On Apr 16, 2013, at 1:27 PM, Toby Thain <toby at telegraphics.com.au> wrote:
On 16/04/13 1:07 PM, Chuck Guzis wrote:
... computer gear isn't alone in the
"don't replace, throw away" category.
It's infected everything. This city (Toronto) still has leather/shoe repairers,
though.
We have them in Philadelphia, too. It can get hard to justify
when it costs more to repair/resole a shoe than to buy a new
pair, but my wife is an opera performer, so sometimes it's
important enough to repair a pair that looks good.
Appliances are my big beef. I have a coffee maker with the
grinder built in that I REALLY like. Somehow, the bottom part
got colonized by roaches (which, fortunately, don't seem to
have taken root anywhere else in the house), so I thoroughly
flushed it out with soap and water and let it dry for about a
month. Everything works EXCEPT the transistor that switches
the relay that turns on the heater, which makes it pretty
useless as a coffee maker. Taking the thing apart was totally
impossible without marring the appearance, and some parts are
nearly impossible to put back together; the low-voltage PSU
for the microcontroller and the relay were all sealed in a
caulked-up box at the bottom that was impossible to remove.
I still think I can fix it, since I've identified the bad
transistor, but if it weren't a $200 coffee maker, I don't
think I'd have considered it worth the effort. Things just
aren't made to be fixed anymore; you can't buy replacement
PSU or controller boards, so if the microcontroller had died,
there'd be basically no hope.
As a side note, we've been getting along fine with a separate
grinder and a Farberware percolator whose design hasn't been
changed since at least the '60s with the exception of using
an IEC receptacle for the power cord. So there's that. My
in-laws still use theirs from the '60s, so I'm reasonably
confident that it should last.
- Dave