Scots_Charles_River
Bushcrafter (boy, I've got a lot to say!)
Planned Obsolescence - we teach it in Product Design. The range is from a 4 pint milk bottle to a family car. Cheaper car tyres often have deeper tread than more expensive ones.
Its called "built in obsoloscence" not a theory - a manufacturing process and design requirement in some fields
dont get me started on modern medical equipment
I used to work on a linear acellerator from the 60's - first of its kind - worked right up to the day it was replaced
its replacement is struggling to make 10 years and to be honest so much of it has been replaced its not even the original machine.....
Our Samsung fridge kept icing up and although it was out of warranty, Samsung sent an engineer round to fix it, free of charge.
Although I'm sure there is an amount of planned obsolescence, the fact that people aren't (always) prepared to pay for quality is probably a big factor. For example, you could buy an industrial sewing machine but it's more expensive than a domestic one which has to use cheaper parts to keep the cost low
I'll have a look at that cheers Paul
I did a lot of digging about when it first went dodgy and it was quite a common fault apparently, something about a connection working loose along the top of the plasma panel when it warmed up and expanded.
This tumble drier must be around 40 years old as I'm 39 and it was at home as long as I can remember and now it sits in my garage and still works perfectly!! So they can make stuff that lasts but probably not good for business?
Steve.
Nice bow rig