The Right to Repair Movement

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Yes, they can pass laws to do that and the manufacturers will fight those laws in the courts and make huge campaign contributions to "business friendly" (aka Republican) politicians who will then feel obligated to repeal such laws to keep the campaign cash coming their way. Not trying to get political here, just relating reality.
 
Yeah I remember seeing a story about

A farmer who had purchased a new John Deere tractor and it stopped leaving him stuck out in a field somewhere. Not easy to push your tractor back to the barn! He couldn't get the software J.D. as it wasn't available to the owners. He was used to maintaining his own equipment, always had. Long story short, he sold it and got his hands on an older tractor and said after the crap he went through with J.D. he was through with them. He felt betrayed. So how is this a good thing? Also when big box stores contract with well known brands and order up huge amounts of a product, say 50,000 hot water heaters ,but only if they can get them at a certain price point. If the deal goes down, the supplier most likely will have to cut quality or something just to stay within their margin. This is never a good thing for us, the consumer. Especially when it's a brand you've known and trusted and has always had a good product. Yet you can still get the quality your used to from a smaller dealer, you'll pay more to get what you thought you were getting at the big box stores. Someone placed two J.D. tractor mowers side by side, one from a dealer store and one from H.Depot and they looked the same at first. Closer inspection, one had a metal seat, the other plastic. The motors were from different manufacturers, on and on and the kicker is in this case the prices to the buyer weren't all that different, but the quality difference became very obvious.What a scam to the unsuspecting customer. Buyer beware. H.D. had to recall or their supplier had to recall thousands of h.water heaters. They hadn't even been inspected before shipping. They had been sourced out to another company in Mexico and others manufacturers with shady pasts. "Brand loyalty" doesn't mean to me what it did to past generations of buyers, it's not the same in many ways now.
 
@ Human

Well, at least it might be possible. I mean, look at where we are with the appliances and energy star. I'm sure the companies tried to pay off business-friendly politicians with that but obviously, that didn't work.
 
My car is pushing 20, my dryer 40, there is a garage full of spare parts for both, and I keep things going with my tools which have paid for themselves many times over. I joke that my house is where things go to live forever.
 
I took my parents' 20+ year old stove when they replaced it and kept it in the garage, and when my 6-year old stove's PC control board died, I rolled it in and swapped plugs and finished baking whatever my wife had started LOL. My wife hates it because she would like newer stuff but I can't justify buying this new stuff that's not as good and doesn't last half as long.

Soon as I have some cash flow I will do a big buy of parts for it against the day when they are unavailable. I did buy two thermostat assemblies as those are already discontinued and hard to find and that's the main oven part. Everything else is still out there for the most part. Even got a set of plastic knobs for the mechanical clock and timer when one cracked.

The best part is, I took the ASVAB in high school, and bombed out on the mechanical aptitude part, I'm talking like a 20th percentile score. Now I am the guy who can fix or diagnose almost anything. Weird how life takes you different places. At that time I had no experience and it just wasn't important to me.
 
I hear you. I have my parents' 25+ year old Lady Kenmore stove, one of the first ones with the glass top. They replaced it when--guess what--the control board (aka self-destruct mechanism) failed. I had it repaired under my home warranty for $100. The board was NLA, so they had to send it off to be rebuilt by hand. When the technician re-installed it, he said it should last at least another 25 years and that he'd trust the hand rebuilt board more than a new one.

Keeping old stoves going is something of a family tradition. My great grandparents bought one of the first electric stoves in Greenville, S.C. back in the 1920s. It came from the local power company and included a lifetime service contract. Every time one of the open coil clay burners went out, they'd come and replace it. The stove was still operational when my great, great aunt died in 1970. It was the last stove of its kind still in use in Greenville and by that time, the power company had brought their entire remaining supply of original style burners to the house. When those ran out, they retrofitted the stove to use modern style burners.
 
I've noticed that the new Bissell vacuums are harder to repair than previous generations. They even have filters that are inaccessible unless you take the whole thing apart. Once those filters clog up, the motor does and into the trash it goes. It's a truly despicable waste of a limited resource.
 

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