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#1
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Kitchen appliances
This is like asking, what is a good automobile!
Blue collar worker, looking for dependable....appliances. So looking for stuff above basic/cheap, maybe in stainless. Have had many brands, not real impressed with Maytag, so I'll eliminate it. Need electric stove, fridge, & DW. Got an over the range GE s/s microwave, which I've been happy with. What brands would you recommend? |
#2
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Kitchen appliances
On Nov 23, 11:01*am, "Curt" wrote:
This is like asking, what is a good automobile! Blue collar worker, looking for dependable....appliances. So looking for stuff above basic/cheap, maybe in stainless. Have had many brands, not real impressed with Maytag, so I'll eliminate it. Need electric stove, fridge, & DW. *Got an over the range GE s/s microwave, which I've been happy with. What brands would you recommend? We have a Kenmore smooth-top electric range, very happy. Not impressed with SS, shows every fingerprint too easily. |
#3
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Kitchen appliances
I'm buying Stove and dishwasher and carpet right now for the wife.
When the kids leave the house they want to redo everything,, It depends on what brand you want. and What you want to spend. wife wants this whrillpool smooth top which is $1400 mine is a drop in and I got to cut my granet counter top which is another $300.. Sears has good deal on a dishwasher $399 Kenmore it was made by whrillpool it has the stainless insides and other bells and whistels the wife wanted.. Just shop the stores lowes best buy Depot and local mom and pops. remember you find one others will match it case you like a certin store. |
#4
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Kitchen appliances
On Nov 23, 12:44*pm, "Jack Valance" wrote:
I'm buying Stove and dishwasher and carpet right now for the wife. When the kids leave the house they want to redo everything,, It depends on what brand you want. and What you want to spend. wife wants this whrillpool smooth top which is $1400 mine is a drop in and I got to cut my granet counter top which is another $300.. Sears has good deal on a dishwasher $399 Kenmore it was made by whrillpool it has the stainless insides and other bells and whistels the wife wanted... Just shop the stores lowes best buy Depot and local mom and pops. remember you find one others will match it case you like a certin store. I buy my appliances at a local "no Mom, just Pop" store with a real fancy name: The Appliance Store The owner has an inner-city warehouse where he stocks his goods (new and used) and mostly sells used appliances. He also has a no frills store front in the burbs where the vast majority of the appliances are new, with a small back room of used stuff. His prices are just about always better than everyone else's and when they're not, he makes them so. There's no sales BS. He tells you about the features, including which ones are worth the money and which ones are just expensive fluff. He always clears up who makes which brands, which units are entry level, mid level, etc. and why. Metal this compared to plastic that, etc. I bought my dryer on a Saturday. He said he could deliver it on Monday: to my house for $25 or to the store for free. When I offered to go to his warehouse and pick it up myself that day, he took $20 off the price. I bought my dishwasher on a Friday night. He dropped it off at my house Saturday morning while he was making his morning run from the warehouse to his store, no charge. He wouldn't even take a tip...but I did refill his coffee cup. I don't need fancy show rooms or pushy sale's dweeps. I just want a decent appliance at a decent price and to work with an honest person. Is that too much to ask for? |
#6
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#7
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#8
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Kitchen appliances
On Nov 23, 1:50*pm, wrote:
On Wed, 23 Nov 2011 12:12:24 -0600, " wrote: On Wed, 23 Nov 2011 09:38:32 -0800 (PST), "hr(bob) " wrote: On Nov 23, 11:01*am, "Curt" wrote: This is like asking, what is a good automobile! Blue collar worker, looking for dependable....appliances. So looking for stuff above basic/cheap, maybe in stainless. Have had many brands, not real impressed with Maytag, so I'll eliminate it. Need electric stove, fridge, & DW. *Got an over the range GE s/s microwave, which I've been happy with. What brands would you recommend? We have a Kenmore smooth-top electric range, very happy. *Not impressed with SS, shows every fingerprint too easily. Perhaps cheap stainless does but ours has been really good that way. *There seems to be some coating on the stainless but it's hard to tell. If it is brushed stainless it won't show fingerprints, that is only polished stainless and who would want that? Brushed stainless sure does show fingerprints, but the trick is to clean the surface, then apply some Pledge and buff off. Seriously, works like a charm - it makes the surface much more fingerprint- resistant. nate |
#9
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Kitchen appliances
"N8N" wrote in message ... On Nov 23, 1:50 pm, wrote: On Wed, 23 Nov 2011 12:12:24 -0600, " wrote: On Wed, 23 Nov 2011 09:38:32 -0800 (PST), "hr(bob) " wrote: On Nov 23, 11:01 am, "Curt" wrote: This is like asking, what is a good automobile! Blue collar worker, looking for dependable....appliances. So looking for stuff above basic/cheap, maybe in stainless. Have had many brands, not real impressed with Maytag, so I'll eliminate it. Need electric stove, fridge, & DW. Got an over the range GE s/s microwave, which I've been happy with. What brands would you recommend? We have a Kenmore smooth-top electric range, very happy. Not impressed with SS, shows every fingerprint too easily. Perhaps cheap stainless does but ours has been really good that way. There seems to be some coating on the stainless but it's hard to tell. If it is brushed stainless it won't show fingerprints, that is only polished stainless and who would want that? Brushed stainless sure does show fingerprints, but the trick is to clean the surface, then apply some Pledge and buff off. Seriously, works like a charm - it makes the surface much more fingerprint- resistant. nate Will keep that in mind. Woulda never thought of Pledge. Thanks, nate. I noticed yesterday during install that the brushed does definitely take fingerprints, but I already noticed that on the LG fridge. I'm not really fussy about fingerprint marks, as long as they're within reason. I remember people who used to cover their furniture with that clear plastic in the 60's. It was hideous looking, and hot to sit on. And it made a crinkly sound. I always thought people who had that stuff were a little over the top obsessive, and hardly wanted to sit down, lest I may leave a germ or fingerprint. And I always envisioned the lady of the house getting out the respirator mask and industrial strength disinfectants right after I left and giving the chair a thorough what's for. We're not slobs, but we live in our house and use it, fingerprints and all. Steve |
#10
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Kitchen appliances
On Nov 23, 2:49*pm, "Steve B" wrote:
"N8N" wrote in message ... On Nov 23, 1:50 pm, wrote: On Wed, 23 Nov 2011 12:12:24 -0600, " wrote: On Wed, 23 Nov 2011 09:38:32 -0800 (PST), "hr(bob) " wrote: On Nov 23, 11:01 am, "Curt" wrote: This is like asking, what is a good automobile! Blue collar worker, looking for dependable....appliances. So looking for stuff above basic/cheap, maybe in stainless. Have had many brands, not real impressed with Maytag, so I'll eliminate it. Need electric stove, fridge, & DW. Got an over the range GE s/s microwave, which I've been happy with. What brands would you recommend? We have a Kenmore smooth-top electric range, very happy. Not impressed with SS, shows every fingerprint too easily. Perhaps cheap stainless does but ours has been really good that way. There seems to be some coating on the stainless but it's hard to tell. If it is brushed stainless it won't show fingerprints, that is only polished stainless and who would want that? Brushed stainless sure does show fingerprints, but the trick is to clean the surface, then apply some Pledge and buff off. *Seriously, works like a charm - it makes the surface much more fingerprint- resistant. nate Will keep that in mind. *Woulda never thought of Pledge. *Thanks, nate. *I noticed yesterday during install that the brushed does definitely take fingerprints, but I already noticed that on the LG fridge. *I'm not really fussy about fingerprint marks, as long as they're within reason. I remember people who used to cover their furniture with that clear plastic in the 60's. *It was hideous looking, and hot to sit on. *And it made a crinkly sound. *I always thought people who had that stuff were a little over the top obsessive, and hardly wanted to sit down, lest I may leave a germ or fingerprint. *And I always envisioned the lady of the house getting out the respirator mask and industrial strength disinfectants right after I left and giving the chair a thorough what's for. We're not slobs, but we live in our house and use it, fingerprints and all. Steve Oh, I hear ya... I never hardly bothered, it seemed to get done at my last place whenever the trash can (also brushed stainless) started to look too shabby. which was about every 6 mos. or so. The fingerprints really didn't bother me greatly, but since the Pledge kept them from being so noticeable, I went ahead and did it. I think I found a suggestion to use it online, tried it, and found that it really did work. nate |
#11
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Kitchen appliances
Well I NEVER BUY ANYTHING FROM SEARS THAT MIGHT REQUIRE SERVICE!!!!!!!
My mom died, in selling her home I called sears to get her furnace with air serviced.... Same tech did both. They charged the travel charge twice. then discounted the 2nd travel charge by 1/2 just for the tech to change tool kits. This is a rip off. I vote with my feet and didnt buy anything from sears that might EVER need service I still shopped for tools at sears, till I got caught in a SLOW moving line while the cashier pushed credit cards, when she repeatedly tried to push me into one I said call the manager! I asked him are you a merchant or a credit card provider? then i answered for him and said heres my carrt of stuff valued at over 700 bucks you can put it back....... besides craftsman tools arent as good, they rust easily. I rarely shop for ANYTHING at sears, and have heard rumors they are close to going out of business |
#12
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Kitchen appliances
Curt wrote:
This is like asking, what is a good automobile! Blue collar worker, looking for dependable....appliances. So looking for stuff above basic/cheap, maybe in stainless. Have had many brands, not real impressed with Maytag, so I'll eliminate it. Need electric stove, fridge, & DW. Got an over the range GE s/s microwave, which I've been happy with. What brands would you recommend? Not positive about the brands, but the smooth top electric ranges are to be avoided according to most prior posts on the subject. Someday (next week, next year) it will break and you'll just about have to buy a new stove. My only impression of brands is high-end vs middle. Of the middle-priced ones, they are virtually interchangeable in function and useful life. Your choice, therefore, may depend on esthetics rather than dependability. If you have natural gas available, most cooks prefer it over electric. It's range of temperatures is vastly superior to that of an electric. |
#13
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Kitchen appliances
Ed Pawlowski wrote: On Wed, 23 Nov 2011 12:01:17 -0500, wrote: This is like asking, what is a good automobile! Blue collar worker, looking for dependable....appliances. So looking for stuff above basic/cheap, maybe in stainless. Have had many brands, not real impressed with Maytag, so I'll eliminate it. Need electric stove, fridge,& DW. Got an over the range GE s/s microwave, which I've been happy with. What brands would you recommend? I've been very happy with Kitchen Aid brand over the years. Whirlpool family brands seem to be a bit better than Frigidaire family brands. Hi, I have been happy with GE or Whirlpool brand. I always get what I can tackle for repairs. The more bells and whistles the more trouble it seems. This house contains all Whirlpool in the kitchen and laundry room. After 15 years or so no major repair was need on any. |
#14
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Kitchen appliances
On Wed, 23 Nov 2011 15:39:14 -0600, "HeyBub"
wrote: If you have natural gas available, most cooks prefer it over electric. It's range of temperatures is vastly superior to that of an electric. If you don't have NG available, propane can be a good alternative. We had it put in about 25 years ago. I hated electric for the first few years we lived here. |
#15
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Kitchen appliances
On Wed, 23 Nov 2011 12:01:17 -0500, "Curt" wrote:
This is like asking, what is a good automobile! Blue collar worker, looking for dependable....appliances. So looking for stuff above basic/cheap, maybe in stainless. Have had many brands, not real impressed with Maytag, so I'll eliminate it. Need electric stove, fridge, & DW. Got an over the range GE s/s microwave, which I've been happy with. What brands would you recommend? I've always had good luck with Whirlpool and Kenmore and I think Whirlpool makes some of Kenmore's stuff. |
#16
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Kitchen appliances
On 11/23/2011 11:01 AM, Curt wrote:
This is like asking, what is a good automobile! Blue collar worker, looking for dependable....appliances. So looking for stuff above basic/cheap, maybe in stainless. Have had many brands, not real impressed with Maytag, so I'll eliminate it. Need electric stove, fridge,& DW. Got an over the range GE s/s microwave, which I've been happy with. What brands would you recommend? watch the line wrap, when I put on the link, it won't send We use stainless steel wipes - removes fingerprints, cleans, polishes http://www.google.com/webhp?hl=en&ta...tainless+steel +wipes&hl=en&site=webhp&prmd=imvns&source=univ&tbm =shop &tbo=u&sa=X&ei=-0HOTqDOF6yGsgKD_4XWDg&sqi=2&ved =0CHIQrQQ&bav=on.2,or.r_gc.r_pw.,cf.osb&fp =d98391f7096812b4&biw=839&bih=498 If things get bad enough, use 3M scotch brite pads - maroon is the one used by commercial stainless installers for finishing welds, grinding, etc. http://www.google.com/webhp?hl=en&tab=iw#q =3m+pads+scotch+brite&hl =en&site=webhp&prmd=imvns&source=univ&tbm=shop&tbo =u&sa=X&ei=HUPOTtmeCLODsAKvpKXnDg&ved=0CIoBEK0E&ba v=on.2,or.r_gc.r_pw.,cf.osb&fp=d98391f7096812b4&bi w =839&bih=498 -- ___________________________________ Keep the whole world singing . . . Dan G |
#17
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Kitchen appliances
On Wed, 23 Nov 2011 12:01:17 -0500, "Curt" wrote: This is like asking, what is a good automobile! Blue collar worker, looking for dependable....appliances. So looking for stuff above basic/cheap, maybe in stainless. Have had many brands, not real impressed with Maytag, so I'll eliminate it. Need electric stove, fridge, & DW. Got an over the range GE s/s microwave, which I've been happy with. What brands would you recommend? As far as dishwashers, there's an issue in the news right now with some catching fire. A class action suit has been started. http://www.kitchenaidfire.com/ I'd do a lot of research before buying one. |
#18
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Kitchen appliances
"Curt" wrote in message
This is like asking, what is a good automobile! Blue collar worker, looking for dependable....appliances. So looking for stuff above basic/cheap, maybe in stainless. Commercial or appliances made for restaurants will be higher quality. I bought a piece of junk made in China deep fryer. The temperature numbers came off when washing to remove the grease. And the cord stopped working after 1 year. And it takes forever to warm up. No more China crap for me! The next deep fryer I buy will be a commercial restaurant type (counter top). This takes a special 240 volt 30 amp outlet, but more voltage and amperage means it will warm up faster. Just google using the word commercial or restaurant, then the type of appliance. Like commercial deep fryer. I found these (look at specs for voltage/amperage)... http://www.centralrestaurant.com/Cou...ers-pl341.html |
#19
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Kitchen appliances
On 11/24/2011 10:18 AM, homer wrote:
As far as dishwashers, there's an issue in the news right now with some catching fire. A class action suit has been started. http://www.kitchenaidfire.com/ I'd do a lot of research before buying one. You could buy a GE http://www.cpsc.gov/cpscpub/prerel/prhtml11/11022.html Or an LG http://www.cpsc.gov/cpscpub/prerel/prhtml11/11324.html Or Samsung death by electrucution: http://www.cpsc.gov/cpscpub/prerel/prhtml10/10031.html Or maybe have Electrolux gas you to death: http://www.cpsc.gov/cpscpub/prerel/prhtml10/10048.html |
#21
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Kitchen appliances
On Thu, 24 Nov 2011 13:17:38 -0500, Betelgeuse
wrote: On 11/24/2011 10:18 AM, homer wrote: As far as dishwashers, there's an issue in the news right now with some catching fire. A class action suit has been started. http://www.kitchenaidfire.com/ I'd do a lot of research before buying one. You could buy a GE http://www.cpsc.gov/cpscpub/prerel/prhtml11/11022.html Or an LG http://www.cpsc.gov/cpscpub/prerel/prhtml11/11324.html Or Samsung death by electrucution: http://www.cpsc.gov/cpscpub/prerel/prhtml10/10031.html Or maybe have Electrolux gas you to death: http://www.cpsc.gov/cpscpub/prerel/prhtml10/10048.html Wow! A whole 900 units (I looked because we bought one about six months ago). |
#22
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#23
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#25
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Kitchen appliances
On Nov 23, 6:34*pm, Higgs Boson wrote:
On Nov 23, 10:12*am, DerbyDad03 wrote: On Nov 23, 12:44*pm, "Jack Valance" wrote: I'm buying Stove and dishwasher and carpet right now for the wife. When the kids leave the house they want to redo everything,, It depends on what brand you want. and What you want to spend. wife wants this whrillpool smooth top which is $1400 mine is a drop in and I got to cut my granet counter top which is another $300.. Sears has good deal on a dishwasher $399 Kenmore it was made by whrillpool it has the stainless insides and other bells and whistels the wife wanted.. Just shop the stores lowes best buy Depot and local mom and pops. remember you find one others will match it case you like a certin store. I buy my appliances at a local "no Mom, just Pop" store with a real fancy name: The Appliance Store The owner has an inner-city warehouse where he stocks his goods (new and used) and mostly sells used appliances. He also has a no frills store front in the burbs where the vast majority of the appliances are new, with a small back room of used stuff. His prices are just about always better than everyone else's and when they're not, he makes them so. There's no sales BS. He tells you about the features, including which ones are worth the money and which ones are just expensive fluff. He always clears up who makes which brands, which units are entry level, mid level, etc. and why. Metal this compared to plastic that, etc. I bought my dryer on a Saturday. He said he could deliver it on Monday: to my house for $25 or to the store for free. When I offered to go to his warehouse and pick it up myself that day, he took $20 off the price. I bought my dishwasher on a Friday night. He dropped it off at my house Saturday morning while he was making his morning run from the warehouse to his store, no charge. He wouldn't even take a tip...but I did refill his coffee cup. I don't need fancy show rooms or pushy sale's dweeps. I just want a decent appliance at a decent price and to work with an honest person. Is that too much to ask for? .... Derby Dad, what state/city is that place? *I looked on-line and found Appliance Stores in several states & cities. What difference does it make what state/city my Appliance Store is in? I assume you'd shop at the one closest to you. Sounds like a great way to do business. It is. But -- do you get the usual warranties? *And what happens if you need service? Of course. Everything comes with the same manufacturer's warranty you'd get anywhere. If you need service, you call the manufacturer's service department and they send out a tech from whatever company they contract with in your area. It's not like Home Depot or Lowes sends out a Home Depot or Lowes employee to service your equipment. TIA YW HB |
#26
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Kitchen appliances
On Thu, 24 Nov 2011 16:23:21 -0800 (PST), DerbyDad03
wrote: On Nov 23, 6:34*pm, Higgs Boson wrote: On Nov 23, 10:12*am, DerbyDad03 wrote: On Nov 23, 12:44*pm, "Jack Valance" wrote: I'm buying Stove and dishwasher and carpet right now for the wife. When the kids leave the house they want to redo everything,, It depends on what brand you want. and What you want to spend. wife wants this whrillpool smooth top which is $1400 mine is a drop in and I got to cut my granet counter top which is another $300.. Sears has good deal on a dishwasher $399 Kenmore it was made by whrillpool it has the stainless insides and other bells and whistels the wife wanted.. Just shop the stores lowes best buy Depot and local mom and pops. remember you find one others will match it case you like a certin store. I buy my appliances at a local "no Mom, just Pop" store with a real fancy name: The Appliance Store The owner has an inner-city warehouse where he stocks his goods (new and used) and mostly sells used appliances. He also has a no frills store front in the burbs where the vast majority of the appliances are new, with a small back room of used stuff. His prices are just about always better than everyone else's and when they're not, he makes them so. There's no sales BS. He tells you about the features, including which ones are worth the money and which ones are just expensive fluff. He always clears up who makes which brands, which units are entry level, mid level, etc. and why. Metal this compared to plastic that, etc. I bought my dryer on a Saturday. He said he could deliver it on Monday: to my house for $25 or to the store for free. When I offered to go to his warehouse and pick it up myself that day, he took $20 off the price. I bought my dishwasher on a Friday night. He dropped it off at my house Saturday morning while he was making his morning run from the warehouse to his store, no charge. He wouldn't even take a tip...but I did refill his coffee cup. I don't need fancy show rooms or pushy sale's dweeps. I just want a decent appliance at a decent price and to work with an honest person. Is that too much to ask for? ... Derby Dad, what state/city is that place? *I looked on-line and found Appliance Stores in several states & cities. What difference does it make what state/city my Appliance Store is in? I assume you'd shop at the one closest to you. Sounds like a great way to do business. It is. But -- do you get the usual warranties? *And what happens if you need service? Of course. Everything comes with the same manufacturer's warranty you'd get anywhere. If you need service, you call the manufacturer's service department and they send out a tech from whatever company they contract with in your area. It's not like Home Depot or Lowes sends out a Home Depot or Lowes employee to service your equipment. Last time we called (dishwasher) it was a Lowes employee (at least the truck was theirs). Turns out there was no problem but no one could find the "error code". Turned out to be low "Jet Dry", or whatever the wetting agent is called, reservoir. Go figure. |
#27
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Kitchen appliances
On Thu, 24 Nov 2011 16:23:21 -0800 (PST), DerbyDad03
wrote: On Nov 23, 6:34Â*pm, Higgs Boson wrote: On Nov 23, 10:12Â*am, DerbyDad03 wrote: On Nov 23, 12:44Â*pm, "Jack Valance" wrote: I'm buying Stove and dishwasher and carpet right now for the wife. When the kids leave the house they want to redo everything,, It depends on what brand you want. and What you want to spend. wife wants this whrillpool smooth top which is $1400 mine is a drop in and I got to cut my granet counter top which is another $300.. Sears has good deal on a dishwasher $399 Kenmore it was made by whrillpool it has the stainless insides and other bells and whistels the wife wanted.. Just shop the stores lowes best buy Depot and local mom and pops. remember you find one others will match it case you like a certin store. I buy my appliances at a local "no Mom, just Pop" store with a real fancy name: The Appliance Store The owner has an inner-city warehouse where he stocks his goods (new and used) and mostly sells used appliances. He also has a no frills store front in the burbs where the vast majority of the appliances are new, with a small back room of used stuff. His prices are just about always better than everyone else's and when they're not, he makes them so. There's no sales BS. He tells you about the features, including which ones are worth the money and which ones are just expensive fluff. He always clears up who makes which brands, which units are entry level, mid level, etc. and why. Metal this compared to plastic that, etc. I bought my dryer on a Saturday. He said he could deliver it on Monday: to my house for $25 or to the store for free. When I offered to go to his warehouse and pick it up myself that day, he took $20 off the price. I bought my dishwasher on a Friday night. He dropped it off at my house Saturday morning while he was making his morning run from the warehouse to his store, no charge. He wouldn't even take a tip...but I did refill his coffee cup. I don't need fancy show rooms or pushy sale's dweeps. I just want a decent appliance at a decent price and to work with an honest person. Is that too much to ask for? ... Derby Dad, what state/city is that place? Â*I looked on-line and found Appliance Stores in several states & cities. What difference does it make what state/city my Appliance Store is in? I assume you'd shop at the one closest to you. Sounds like a great way to do business. It is. But -- do you get the usual warranties? Â*And what happens if you need service? Of course. Everything comes with the same manufacturer's warranty you'd get anywhere. If you need service, you call the manufacturer's service department and they send out a tech from whatever company they contract with in your area. It's not like Home Depot or Lowes sends out a Home Depot or Lowes employee to service your equipment. Perhaps not - but when I buy from my local appliance place they DO send out "their guy" to do the repairs - because they ARE the company that contracts to do the repairs in the area - which in MY books is a convincing arguement for buying from them. If something THEY sold breaks down, they are liable to give priority service as they want you to come back for the next appliance you need as well. Same with TV and Audio equipment. There are 2 dealerships in the Twin Cities (Kitchener Waterloo) with their own in-house authourized service centers - they are the "repair depot" for every product they sell. Even if they didn't have "price guarantee" and match the big-box store prices, it's a no-brainer where I'll be buying my TV and Audio equipment. TIA YW HB |
#28
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Kitchen appliances
On Nov 24, 10:06*pm, wrote:
On Thu, 24 Nov 2011 16:23:21 -0800 (PST), DerbyDad03 wrote: On Nov 23, 6:34*pm, Higgs Boson wrote: On Nov 23, 10:12*am, DerbyDad03 wrote: On Nov 23, 12:44*pm, "Jack Valance" wrote: I'm buying Stove and dishwasher and carpet right now for the wife. When the kids leave the house they want to redo everything,, It depends on what brand you want. and What you want to spend. wife wants this whrillpool smooth top which is $1400 mine is a drop in and I got to cut my granet counter top which is another $300.. Sears has good deal on a dishwasher $399 Kenmore it was made by whrillpool it has the stainless insides and other bells and whistels the wife wanted.. Just shop the stores lowes best buy Depot and local mom and pops. remember you find one others will match it case you like a certin store. I buy my appliances at a local "no Mom, just Pop" store with a real fancy name: The Appliance Store The owner has an inner-city warehouse where he stocks his goods (new and used) and mostly sells used appliances. He also has a no frills store front in the burbs where the vast majority of the appliances are new, with a small back room of used stuff. His prices are just about always better than everyone else's and when they're not, he makes them so. There's no sales BS. He tells you about the features, including which ones are worth the money and which ones are just expensive fluff. He always clears up who makes which brands, which units are entry level, mid level, etc. and why. Metal this compared to plastic that, etc. I bought my dryer on a Saturday. He said he could deliver it on Monday: to my house for $25 or to the store for free. When I offered to go to his warehouse and pick it up myself that day, he took $20 off the price. I bought my dishwasher on a Friday night. He dropped it off at my house Saturday morning while he was making his morning run from the warehouse to his store, no charge. He wouldn't even take a tip...but I did refill his coffee cup. I don't need fancy show rooms or pushy sale's dweeps. I just want a decent appliance at a decent price and to work with an honest person.. Is that too much to ask for? ... Derby Dad, what state/city is that place? *I looked on-line and found Appliance Stores in several states & cities. What difference does it make what state/city my Appliance Store is in? I assume you'd shop at the one closest to you. Sounds like a great way to do business. It is. But -- do you get the usual warranties? *And what happens if you need service? Of course. Everything comes with the same manufacturer's warranty you'd get anywhere. If you need service, you call the manufacturer's service department and they send out a tech from whatever company they contract with in your area. It's not like Home Depot or Lowes sends out a Home Depot or Lowes employee to service your equipment. Perhaps not - but when I buy from my local appliance place they DO send out "their guy" to do the repairs - because they ARE the company that contracts to do the repairs in the area - which in MY books is a convincing arguement for buying from them. If something THEY sold breaks down, they are liable to give priority service as they want you to come back for the next appliance you need as well. Same with TV and Audio equipment. There are 2 dealerships in the Twin Cities (Kitchener Waterloo) with their own in-house authourized service centers - they are the "repair depot" for every product they sell. Even if they didn't have "price guarantee" and match the big-box store prices, it's a no-brainer where I'll be buying my TV and Audio equipment. TIA YW HB I agree...that's exactly why I bought my snow blower from the outdoor power equipment dealer that also happens to be the factory authorized service center for Ariens in my area. Well, that, and because I trusted them to assemble it better than the pimply faced kid or laid- off copier salesman at Home Depot. I've posted on that subject/reason for buying from those types of stores before. However, in the case of the appliances I've purchased from the Appliance Store, they do not have a service department. The one time I needed service on an appliance I bought from them, the manufacturer sent a tech from a local company that sells parts and service, but not actual appliances. So I got my appliance at a great price, with great sales service, and had no problem getting service on the unit because the service company has no reason to prioritize customers vs. non-customers, at least from a "purchase of my next appliance" perspective. Obviously a customer with a huge contract with them, like an apartment complex might get priority, but that's a different story. I'll bet even your guy would give them priority also. ;-) |
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Kitchen appliances
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#31
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Kitchen appliances
On Fri, 25 Nov 2011 00:13:55 -0500, Ed Pawlowski wrote:
On Thu, 24 Nov 2011 17:36:00 -0500, wrote: When I was looking, the only "american made" units were BOSCH. Frigidaire used to have a plant in Canada as well as four in the US. I know one has been closed, but I thought others were still working. As I noted in another post, Frigidaire is owned by Electrolux and, yes, they do have manufacturing plants in the US (Georgia and Tennessee and perhaps some others). |
#32
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Kitchen appliances
On Fri, 25 Nov 2011 00:06:29 -0500, Ed Pawlowski wrote:
On Thu, 24 Nov 2011 11:53:04 -0500, wrote: Whirlpool is Kenmore, Roper, Kitchen Aid. Maytag, Amana Jenn Air and some others. There may only be 2 "American" manufacturers these days (GE being the other one) although neither really make much here. Frigidaire (now owned by Electrolux) makes some of the Kenmore products also. Roper used to make some of their gas ranges, but I don't know if they still do. Most of the appliance companies have been bought, moved, closed, re-branded and re-named so often it is difficult to keep track. Philco went out of business in the 1960's or so, but I see the name used once in a while for some rebranded stuff. I used to sell to: Edison Electric, White Westinghouse, White Consolidated Industries, Frigidaire, and Electrolux. Same company, just new owners and names over the years. They also made Norge, Crosley, and a few other brands that I don't recall right now . Same product, different stickers. And GE does not build any appliances any more - large or small. It is strictly a licencing agreement.Same as RCA.And a whols slew of other "American" brands. |
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Kitchen appliances
On Fri, 25 Nov 2011 00:13:55 -0500, Ed Pawlowski wrote:
On Thu, 24 Nov 2011 17:36:00 -0500, wrote: When I was looking, the only "american made" units were BOSCH. Frigidaire used to have a plant in Canada as well as four in the US. I know one has been closed, but I thought others were still working. See: http://www.stillmadeinusa.com/applia...ndryAppliances for a RAPIDLY shrinking list of home appliances made in America. |
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