Yeah, sad.
Built in obsolescence is depressing.
Repairing your leaky kitchen mixer tap with a 20p O ring is fucking golden though.
The replacement parts or whole thing are so cheap (and often shit) that repair is pointless or impossible.
I called an appliance repair guy out to fix a Miele oven, he said it basically wasn’t worth the repair, I asked which he recommended- ‘the cheapest one that works, they’re all crap and break in 5 years’ he said with a devastated look.
I used to manage a 1929 apartment building in the States.
I was the live-in Super. 🙂
I could still buy parts for the concealed shower/bath mixer valves from the same company in Michigan that made them 70 years before; valve seats, washer jumpers etc.
I was keeping these 1930s bathrooms working.
Same with the apartment door locks, I could order new cylinders and whole mechanisms, exact matches for the originals.
Mind you that was 20 years ago, and things were very different then.
Yeah, sad.
Built in obsolescence is depressing.
Repairing your leaky kitchen mixer tap with a 20p O ring is fucking golden though.
The replacement parts or whole thing are so cheap (and often shit) that repair is pointless or impossible.
I called an appliance repair guy out to fix a Miele oven, he said it basically wasn’t worth the repair, I asked which he recommended- ‘the cheapest one that works, they’re all crap and break in 5 years’ he said with a devastated look.
I used to manage a 1929 apartment building in the States.
I was the live-in Super. 🙂
I could still buy parts for the concealed shower/bath mixer valves from the same company in Michigan that made them 70 years before; valve seats, washer jumpers etc.
I was keeping these 1930s bathrooms working.
Same with the apartment door locks, I could order new cylinders and whole mechanisms, exact matches for the originals.
Mind you that was 20 years ago, and things were very different then.