dodge man
Super Star Member
We had problems with our Samsung stove also. It blew something during its cleaning cycle. Fixed under warranty for free and has been fine since. The fridge has been fine.
Unless it's designed to fail, like the Ford water pump.Longevity always depends on how you take care of something.
Lifetime purchases…Am I the only one who thinks it's weird that appliances are INFERIOR to the ones made in 1965? Is technology really supposed to to BACKWARD?
That's when my grandparents built their house. Never changed the washer, dryer, oven, stove, either deep freeze, or the USED refrigerator they put in their basement.
They never stopped using the automatic Sunbeam toaster they bought in the Sixties. You put two slices in, and in a couple of minutes, they pop out, perfectly toasted.
My guess is there will be a slew of those submerged wet belts driving the oil pumps failing in the future. Of course outside of Fords warranty and a real pain to replace and that is assuming the driver shuts down the engine before the main, rod, and cam bearings seize do to oil starvation. On the 2.7's the engine has to be retimed since the cam chains gears have to be removed first. Brilliant.Ford's clever answer to the problem of coolant intrusion was to put a second gasket around the water pump. So when the first gasket fails, you are supposed to drive to a mechanic before the second gasket fails.
The mid 1980's Honda engines were considered very long lived if clean oil and service dates for cam belts and water pumps were followed, unfortunately some folks would change the cam belt but not do the water pump at the same time. When the bearings go on the water pump unlucky owners engines cams go out of time and being interference engines valves get smacked all over not just replacing a water pump.Unless it's designed to fail, like the Ford water pump.