KJRR
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- KJ
- Joined
- Feb 1, 2020
- Threads
- 14
- Messages
- 2,022
- Reaction score
- 10,482
- Location
- Cleveland, OH
- Vehicle(s)
- '19 Ford Ranger, '14 Ford Edge, '74 VW Type 181
- Occupation
- Professional Curmudgeon
Well all be using washboards in the river and clothes line in the backyard and like it.I was thinking of buying a gas furnace to stash, maybe I'll keep an eye out for "old stock" gas h2o tanks. This energy star crap has destroyed appliance longevity, unless they are designing the shorter lifespan into them to keep the orders coming. They say 8 to 10 years for a washers life now an they're $1,000 plus. My mom had the same for 25 years but it didn't have 22 cycle choices an it used enough water to actually clean clothes.
Just replaced our 24 yr old fridgidaire washer and dryer. Don't expect the new ones to last that long. Dryer could have kept going but washer tub bearing was shot and $800 to replace back half of tub, couldn't get just the bearing. Next up is washboard and clothes line. Neighbors already give me sideways glances.i got a new maytag washer four years ago. within two years it was already having issues and needing repair. few months back it broke again. the repair guy came out and said i dont wanna rip you off its not worth paying me to fix it. for the cost of what it needs you can go get a new one... nice of him to be honest but sad for the quality of the machine. when i was a kid our washer and dryer were both about ten years older than me and they both worked fine no repairs until the mid 1990s. i think whirlpool maytag and a few other brands are all one owner.

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