Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#361
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking,misc.consumers.frugal-living,sci.electronics.repair,alt.home.repair,misc.consumers.house
|
|||
|
|||
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
Letīs do an experiment === Rod vs. Rod !!
Rod Speed ha escrito: lsmartino wrote: Donīt forget this other website: http://www.ozdebate.net/rod.html seems like the guy is a legend. I am indeed. Eat your heart out, wogchild. Keep furiously sweeping the awkward evidence under the carpet. I wonder if he speaks other languages besides english... Nope, never bothered with the babble you stupid wogs get up to. It's a tad more complicated than that. if he can annoy the english speaker world, Just another of your pathetic little drug crazed fantasys, wogchild. Fraid not. I guess he will have the talent to show his "gifted skills" in other languages too. Guess again, wogchild. You really are a juvenile little child. P.S: Reply constructed using http://www.ozdebate.net/rod.html |
#362
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking,misc.consumers.frugal-living,sci.electronics.repair,alt.home.repair,misc.consumers.house
|
|||
|
|||
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
Vic Smith wrote:
You got your stories, I got mine. They're not my stories. There are regularly warnings by automotive columnists and mechanics to avoid the quick-change oil change places like the plague, as well as the horror stories of customers that have had their vehicles damaged by these places. I'm not risking my vehicle to a place like that. I'll bring it to a reputable independent mechanic, do it myself, or go to the dealer if they have a good price. Usually the Toyota dealer has an oil change deal that is cheaper than Jiffy Lube, plus they are using better quality filters, and more experienced mechanics. |
#363
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking,misc.consumers.frugal-living,sci.electronics.repair,alt.home.repair,misc.consumers.house
|
|||
|
|||
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
scenario_dave wrote:
If you tell people 3000, a lot of them will start thinking about it at 3500 and get around to doing it at 5000 or 6000. If you say 7500, they get around to it at 10,000 to 12,000. So if the ideal is to change it at 7,500, your better off saying 3000, so most of the people will change it before 7,500. Saves a lot of hasle in the long run. LOL. Maybe some people are like this. I try to do the maintenance as close as possible to the proper interval, so I can keep on schedule over the long haul. It's becoming moot as more and more vehicles have service interval indicators that are based on driving conditions, temperature, etc. |
#364
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking,misc.consumers.frugal-living,sci.electronics.repair,alt.home.repair,misc.consumers.house
|
|||
|
|||
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
Edwin Pawlowski wrote:
"Vic Smith" wrote in message That'll be $21.99, sir. Thank you for using Jiffy Lube. See you in 3 months or 3000 miles." He make shis living changing oil. What do you expect him to say? What's the better experience? You got your stories, I got mine. The better experience is my own evaluation of my own driving habits and conditions as well as reading what the manufacturer of the engine and testing laboratories conclude. Short distance driving in cold weather? Yes, if you _only_ do short distances, you build up moisture in the oil system which doesn't get vaporized by engine heat. But short trips with occasional longer trips and freeway driving gets rid of that moisture. All the experts agree that 3000 mile oil changes are almost always unnecessary for normal service. There are sometimes side benefits to the 3000 mile changes, such as when people have an oil burning engine yet never check or top off their oil. The 3000 mile oil changes mean that they'll have a lot more oil in their engine, on average, than if they did 7500 mile changes. There were some Saturn engines where the oil needed to be exceptionally clean because it was used to hydraulically to tension the timing chain. Varnish build-up in the timing chain tensioner bore could cause the tensioner mechanism to malfunction, and lead to timing chain failure. But these sorts of issues are pretty rare. |
#365
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking,misc.consumers.frugal-living,sci.electronics.repair,alt.home.repair,misc.consumers.house
|
|||
|
|||
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
Some stupid wog claiming to be lsmartino wrote just the puerile **** you'd expect from a stupid wog. |
#366
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking,misc.consumers.frugal-living,sci.electronics.repair,alt.home.repair,misc.consumers.house
|
|||
|
|||
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
Rod Speed ha escrito: Some stupid wog claiming to be lsmartino wrote Hehehehehehe! The experiment is going well, letīs try it again. just the puerile **** you'd expect from a stupid wog. The rule of holes - when you're in one, you should stop digging. P.S: Reply created using http://www.ozdebate.net/rod.html |
#367
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking,misc.consumers.frugal-living,sci.electronics.repair,alt.home.repair,misc.consumers.house
|
|||
|
|||
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
Ignoramus16071 wrote:
On Wed, 17 Jan 2007 00:04:59 GMT, James Sweet wrote: Ignoramus16071 wrote: On Tue, 16 Jan 2007 20:41:59 GMT, James Sweet wrote: Ignoramus16071 wrote: TO the skeptics of the "planned obsolescence" and "designed to fail" theory, I have a simple suggestion. Take household machines from trash and take them apart. Look for signs of above mentioned behaviours -- and you will find plenty. Such as parts that are obviously designed to fail. i Designed to fail, or designed to be cheap? When you see these "designed to fail" parts, does it often appear that they could be made to last much better for the same cost? Well, let me give you one example. We had a electric tea kettle. It broke the hinge on the lid. Postmortem indicated that it broke because it lacked material around the hinge. At the cost of extra 1-2 cents, they could have a few mm more plastic around the hinges so that they hold up better. The extra cost is minuscule. Another example, I received a KMart wallet as a gift and it is unusable -- the credit card pockets are too tight and it is generally too tight for money also(I like to carry a few hundred $$ in cash etc, which does not affect credit card pockets). Again, at the cost of perhaps 10 cents per wallet, it could have been made into a better wallet. If anyone has suggestions for a really good three section leather wallet, I will appreciate. i There's the key, an extra few cents. 2 cents times 2 million kettles and you're talking 40 grand, that's not minuscule, even for a big company. 10 cents is even more significant, when you're manufacturing millions of things, pennies *do* matter. You can get something that cost an extra 10 cents to make, but it will cost you an extra 10 bucks to buy and the average consumer not knowing the difference will buy the cheaper one. It's all about offering the lowest price and making the most profit per sale, they don't intentionally try to make it break, they just don't care if it does so long as it lasts through the warranty. If they know what happens with their product -- and they do -- then it IS intentional. If I set a fire on my kitchen floor, hoping to cook a pig that would not fit in a stove, knowing that my house would burn down, and the house burns down, the result is intentional -- even though the fire was started to cook a pig. Same here -- if they try to save 2 cents and make products that they KNOW do not perform their intended purpose, then making substandard products is intentional on their part. That's why I do not patronize cutthroat retailers such as Walmart. Because they are looking to screw ME by selling products that do not perform their intended purpose (and by forcing manufacturers to make such via abusive methods). I do not like such capitalists and to not want to give them any of my business. I would rather pay 3x more to businesses such as McMaster-Carr, or Bosch, etc, to get a product that actually works. My experience with Harbor Freight has been spotty, but most of the products that I bought from them, do work as advertised. i I just recently bought a hand-held spothight with a 6V valve-regulated lead-acid battery. (bought at Lidl in the UK.) It is Osram brand but who knows who actually designed or made it. Out of curiosity I opened it up and measured the voltage as it was charging the battery. The 6V (3 cell) battery gets charged to about 8.5V with the supplied charger so that would kill the battery pretty quickly. The proper charging voltage is even marked clearly on the Chinese-made battery. The charger is basically just a resistor and an unregulated power supply. I know that say a LM317 would be too expensive for these guys but there would surely be a cheaper circuit e.g. with a zener diode and a transistor that could clamp the charging voltage to a sensible limit, for 10c or less. In my own case, I will charge it with a regulated power supply instead, but it makes me sad to think that the rest of these things will be destroyed quite soon by overcharging, and since the battery is not easily removable from the casing of the torch, I guess that approximately none of them will be recycled when they stop working. Even if they were "recycled", I have heard some bad things about the way lead-acid battery recycling is done these days, so it would be much better if someone had at least been able to use it for a few years first. That is one good thing about lithium batteries, the appliance manufacturers are so ****-scared of abusing the batteries, causing a fire and getting sued that they usually do put a half-decent charger in the products, even if that does cost them the extra 10c. Chris |
#368
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking,misc.consumers.frugal-living,sci.electronics.repair,alt.home.repair,misc.consumers.house
|
|||
|
|||
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
"Ignoramus16071" wrote in message
... Another example, I received a KMart wallet as a gift and it is unusable -- the credit card pockets are too tight and it is generally too tight for money also(I like to carry a few hundred $$ in cash etc, which does not affect credit card pockets). Again, at the cost of perhaps 10 cents per wallet, it could have been made into a better wallet. Obviously you got the wallet intended for tightwads. :-) I got a new wallet for Christmas wherer some compartments were a bit too tight when I loaded them with the various assorted plastic cards, ATM, credit, membership, insurance, driver's license, etc. I ended up trimming some of the cards with scissors. Now they fit ok. No harm done to the cards. If anyone has suggestions for a really good three section leather wallet, I will appreciate. There's your problem! A single-fold wallet is a lot less bulky. I had a 3-section wallet and hated it. It felt like I was carrying a baseball in my pocket. Don |
#369
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking,misc.consumers.frugal-living,sci.electronics.repair,alt.home.repair,misc.consumers.house
|
|||
|
|||
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
Some stupid wog claiming to be lsmartino wrote just the puerile **** you'd expect from a stupid wog. |
#370
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking,misc.consumers.frugal-living,sci.electronics.repair,alt.home.repair,misc.consumers.house
|
|||
|
|||
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
It has been found that the subject under study, in this case Rod Speed
has a compulsion to answer to anything, even to himself :-D Rod Speed ha escrito: Some stupid wog claiming to be lsmartino wrote just the puerile **** you'd expect from a stupid wog. Says SFA about your pathetically childish remark. (R. Speed trademark quote) See you never, loser... hehehehehehehehe! |
#371
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking,misc.consumers.frugal-living,sci.electronics.repair,alt.home.repair,misc.consumers.house
|
|||
|
|||
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
Some stupid wog claiming to be lsmartino wrote just the puerile **** you'd expect from a stupid wog. |
#372
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking,misc.consumers.frugal-living,sci.electronics.repair,alt.home.repair,misc.consumers.house
|
|||
|
|||
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
lsmartino wrote: It has been found that the subject under study, in this case Rod Speed has a compulsion to answer to anything, even to himself :-D I am starting to wonder about this - remember the "Turing Test" for AI - you have a conversation, via a teleprinter, with the "robot" in another room. If you cant distinguish the reply from that of a person, then it passes the Turing Test. Your testing seems to show that Rod might, indeed, be a robot. A bloody good one - had me fooled for along time. But the inability, or unwillingness, to answer ANY direct questions seems to suggest it is an AI program. Probably someones thesis, and they are keeping track of how much "conversation" Rod manages to continue. If its a good one, it should have some sort of adaptive learning algorithm built in...... Interesting. Andrew VK3BFA. |
#373
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking,misc.consumers.frugal-living,sci.electronics.repair,alt.home.repair,misc.consumers.house
|
|||
|
|||
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
Some gutless ****wit desperately cowering behind
Andrew VK3BFA desperately attempted to bull**** its way out of its predicament and fooled absolutely no one at all, as always. No surprise that it got the bums rush, right out the door. Even Telecom had noticed what a completely unemployable dud it was. |
#374
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking,misc.consumers.frugal-living,sci.electronics.repair,alt.home.repair,misc.consumers.house
|
|||
|
|||
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
|
#375
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking,misc.consumers.frugal-living,sci.electronics.repair,alt.home.repair,misc.consumers.house
|
|||
|
|||
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
"Andrew VK3BFA" wrote in
oups.com: But the inability, or unwillingness, to answer ANY direct questions seems to suggest it is an AI program. Isn't "AI" the acronym for "Annoying Idiot"? grin |
#376
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking,misc.consumers.frugal-living,sci.electronics.repair,alt.home.repair,misc.consumers.house
|
|||
|
|||
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
On 21 Jan 2007 19:49:41 -0800, "Andrew VK3BFA"
wrote: But the inability, or unwillingness, to answer ANY direct questions seems to suggest it is an AI program. Probably someones thesis, and they are keeping track of how much "conversation" Rod manages to continue. If its a good one, it should have some sort of adaptive learning algorithm built in...... Interesting. Andrew VK3BFA. That particular trait is shown by politicians as well :-) Mark Rand RTFM |
#377
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking,misc.consumers.frugal-living,sci.electronics.repair,alt.home.repair,misc.consumers.house
|
|||
|
|||
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
On Sun, 21 Jan 2007 09:59:08 -0800, SMS
wrote: Vic Smith wrote: You got your stories, I got mine. They're not my stories. There are regularly warnings by automotive columnists and mechanics to avoid the quick-change oil change places like the plague, as well as the horror stories of customers that have had their vehicles damaged by these places. Sure, they're your stories. You believe them and apparently are affected by them. I believe the horror stories, but also believe them be merely anecdotal warnings that "**** happens." In fact, my son the professional mechanic, last year called me from the road asking to bring him oil and a drain plug. He had just been working in my garage putting an intake manifold and a bunch of other stuff on his car, and changed the oil while he was at it. Didn't tighten the drain plug and it shook out. He saw the stream in his mirror when it came loose, pulled over and shut it down, so no harm was done except 4 quarts of Mobile 1 on the street. This is a kid who is truly mechanically gifted, but doesn't specialize in changing oil. I have *never* hand tightened an oil drain plug, always wrenching it when it goes in, and I'm sure he won't make that mistake again. But he can do 10 things at once, and I can do only 1. Point is, the quick lube places specialize in this simple stuff, sometimes with drill instructer-like shouts of "Plug in!!!, "Plug torqued to 20 foot pounds!!!" Sort of funny, but good practice. OTOH, I've heard the same type of oil plug horror stories about dealer service bays, and independents. **** happens. The only effect these stories have had on me is to make me pull over after *anybody* changes my oil and make sure nothing is screwed up. Since I don't crawl under the car, even that won't help with a hand-tightened plug, which is a time bomb. The only way to be absolutely confident that things are done as you would do them is to do them yourself. Of, course then when you screw something up, you can't whine and carry on about it. Though I usually change my own oil, I've been to quick lube places many, many times and *never* had an issue. Those are my stories. BTW, I'm more particular about who does other types of auto maintenance on my cars. I'm not risking my vehicle to a place like that. I'll bring it to a reputable independent mechanic, do it myself, or go to the dealer if they have a good price. Usually the Toyota dealer has an oil change deal that is cheaper than Jiffy Lube, plus they are using better quality filters, and more experienced mechanics. Good for you. Sounds as if you have your own stories of success. You're happy with your stories, and I with mine. --Vic |
#378
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking,misc.consumers.frugal-living,sci.electronics.repair,alt.home.repair,misc.consumers.house
|
|||
|
|||
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
Andrew VK3BFA ha escrito: lsmartino wrote: It has been found that the subject under study, in this case Rod Speed has a compulsion to answer to anything, even to himself :-D I am starting to wonder about this - remember the "Turing Test" for AI - you have a conversation, via a teleprinter, with the "robot" in another room. If you cant distinguish the reply from that of a person, then it passes the Turing Test. Your testing seems to show that Rod might, indeed, be a robot. A bloody good one - had me fooled for along time. But the inability, or unwillingness, to answer ANY direct questions seems to suggest it is an AI program. Probably someones thesis, and they are keeping track of how much "conversation" Rod manages to continue. If its a good one, it should have some sort of adaptive learning algorithm built in...... If Rod is a robot, it is probably still in development. Please notice the fact that as soon it reachs the end of its script, or possible answers, it has the tendency to repeat the same answer over and over, in an endless loop. This seems to me like a software bug, but surely the AI programmers behind the Rod project are working hard to correct it. Probably they didnīt knew about this bug, because our testing made it surface. Maybe they will incorpore some sort of adaptive learning algorithm into the robot, as we clearly demonstrated that the Rod project is laking one badly, or has a non functional one. :-) Have fun! |
#379
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking,misc.consumers.frugal-living,sci.electronics.repair,alt.home.repair,misc.consumers.house
|
|||
|
|||
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
Some stupid wog claiming to be lsmartino wrote just the puerile **** you'd expect from a stupid wog. |
#380
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking,misc.consumers.frugal-living,sci.electronics.repair,alt.home.repair,misc.consumers.house
|
|||
|
|||
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
Message to Rod Speed developers: This is the bug that must be solved Some stupid wog claiming to be lsmartino wrote just the puerile **** you'd expect from a stupid wog. Three times the same answer in a row. Remember to solve that before you finish the project. Otherwise the project could be considered a total failure. ;-) Ah... and I think a personality change would be fine too. It would make the final product more appaling to the end user. |
#381
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking,misc.consumers.frugal-living,sci.electronics.repair,alt.home.repair,misc.consumers.house
|
|||
|
|||
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
Rod Speed wrote:
Some stupid wog claiming to be lsmartino wrote just the puerile **** you'd expect from a stupid wog. Off your meds again, welfare boy? |
#382
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking,misc.consumers.frugal-living,sci.electronics.repair,alt.home.repair,misc.consumers.house
|
|||
|
|||
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
Some stupid wog claiming to be lsmartino wrote just the puerile **** you'd expect from a stupid wog. |
#383
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking,misc.consumers.frugal-living,sci.electronics.repair,alt.home.repair,misc.consumers.house
|
|||
|
|||
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
William Souden ha escrito: Rod Speed wrote: Some stupid wog claiming to be lsmartino wrote just the puerile **** you'd expect from a stupid wog. Off your meds again, welfare boy? Probably not. The Rod Speed robot is waiting for a long due update to its A.I. software. Until that happens, it wonīt be able to produce an understandable or meaningful answer since the current software reached the end of all possible combination of insults and answers. I wonder if there is a way to reset Rod remotely... |
#384
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking,misc.consumers.frugal-living,sci.electronics.repair,alt.home.repair,misc.consumers.house
|
|||
|
|||
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
Some stupid wog claiming to be lsmartino wrote just the puerile **** you'd expect from a stupid wog. |
#385
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking,misc.consumers.frugal-living,sci.electronics.repair,alt.home.repair,misc.consumers.house
|
|||
|
|||
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
Alex spake thus:
I was buying a vacuum cleaner from a local vacuum cleaner repair guy and while he was complaining about quality of modern he showed me a vacuum cleaner that looked like it was from from 50s or 60s that he was repairing(replacing a motor) He has a contract with a airline to service vacuum cleaners that are used to vacuum airplane salons. These vacuum cleaners work 24/7 for 50 years and all they need a minor service and motor replaced every so many years. Since you brought up the subject of old vacuums, thought I should mention mine: a Kenmore upright that I bought for $10 back in 1980, when it was already, what? probably 30 years old. I just used it yesterday. In the time I've had it, I've replaced the footswitch, repaired the plug (the cord going into it got a bit frayed, so I epoxied it into the plug), and that's it. Oh, and it has a resuable filter bag, so no filters to buy. Beat that with any of the pieces of **** made today (except for the expensive, gold-plated ones) ... -- Just as McDonald's is where you go when you're hungry but don't really care about the quality of your food, Wikipedia is where you go when you're curious but don't really care about the quality of your knowledge. - Matthew White's WikiWatch (http://users.erols.com/mwhite28/wikiwoo.htm) |
#386
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking,misc.consumers.frugal-living,sci.electronics.repair,alt.home.repair,misc.consumers.house
|
|||
|
|||
Water vacuum fiter. Was Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
Since you brought up the subject of old vacuums, thought I should mention
mine: a Kenmore upright that I bought for $10 back in 1980, when it was already, what? probably 30 years old. I just used it yesterday. In the time I've had it, I've replaced the footswitch, repaired the plug (the cord going into it got a bit frayed, so I epoxied it into the plug), and that's it. Oh, and it has a resuable filter bag, so no filters to buy. Hrm... a 50 year old vacuum bag probably doesn't filter dust out like the disposable bags of today. Other than that I'd prefer a referbed old unit. Beat that with any of the pieces of **** made today (except for the expensive, gold-plated ones) ... Saw an ad for a vacuum using water to catch the dirt and dust instead of a filter. It SOUNDS like a good idea. They were selling for $200 for two. That's more than I'll spend to find out how well it works, but at $100 for one I may have considered. Dumb marketing. Any idea if the idea of filtering with water is actually a good idea? Maybe something I should look for when buying the central vac I'll install in the next year or two when our old canister dies. |
#387
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking,misc.consumers.house
|
|||
|
|||
Water vacuum fiter. Was Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
Noozer wrote:
Since you brought up the subject of old vacuums, thought I should mention mine: a Kenmore upright that I bought for $10 back in 1980, when it was already, what? probably 30 years old. I just used it yesterday. In the time I've had it, I've replaced the footswitch, repaired the plug (the cord going into it got a bit frayed, so I epoxied it into the plug), and that's it. Oh, and it has a resuable filter bag, so no filters to buy. Hrm... a 50 year old vacuum bag probably doesn't filter dust out like the disposable bags of today. Other than that I'd prefer a referbed old unit. Beat that with any of the pieces of **** made today (except for the expensive, gold-plated ones) ... Saw an ad for a vacuum using water to catch the dirt and dust instead of a filter. It SOUNDS like a good idea. They were selling for $200 for two. That's more than I'll spend to find out how well it works, but at $100 for one I may have considered. Dumb marketing. Any idea if the idea of filtering with water is actually a good idea? Maybe something I should look for when buying the central vac I'll install in the next year or two when our old canister dies. Using water to clean air by passing it through is an old idea. Hooka pipes use it in Turkey, and many spray booths use a water curtain in their extraction cabinets to remove paint particles before venting into the open air. So yes, its a good idea but one would need to see it working first on a domestic scale. |
#388
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking,misc.consumers.frugal-living,sci.electronics.repair,alt.home.repair,misc.consumers.house
|
|||
|
|||
Water vacuum fiter. Was Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
|
#389
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking,misc.consumers.frugal-living,sci.electronics.repair,alt.home.repair,misc.consumers.house
|
|||
|
|||
Water vacuum fiter. Was Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
Noozer spake thus:
Since you brought up the subject of old vacuums, thought I should mention mine: a Kenmore upright that I bought for $10 back in 1980, when it was already, what? probably 30 years old. I just used it yesterday. In the time I've had it, I've replaced the footswitch, repaired the plug (the cord going into it got a bit frayed, so I epoxied it into the plug), and that's it. Oh, and it has a resuable filter bag, so no filters to buy. Hrm... a 50 year old vacuum bag probably doesn't filter dust out like the disposable bags of today. Other than that I'd prefer a referbed old unit. Well, I'd never claim that it filters to HEPA specs, but it does work plenty well enough for my needs (and, I imagine, for most folks'). I don't need a modren vacuum for which I have to buy disposable bags. -- Just as McDonald's is where you go when you're hungry but don't really care about the quality of your food, Wikipedia is where you go when you're curious but don't really care about the quality of your knowledge. - Matthew White's WikiWatch (http://users.erols.com/mwhite28/wikiwoo.htm) |
#390
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking,misc.consumers.frugal-living,sci.electronics.repair,alt.home.repair,misc.consumers.house
|
|||
|
|||
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
Vic Smith wrote:
The only effect these stories have had on me is to make me pull over after *anybody* changes my oil and make sure nothing is screwed up. Since I don't crawl under the car, even that won't help with a hand-tightened plug, which is a time bomb. I prefer to go to a competent mechanic who has the experience and attitude to do things properly. This eliminates the need to check that everything was done properly. You can't see if everything was done properly with an oil change easily. Did the mechanic leave the old oil filter gasket stuck onto the engine, a fairly common occurrence? Did he replace the oil drain plug gasket? Did he use the proper oil (something that even the dealer sometimes doesn't do)? Was the filter tightened sufficiently, but not over-tightened? Was the drain plug tightened sufficiently, but not over-tightened. My mechanic now even stocks factory oil filters for his regular customers so you don't have to bring our own. He doesn't try to sell you unneeded services such as the Bilstein Wallet Flush, etc. Oh, and he's about $10 less for an oil change than Jiffy Lube. I'd go there even if he wasn't my brother-in-law! |
#391
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking,misc.consumers.house
|
|||
|
|||
Water vacuum fiter. Was Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
In , on Tue, 23 Jan 2007
09:26:51 GMT, ted frater wrote: Noozer wrote: Since you brought up the subject of old vacuums, thought I should mention mine: a Kenmore upright that I bought for $10 back in 1980, when it was already, what? probably 30 years old. I just used it yesterday. In the time I've had it, I've replaced the footswitch, repaired the plug (the cord going into it got a bit frayed, so I epoxied it into the plug), and that's it. Oh, and it has a resuable filter bag, so no filters to buy. Hrm... a 50 year old vacuum bag probably doesn't filter dust out like the disposable bags of today. Other than that I'd prefer a referbed old unit. Beat that with any of the pieces of **** made today (except for the expensive, gold-plated ones) ... Saw an ad for a vacuum using water to catch the dirt and dust instead of a filter. It SOUNDS like a good idea. They were selling for $200 for two. That's more than I'll spend to find out how well it works, but at $100 for one I may have considered. Dumb marketing. Any idea if the idea of filtering with water is actually a good idea? Maybe something I should look for when buying the central vac I'll install in the next year or two when our old canister dies. Using water to clean air by passing it through is an old idea. Hooka pipes use it in Turkey, and many spray booths use a water curtain in their extraction cabinets to remove paint particles before venting into the open air. So yes, its a good idea but one would need to see it working first on a domestic scale. Rainbow Vacuum cleaners have been doing it for decades. http://www.rainbowsystem.com/eng/history.cfm (flash) My parents bought their first Rainbow in ~'67. We bought our only Rainbow in '90. Before HEPA filters, that was THE filtration method for people with allergies. |
#392
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking,misc.consumers.house
|
|||
|
|||
Water vacuum fiter. Was Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing?
|
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing? | Electronics Repair | |||
Planned Obselescence....A Good Thing? | Home Repair | |||
too much of a good thing | Woodworking | |||
Update: too much of a good thing | Woodworking | |||
Not very good at this woodwork thing... | UK diy |