I'm still running the same microwave the prior owners of our house installed in the 1995 kitchen remodel. I've replaced the magnetron, replaced door switches, and even the mode stirrer. But each of those were $5 or $15 parts, have helped me avoid redoing the custom cabinetry that holds it, and are
way cheaper than replacing a large 1800 watt microwave oven.
Point is, yeah...
parts fail on a microwave, but they're pretty easy to repair.
Also, I thought that nowadays, most of them conformed to a few industry standard sizes, to make them more easily swappable. Not like the earlier days of surround kits and custom cabinets, what I'm dealing with on mine.
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What I'd be more concerned about with a drawer microwave, is the useability factor. We use ours for heating more liquids than solids, and how does that full cup of tea or soup respond to opening and closing a drawer? How do you clean the thing, when something spatters or boils over?