Cougsfan
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Sep 10, 2008
- Messages
- 1,630
- Location
- Eastern Washington State
- Tractor
- Ferguson TO35, Branson 4720CH
We recently replaced our microwave, toaster and dishwasher. They were all just a few years old, and all had issues. In fact it seems like most appliances we have bought in the last 15 years or so have an unusually high number of issues. We don't buy the cheapest appliances, we read and pay attention to the reviews. Some have lasted well, but in general they all seem far more highly prone to having issues. Unfortunately I have became on first name basis with our local appliance repair guy. He says you can't necessarily go by brand, or price, or where it is made. Some models of some brands are definitely better than others, but all of them definitely are of considerably poorer quality compared to decades past. He suggested that we consult with him prior to buying something so he can tell us which model of which brand he considers better. He also says the more "features" an appliance has; the more issues you are likely to have.
Its not like they don't know how to make a toaster that toasts evenly on both sides and will last for 20 to 40 years because they used to make them that way.
You always hear that "you get what you pay for." That is not necessarily true in the appliance industry. Expensiveness doesn't appear to correlate very well with quality. I have read you can actually buy higher quality appliances in Europe and Japan made by our same common name manufacturers, but those are not available in the States, some suggest because of reasons related to planned obsolescence. I am not much to buy into conspiracy theories, but this makes one consider that suggestion. What can consumers do when an entire industry appears to be immersed in the planned obsolescence mentality?
A side rant; The water filter on our newest refrigerator is a microchipped filter that raised the filter replacement cost from $20 to $50. Why do I need a filter with a microchip to tell me it is time to replace it?
Its not like they don't know how to make a toaster that toasts evenly on both sides and will last for 20 to 40 years because they used to make them that way.
You always hear that "you get what you pay for." That is not necessarily true in the appliance industry. Expensiveness doesn't appear to correlate very well with quality. I have read you can actually buy higher quality appliances in Europe and Japan made by our same common name manufacturers, but those are not available in the States, some suggest because of reasons related to planned obsolescence. I am not much to buy into conspiracy theories, but this makes one consider that suggestion. What can consumers do when an entire industry appears to be immersed in the planned obsolescence mentality?
A side rant; The water filter on our newest refrigerator is a microchipped filter that raised the filter replacement cost from $20 to $50. Why do I need a filter with a microchip to tell me it is time to replace it?