 4 to 6 years. My stepmother replaced a GE washer and dryer pair that was less than two years old because they were crap. Not much to go wrong? cheap parts, poor designs and sloppy assembly work. Something is making noise and you find a broken weld, sheared off bolt or bad bearing that SHOULD NOT HAVE HAPPENED. The washer lasted 18 years before the hard water ruined it, and it had a timer replaced when it was 12 years Old. You think that the new designs are an improvement? :( How can anyone make a claim either way based on personal experience? He would have to have personal experience on *multiple* old appliances that lasted a long time (a mathematical impossibilty) and *multiple* newer ones that did not. Anything else boils down to "I once knew a guy... or Joe down at the appliance store once told me...". I didn't talk to the appliance repair guys any longer than it took to know they were either lying, or a thief. I bought parts I needed from the manufacturer, a distributor, or on line. Sears has a decent assortment of [parts for lots of brands, and the UPS truck or mailman drops them at your door. How many dryers have you repaired, or scrapped? I've repaired everything I can, for over 40 years. It didn't matter if it was an appliance, a car, a house, a broadcast transmitter, or even a radio for the space station, I fixed it. As you can see from my sig file, I live in Florida, and a LOT of poorly designed crap dies from nearby lightning strikes. It is an absolute certainty that all of appliances that lasted a long time were manufactured a long time ago. That does not equate to "All of the appliances made a long time ago lasted a long time". Nobody knows how long the appliance they bought last month is going to last so how can a valid comparison be made? A friend bought a brand new Neptune washer that didn't last a month. The dealer had to replace it TWICE before he had one that lasted over a month. You sure it wasn't a Uranus washer? If they hadn't fixed the thing Randy would have told the dealer to put it there. -- Service to my country? Been there, Done that, and I've got my DD214 to prove it. Member of DAV #85. Michael A. Terrell Central Florida |
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
Don K wrote:
"Michael Black" wrote in message ... So a tv set forty years ago was handwired (I have no clue whether that was a good or bad thing, but it was costly) on a heavy metal chassis, and was a significant purchase for most households. But when something broke, the cost of repair was low compare to the cost of replacement, to that tv set would be taken to the local repair shop. But, pretty much all the parts in that tv set were generic, so that repair shop did not have to be in some relationship with the manufacturer, and the parts could be had at the local electronics store (and since those stores were selling to all kinds of people, the same general parts to repair that tv set were also used by they hobbyist and even the professional, the stores could survive with a relatively small stock that was bought by many), so the repair shop often didn't need to keep a lot of stock, especially not a lot of specialized stock. Also because the failure rate was so high, most failures would be simply a burnt-out vacuum tube. These repairs were relatively easy to fix and a TV repairman could make a living charging for simple quick house calls. Most corner drugstores had a tube-tester for the DIY repairman and a stock of common tubes 12AU7, etc. Eventually and after replacing a lot of tubes the TV would need realignment. Modern TV's hardly ever need to be realigned. This is not the result of planned obselescence. It is the result of phasing-in new improvements in technology as it develops. For instance, it is just-as-easy to manufacture a chip with 100,000 transistors as with one or two. This means circuitry can be made extra-stable, and to some extent, self-healing, and self-aligning. Don That doesn't stop you from having bad SAW filters, though. -- Service to my country? Been there, Done that, and I've got my DD214 to prove it. Member of DAV #85. Michael A. Terrell Central Florida |
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
Too_Many_Tools ha escrito: In my opinon, it is a symptom of a larger problem.... Companies are setting up the situation that you are forced to buy new versus repair the used applicance, car, electronics, computers, cell phones....because they make a larger profit. The MBAs that are crafting the company policy are behind this. And the consumer is being left holding the bill...including paying for the cost of disposal. I dont think it is planned obsolescence per se,( as in a sort of conspiracy to deliberately make things to expire at a given moment.) it's more to do with capitalist economics. It saves companies money to cut back on service and parts support, and with the constant search for cheaper production we see a decline in build standards. This enables the final retail price to be lowered, more volume of sales etc. This has created a consumer culture of the 'throwaway product' . Longevity is not high on the average consumer's list of priorities when shopping. It's more to do with how cool a thing looks, and how it complements their lifestyle. rather moronic in my opinion, but that seems to be what many people believe, probably because they know no better. People pay less and value the product less. For all but the very high end gear,( a minority niche in the market), the idea of repair for things like TVs doesn't come into it for the majority of those sort of products sold. All well and good, but it's ultimately the environment which pays, and this unsustainable lifestyle of consumerism means we have to start wars to get oil to keep on supporting this system (after all where does all that plastic come from?) Not to mention envirtonmental side effects from the millions of tons of waste generated by this process which defy contemplation. And let's not forget costly solutions to attempt to solve this problem. So I reckon we should be asking about the *real* cost of these 'cheap' throwaway items - consider the excessive use of raw materials, treatment of waste etc etc. - and they're suddenly not so cheap after all! Incidentally, there are some great pics of this phenomenon he http://www.chrisjordan.com/ regards, -B. |
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
The Direct Drive vac power heads I have seen are cheap plasicky
lightweight air turbine design. Poor torque to the brushes and the loss of suction due to energy absorbed by the turbine make these inefficient and, of course, failure prone due to cheap plastic components. The replacement belt for my power head was $2.35 retail at the local vac shop. 10 for $12.00 including shipping on Ebay. Try and find replacement air turbine parts for that new vac-anywhere. The original belt lasted 20 years and only failed because my GF sucked a sash cord up and stalled the head. JR Dweller in te cellar Rod Speed wrote: JR North wrote: Unfortunately, you have to plan for Planned Obsolescence several years behind. For instance: my Kenmore washer/dryer set is 16 years old. Still going strong. No repairs. Lots of posts in S.E.R (and here) on current W/D models puking after 2 or so years. My JC Penney (Eureka) canister vac is 22 years old. Only thing replaced was power head belt a couple years ago. New vacs are garbage. I could go on and on.... Lousy design is nothing like planned obsolescence. Most obviously with the modern approach of beltless direct drive systems which dont even have a belt that will ever need replacing. Too_Many_Tools wrote: In my opinon...no. I intentionally try to have older appliances, vehicles, machines to lower repair costs and keep overall ownership cost to a minimum. Your thoughts? TMT Irreparable damageBy Bryce Baschuk THE WASHINGTON TIMES January 9, 2007 Bill Jones, after 42 years, is finally closing the Procter Appliance Service shop in Silver Spring. "You can't make a good salary to survive on the way you could years ago," said the 61-year-old owner of the oven, refrigerator and washer-dryer repair shop. "Everything has changed in the appliance business." Mr. Jones recently sold his home in Laurel and is in the process of moving to Bluffton, S.C., with his wife, Jeannette. Mr. Jones is one of the many Washington-area repairmen who have struggled to stay afloat as residents replace, not repair, old appliances. "It's a dying trade," said Scott Brown, Webmaster of www.fixitnow.com and self-proclaimed "Samurai Appliance Repairman." The reason for this is twofold, Mr. Brown said: The cost of appliances is coming down because of cheap overseas labor and improved manufacturing techniques, and repairmen are literally dying off. The average age of appliance technicians is 42, and there are few young repairmen to take their place, said Mr. Brown, 47. He has been repairing appliances in New Hampshire for the past 13 years. In the next seven years, the number of veteran appliance repairmen will decrease nationwide as current workers retire or transfer to other occupations, the Department of Labor said in its 2007 Occupational Outlook Handbook. The federal agency said many prospective repairmen prefer work that is less strenuous and want more comfortable working conditions. Local repairmen said it is simply a question of economics. "Nowadays appliances are cheap, so people are just getting new ones," said Paul Singh, a manager at the Appliance Service Depot, a repair shop in Northwest. "As a result, business has slowed down a lot." "The average repair cost for a household appliance is $50 to $350," said Shahid Rana, a service technician at Rana Refrigeration, a repair shop in Capitol Heights. "If the repair is going to cost more than that, we usually tell the customer to go out and buy a new one." It's not uncommon for today's repairmen to condemn an appliance instead of fixing it for the sake of their customers' wallets. If they decide to repair an appliance that is likely to break down again, repairmen are criticized by their customers and often lose business because of a damaged reputation. Mr. Jones said he based his repair decisions on the 50 percent rule: "If the cost of service costs more than 50 percent of the price of a new machine, I'll tell my customers to get a new one." "A lot of customers want me to be honest with them, so I'll tell them my opinion and leave the decision making up to them," he said. In recent years, consumers have tended to buy new appliances when existing warranties expire rather than repair old appliances, the Department of Labor said. Mr. Brown acknowledged this trend. "Lower-end appliances which you can buy for $200 to $300 are basically throwaway appliances," he said. "They are so inexpensive that you shouldn't pay to get them repaired." "The quality of the materials that are being made aren't lasting," Mr. Jones said. "Nowadays you're seeing more plastic and more circuit boards, and they aren't holding up." Many home appliances sold in the United States are made in Taiwan, Singapore, China and Mexico. "Nothing is made [in the United States] anymore," Mr. Jones said. "But then again, American parts are only better to a point, a lot of U.S. companies are all about the dollar." Fortunately for the next generation of repairmen, some of today's high-end appliances make service repairs the most cost-effective option. The Department of Labor concurred. "Over the next decade, as more consumers purchase higher-priced appliances designed to have much longer lives, they will be more likely to use repair services than to purchase new appliances," said the 2007 Occupational Outlook Handbook. Modern, energy-efficient refrigerators can cost as much as $5,000 to $10,000, and with such a hefty price tag, throwing one away is not an option. In some cases, repairmen can help consumers reduce the amount of aggravation that a broken appliance will cause. Consider the time and effort it takes to shop for a new appliance, wait for its delivery, remove the old one and get the new one installed. In addition, certain appliances such as ovens and washing machines can be a bigger hassle to replace because they are connected to gas and water lines. "It takes your time, it takes your effort, and if you don't install the new appliance, you'll have to hire a service technician to install it anyways," Mr. Brown said. Some consumers bond with their appliances like old pets, and for loyalty or sentimental reasons, refuse to let them go. Mr. Rana said some of his clients have appliances that are more than 30 years old. It makes sense, he said. "A lot of old refrigerators are worth fixing because they give people good service. They just don't make things like they used to." -- -------------------------------------------------------------- Home Page: http://www.seanet.com/~jasonrnorth If you're not the lead dog, the view never changes Doubt yourself, and the real world will eat you alive The world doesn't revolve around you, it revolves around me No skeletons in the closet; just decomposing corpses -------------------------------------------------------------- Dependence is Vulnerability: -------------------------------------------------------------- "Open the Pod Bay Doors please, Hal" "I'm sorry, Dave, I'm afraid I can't do that.." |
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
Too_Many_Tools wrote:
In my opinon...no. I intentionally try to have older appliances, vehicles, machines to lower repair costs and keep overall ownership cost to a minimum. Your thoughts? I don't think planned obsolescence is a good thing or a bad thing, because in most cases it's fictional. Appliances and other items you buy aren't designed to fail. They are designed to be cheap to manufacture. The article you mentioned quoted a repairman saying that lots of new devices are made with circuit boards (rather than discrete components). There's a reason for that. Circuits built with circuit boards and integrated circuits cost much, much less to produce than ones made of discrete components. Probably half as much, maybe even less than that. I'm not sure people understand how streamlined and optimized modern manufacturing techniques are. The reason we get all these appliances and electronics items for so cheap is the way they are made. To me, it is truly remarkable that you can go to the store and buy a DVD player for $30. It might only last 2 or 3 years, but 10 years ago, it would have cost $10,000 to build an equivalent machine (just because of the processing power). So the question, to me, is this: do you want to buy a new item for $100 and have it last 5 or 10 years, or do you want to spend $200 for it and have it last 10 or 20? My answer would be that I'd rather have the item that costs half as much and lasts half as long. Why? Because I can take the $100 I saved and put it in the bank. In 5 or 10 years when the item breaks, I can take the $100 out of the bank, and it will have grown with interest that has outpaced inflation, so it will be worth more than $100 in inflation-adjusted dollars, and at that time, the price of the device may have gone down to less than $100 in inflation-adjusted dollars, and it will certainly be more up to date (more energy efficient, better support for new media formats, smaller, whatever). To put it a slightly different way, for that $30 DVD player, it costs something like $10 labor and $10 materials to put that thing together in the first place (because there are packaging and shipping costs and profit). So how efficient is it to spend $30 labor fixing it? It isn't efficient. Repairing mass-produced items isn't efficient because one person working on one item and doing everything by hand simply doesn't have the same economies of scale that a highly-optimized manufacturing environment has. - Logan |
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
"Rod Speed" wrote in
: Dude, I hate to be the one to break this news to you, but *everything* manufactured has a pre-determined design life. Be it 30 nanoseconds or 300 years, it _does_ have a design life. This design life is set in the initial concept phase of design work, it is one of the parameters that _must_ be determined before any actual design work takes place. Without that parameter, you cannot design. So, yes, appliances have a design life, and that life is, due to economics, going to be the warranty period plus some safety factor (to help ensure that the product doesn't cause expensive warranty claims). Appliances are a commodity product, just like about every other mass produced product on the market. The population is not expanding enough to for it to be economically feasable for a company to produce a product that will last 30 years with minimal upkeep, except in special circumstances. The product has to 'wear out' or fail within some time period so as to generate repeat sales for the market. -- Anthony You can't 'idiot proof' anything....every time you try, they just make better idiots. Remove sp to reply via email |
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
Don Phillipson wrote
Rod Speed wrote Just had the chain adjuster failed on a dirt cheap relatively new electric chainsaw. I assumed that they wouldnt bother to supply parts like that, but I was wrong, readily available and in fact free. Clearly no planned obsolescence there. Contrast my Sears Craftsman chainsaw (42 cc engine, 18" blade) regularly $C 250 discounted to $C 200. This required repair during the warranted one year (unexplained jingle, source not found when I took off various covers: Sears replaced the ignition module free.) After total 20 months intermittent use the saw would not start. Sears diagnosed that it needed a new cylinder and piston i.e. parts costing $180 Sounds very implausible unless you abused it very badly by not providing adequate lubrication etc. plus $100 service time. This unit is marked "assembled in the USA" i.e. from imported components. This was my second, the first being a Husqvarna 325 in 1990. That too required warranty repairs early, and was kept running by a small family motor repair shop. Thats the main reason I went electric. I dont need the away from home capability for cutting firewood etc and dont like very small gasoline engines reliability wise. When it finally stopped I did not want to pay for further repairs since the repairman had told me the Husqv 325 was a notoriously dud design, not manufactured for more than a year or two. Clearly was enough of an arsehole to not tell you that when you first brought it in for repair. I bought Sears since Consumer Reports flagged several models as a Best Buy. Trouble with those is that they cant really get a handle on reliability, let alone flagrant abuse by the owner. I guess the CR test system could not include length of service. Yep, they dont even do that well on that with cars, let alone appliances. It just isnt feasible and even if it was, by the time they have decent stats, that model is long gone. I usually find that its damned hard to actually find the products that come out on top of the list even if you are buying the product just after the test has come out. In spades down the track. I just lucked out there recently when buying a satnav, they had just done the test a month before I wanted to get one, all the products were still current, and I could borrow the two candidates that did well in the test from mates and could see how I liked them myself. Went for the TomTom because its pure touch screen, did the destination selection much better than the Navman, and the test claimed that the TomTom does a lot better in tunnels and the CBD than the alts. I havent had a chance to test that claim yet. |
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
On Sun, 14 Jan 2007 20:48:52 GMT, "Rick Brandt"
wrote: Michael A. Terrell wrote: Yes, my mother used her first clothes dryer for over 30 years. We replaced the belt three times. A new dryer might last five years, total. On what do you base this statement? To claim that (on average) a new dryer will only last five years is absurd. What, you once knew "a guy" who replaced a five year old dryer? The dryer has to be one of the simplest and most reliable things in the home. There just isn't that much to go wrong. Well, the local thrift shopa and Habitat for Humanity won't accept major appliances over 3 years old. The reason? Too many are not functional and not economically repairable and it costs them too much to dispose of them. The washer lasted 18 years before the hard water ruined it, and it had a timer replaced when it was 12 years Old. You think that the new designs are an improvement? :( How can anyone make a claim either way based on personal experience? He would have to have personal experience on *multiple* old appliances that lasted a long time (a mathematical impossibilty) and *multiple* newer ones that did not. Anything else boils down to "I once knew a guy... or Joe down at the appliance store once told me...". It is an absolute certainty that all of appliances that lasted a long time were manufactured a long time ago. That does not equate to "All of the appliances made a long time ago lasted a long time". Nobody knows how long the appliance they bought last month is going to last so how can a valid comparison be made? Well, I've seen the results of the "cheaepening of america" The suspension springs on several washers I've recently worked on had worn through.On our own, After replacing the springs, it was only a short time till the metal "eye" the spring goes into wore through. The "ballance spring" wore right through the metal of the chassis. I ended up drilling new holes for the springs to try to get another couple years out of my wife's 3 year old drier. The one it replaced was 27 years old and still had all the original springs. We replaced it when the pump started to leak because the transmission was also leaking oil and I figured it wasn't worth spending more money on - would likely have been farther ahead rebuilding the old one, but the timer and several other critical parts were obsolete. The 36 year old dryer is still running. I replace drum rollers about every 18 months or so now and it's on it's third belt. The original rollers lasted about 20 years. The element let go last year and I patched it up, so it's likely good for another 2 sets of rollers???? -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
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