I remember when I was in uni, living on-campus in a student dorm. Living conditions were not great, the rooms were small and they stuffed 3 or 4 guys in each room. We each had a bed, a chair, a tiny wardrobe, a shelf and half a desk. No fridge. Each fall, when we got back to school, there was an effervescent market for old used refrigerators. Everybody was buying and selling fridges for the first 1 or 2 weeks. One year we bought a 50 year old Zil fridge made in the USSR in the 60's. We paid like €10 for it. It was heavy as hell and we had to carry it up the stairs to the 4th floor. The thing made a loud, continuous buzzing which helped drown out one of our colleague's thunderous snoring. We loved it. I don't remember what happened to it or who got to keep it after we disbanded, but I'm sure it still works.
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Sadly the old disc world Captain Samuel Vimes 'Boots' theory of socio-economic unfairness boot theory applies.
"The reason that the rich were so rich, Vimes reasoned, was because they managed to spend less money. Take boots, for example. ... A really good pair of leather boots cost fifty dollars. But an affordable pair of boots, which were sort of OK for a season or two and then leaked like hell when the cardboard gave out, cost about ten dollars. ... But the thing was that good boots lasted for years and years. A man who could afford fifty dollars had a pair of boots that'd still be keeping his feet dry in ten years' time, while a poor man who could only afford cheap boots would have spent a hundred dollars on boots in the same time and would still have wet feet. This was the Captain Samuel Vimes 'Boots' theory of socio-economic unfairness."
Built to outlast the owner.
When my parents were kids, their home-ec class consisted of repeatedly hammering into their heads to cook meat at 400 degrees for 30 minutes or else they'd get sick because the refrigeration was so unreliable
That’s why my grandmother made such overdone roasts. I just thought I didn’t like roast beef much until I tried it medium rare instead of charred to a grey cube of leather.
Same, I used to wonder why the looney tunes characters always treated steak as this big delicious thing when my experience with it was disgusting dried shoe leather that required 3 cans of coke to get down.
Where do you live that your parents are old enough to have unreliable ice boxes, but modern enough that both the man and women took home-ec?
Canada
Golden age revisionism is a comforting illusion that edits out the past’s flaws and distorts reality; it becomes dangerous when it shapes decisions based on nostalgia instead of truth.
Those 1980s fridges for ex lacked ice makers and water filtration, used far more energy due to inefficient design, struggled with consistent temperatures that spoiled food faster, often required manual defrosting, and had poor seals that let cold air escape and raised costs.
Golden age revisionism is the chief tactic of blow hard Republicans. Ever hear, make America great....again?
I've never used a fridge that has an ice maker or water filtration. They are still premium options, or some people just don't have any use for the features.
Must be an American thing.
My wife just got a ~20k hospital bill but hey at least our fridge filters the drinking water automatically
I hypothesize that youve been out of the consumer fridge market for at least 10 years. Water filter and ice maker ia the basic bitch options these days.
Premiums option today are things like climate zones, adjustable shelving, ai, inventory tracking and digital screen/computer that you can write notes on or ask ur fridge what meals you can make from the fridge contents.
But don't take my word for it, google it yo.
Except in this case its true. They have over stuffed modern appliances with useless features that shorten the life of the appliance. As to how they didn't comes with ice makers. Of course they did. Most had a place where it could be added if you didn't buy one with that feature. Water filtration wasn't there true enough but no one thought of that then. Only older early 70's fridges came without defrosting. As to the poor seals you get that from damage which applies to modern fridges as well. The fridge I have is from the early 90's and it rocks. No problems with ice buildup No leaks and a consistent temperature. I dread having to buy some modern POS built to fail so you can get sold another one.
Not everything is a republican plot to get you to purchase a forty year appliance.
“The eye sees only what the mind is prepared to comprehend.” — Henri Bergson
I have a mini fridge purchased new early 00s that I recently left unplugged for a day or so to melt the ice buildup on the freezer.
Not that I'm happy with the overall state of appliances these days, but the reality is that technology is still improving, but some of those "improvements" aren't for the buyer's benefit (while others are). And there's plenty of plain old cheap shit in a nice brushed stainless steel package to make it look high end.
Like induction stoves and convection ovens weren't really a thing in the 80s but imo are way better than what came before. But, despite being a convection oven, the cheap one the developers picked for my place is the worst oven I've ever used. And I'm hesitant to "upgrade" because, despite knowing they can be better, there's a good chance whatever I end up getting won't, or make will be at first but will start degrading rapidly from day 1 such that it's shitty by the time the warranty runs out.
That is the big difference between modern and older appliances. The older ones were made in good faith, the newer ones are a gamble because we have an economic system based on greed and it has progressed a lot since the 50s.
You forgot about the locking doors so children had to be taught not to play inside of them if you saw one outside because you would suffocate and die.
I remember watching an episode of Punky Brewster on TV about that.
Now that is a name I haven't hear in a long time....pb.
I mean you ain't wrong or nothing, but I'm pretty sure they're mostly focusing on enshitification.
I'm 40 and the only memory I have of an old appliance that stands out was the time I took soaked clothes and put them in the dryer and ran it. I broke that sum-bitch gud
I will share your pain bro, give it here.
My modern fridge automatically defrost itself and has an incredibly silent compressor. More than once I forgot to close the freezer door correctly and still it's not covered in ice on the inside. It uses so little energy into its day to day operation.
My modern drier has a heat pump built in to effeciently heat the air. It also detects how long it needs to run to get my clothes to the perfect dryness.
My modern dishwasher has a heat exchanger system to retain the heat from the dirty water to warm the fresh water. This saves energy.
Modern devices maybe have their problems. Sometimes with cheaper components or worse repairability. But don't pretend like the only innovation we had over the years was to add wifi to your appliances.
The refrigerator in the photo is auto defrosting, I’m almost certain.
Also, there’s a drive for some markets towards French door fridges and those leak a tremendous amount of energy.
The energy saving parts also come with cost cutting, which is how I interpret the post. My 2001 era dishwasher was recently replaced with a 2024 model (in 2025) and the old one weighs nearly twice as much. They’re comparable in the product line of their time from the same manufacturer; the new one cost more. But it’s not just mass. It’s insulation, it’s metal parts replaced with plastic, nylon-glass fibre parts replaced with ABS and it’s thinning down components to last just until the warranty expires.
It doesn’t have a heat exchanger though. What kind of dishwasher?
Survivorship bias. All the ones that broke aren't around anymore.
Another issue is we've been trained to treat major appliances as disposable. Back in the day you called a repairman.
For example, my mom's washer stopped doing the spin cycle. She immediately hopped on Consumer Reports to shop for a new one.
I hopped on an appliance parts website and ordered her a new lid switch for $15. One YouTube video later and her washer worked like new.
You were lucky it wasn't the $250 circuit board that failed, which charged $50 for shipping.
I hopped on an appliance parts website and ordered her a new lid switch for $15. One YouTube video later and her washer worked like new.
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many youtube videos are scams/clickbait though and/or present un-true or outdated information
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even if i have the spare part and the replacement part (i probably ordered the wrong one, how the heck am i supposed to know whether Knita CX-2035 is compatible with my Radover DishWasher i13s, the manual says i need Knita CX-2034 but they don't produce them anymore, but the Knita website says that CX-2035 is the "successor part"), i assume i either lack a screwdriver or a voltage meter or a fucking welding machine to weld the oven open and shut again. And if i manage to weld it shut correctly, i will forever live in anxiety about accidentally having used toxic chemicals inside the oven which now continue to evaporate each time that i heat it up, slowly poisoning my food and me which will only become clear decades later when i start developing mysterious diseases which might have their origin in me using aluminum wires when i should have used stainless chromated copper wires.
Dude, you can find replacement videos for pretty much any part in any appliance that are just some dude walking you through it because they just did it. I'm not sure where you're seeing scam appliance repair guide videos.
The way you buy parts is you go to a part seller webpage where you enter the model number they'll have a parts diagram and you select the part you need.
There's pretty much zero chance that welding would be required to change a part.
^as said by somebody who never had to replace the motor on their washer, or the burned on their range, or the belt on their dryer, or the elements in the water heater...
The reason they always worked forever was because your dad bought replacement parts from the appliance repair store and didn't complain to you about it.
This is literally one of the top 3 good things about YouTube
have repaired my oven twice (15 years) and dryer three times (16 years). it's amazing how many appliances can be repaired if people just take the time to dig into it.
unless it has a screen. fuck everything about that shit.
Admittedly, the timer of my old microwave isn't reliable anymore, since it's spring got weak. But it would be easy to fix, if i get to it sometime. Staring at a screen has higher priority.
Edit: typo
Yep. Have four of those type. Occasionally, once a decade or so, I have to maintain em. But otherwise I milk em. Like cows.