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Not talking about water in trays but dedicated ice maker ?
Just wondering as they are becoming popular here |
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On Mon, 20 Apr 2009 21:06:07 +0800, phil..c wrote:
> Not talking about water in trays but dedicated ice maker ? > > Just wondering as they are becoming popular here i have one. i think there are the rule rather than the exception in the u.s. the in-door ice and ice water dispenser is a little rarer. your pal, blake |
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![]() "phil..c" wrote: > > Not talking about water in trays but dedicated ice maker ? In the US the majority of refrigerators sold in the past ten years contain an auto icemaker... today most new units are ordered with the through the door cubes, crushed, and water. Very few residences have stand alone icemakers > Just wondering as they are becoming popular here Where is here? |
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Michael "Dog3" wrote:
> blake murphy > > : in rec.food.cooking > >> On Mon, 20 Apr 2009 21:06:07 +0800, phil..c wrote: >> >>> Not talking about water in trays but dedicated ice maker ? >>> >>> Just wondering as they are becoming popular here >> i have one. i think there are the rule rather than the exception in >> the u.s. the in-door ice and ice water dispenser is a little rarer. > > Hmmm... maybe I wasn't paying attention but when we were shopping for > new fridges, the ice cube and water dispensers seemed to be the rule > rather than the exception. The cubes and water come right out of the > front of the freezer door. The ice dispenser will also dispense crushed > ice instead of cubes if you want. That comes in handy when making > smoothies. > > All that said, I can say I made a mistake when I picked out our current > model. I seldom use the water dispenser but I *must* have the ice cube > maker. Seems like I go through a lot of ice and ice cube trays are a > pain. I should have bought a top freezer model with an ice cube maker > in the top of the freezer. Our old fridge is downstairs but too small > for the area we need for it to fill out the kitchen are the fridge is > in. Live and learn. > > I really don't care much for the side by side we currently have. > > Michael > Yes we looked at new fridges and those with the ice makers internal seemed a waste of money and used valuable space and chewed too much power. And lucky to produce 3 kg of ice per day But a few of these are starting to appear http://www.oo.com.au/prod/HMPSIM/1b.jpg getting 18 kg a day of lovely cubed and hollow ice Great for keeping the salads and sea food fresh and the clink of ice in fine crystal with a decent Whiskey adds ambiance to Susan Boyle type voices ![]() Reckon it was a steal at $99.00 for folding money Last one in the shop end of month type haggle |
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phil..c wrote:
> Not talking about water in trays but dedicated ice maker ? > Never seen one here (NE US) except in commercial applications (bar, foodservice, hotel etc). > Just wondering as they are becoming popular here Don't know? I guess it depends where "here" is? |
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![]() "phil..c" wrote: > > Not talking about water in trays but dedicated ice maker ? > > Just wondering as they are becoming popular here A dedicated stand alone ice maker, or an automatic ice maker built into a refrigerator? The later is extremely common in the US, most any new refrigerator other than an absolute bottom end unit will have an ice maker as standard equipment. A dedicated stand alone ice maker is somewhat common for folks who do a lot of entertaining and can out pace a normal refrigerator ice maker. |
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brooklyn1 wrote:
> "phil..c" wrote: >> >> Not talking about water in trays but dedicated ice maker ? > > In the US the majority of refrigerators sold in the past ten years > contain an auto icemaker... today most new units are ordered with the > through the door cubes, crushed, and water. Tell me about it. Try finding a side by side without that feature, it wasn't easy. I wound up buying the floor model at the appliance store. nancy |
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On Mon, 20 Apr 2009 12:45:05 -0400, "Nancy Young"
> wrote: >brooklyn1 wrote: >> "phil..c" wrote: >>> >>> Not talking about water in trays but dedicated ice maker ? >> >> In the US the majority of refrigerators sold in the past ten years >> contain an auto icemaker... today most new units are ordered with the >> through the door cubes, crushed, and water. > >Tell me about it. Try finding a side by side without that feature, >it wasn't easy. I wound up buying the floor model at the appliance >store. > >nancy My Kitchenaid came with the option to have the ice maker. I decided not to...learned my lesson, the wife had it installed during summer. Don't know why I didn't have it installed in the first place. Option was something like $500 extra at the time. |
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phil..c wrote:
> Not talking about water in trays but dedicated ice maker ? > > Just wondering as they are becoming popular here Haven't been without one as an adult ever. Have missed them when living overseas though. |
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Goomba wrote:
> phil..c wrote: >> Not talking about water in trays but dedicated ice maker ? >> >> Just wondering as they are becoming popular here > > Haven't been without one as an adult ever. Have missed them when living > overseas though. let me clarify that. I've always had one in the US, but never had one overseas in various apartments. Of course in one place the water was so chock full of minerals that the ice maker would probably be damaged in short order from the build up. |
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Ice cubes have arrived in phil's town.
Can indoor plumbing be far behind? |
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Miss Anne Thrope wrote:
> Ice cubes have arrived in phil's town. > > Can indoor plumbing be far behind? > see http://www.danscartoons.com/hvac7_demo.gif |
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On Mon, 20 Apr 2009 21:06:07 +0800, "phil..c" >
shouted from the highest rooftop: >Not talking about water in trays but dedicated ice maker ? > >Just wondering as they are becoming popular here We don't have or want one because we both don't like the taste of the ice cubes they make. But my father and step-mother bought one of the first icemaker-refrigerators available and it gave them no end of problems. Not that I can imagine ever needing more ice cubes than we can make in trays and store in the freezer container supplied with our fridge. And on the odd occasion that we're having a party that requires additional ice cubes for keeping beer, wine, sodas, etc cold, I buy two or three bags of commercially made ice. But I wouldn't use it *in* drinks. -- una cerveza mas por favor ... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~ Wax-up and drop-in of Surfing's Golden Years: <http://www.surfwriter.net> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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On Mon 20 Apr 2009 06:06:07a, phil..c told us...
> Not talking about water in trays but dedicated ice maker ? > > Just wondering as they are becoming popular here That could me one of several things here in the US. The most "dedicated" unit would be a standalone unit about the size of a mini refrigerator that does nothing but make ice cubes, and generally at a fairly high production rate. Then there are several flavors of refrigerator/freezer combinations that have an ice maker in the freeezer. The simplest of these is a unit that makes repetitive batches of ice and dumps them into a bin in the freezer. You open the freezer door and grab some cubes. (Actually, they are almost all semi-circular in shape.) More elaborate units, particularly the side- by-side model freezer/refrigerators, make ice in much the same way, but are capable of distributing it through the door in either whole cubes or crushed. Most of these models also dispense chilled water. A couple can also dispense flavored beverages in the same manner. The additional mechanisms of the latter provide many opportunities for problems. I currently have a top freezer refrigerator with a simple ice maker in it and I prefer it. I've never had a problem with it since we bought it 3 years ago. -- Wayne Boatwright ------------------------------------------------------------------------ The whole of nature, as has been said, is a conjugation of the verb to eat, in the active and in the passive. ~William Ralph Inge |
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phil..c wrote:
> Not talking about water in trays but dedicated ice maker ? > > Just wondering as they are becoming popular here I have an ice maker built into the freezer of my fridge. There is also a cold water dispenser. We had them hook the fridge water line to the reverse osmosis system. We have wonderful ice. -- Janet Wilder way-the-heck-south Texas spelling doesn't count but cooking does |
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Wayne Boatwright wrote:
> On Mon 20 Apr 2009 06:06:07a, phil..c told us... > >> Not talking about water in trays but dedicated ice maker ? >> >> Just wondering as they are becoming popular here > > That could me one of several things here in the US. The most "dedicated" > unit would be a standalone unit about the size of a mini refrigerator that > does nothing but make ice cubes, and generally at a fairly high production > rate. > > Then there are several flavors of refrigerator/freezer combinations that > have an ice maker in the freeezer. The simplest of these is a unit that > makes repetitive batches of ice and dumps them into a bin in the freezer. > You open the freezer door and grab some cubes. (Actually, they are almost > all semi-circular in shape.) More elaborate units, particularly the side- > by-side model freezer/refrigerators, make ice in much the same way, but are > capable of distributing it through the door in either whole cubes or > crushed. Most of these models also dispense chilled water. A couple can > also dispense flavored beverages in the same manner. > > The additional mechanisms of the latter provide many opportunities for > problems. I currently have a top freezer refrigerator with a simple ice > maker in it and I prefer it. I've never had a problem with it since we > bought it 3 years ago. > > > I'm on my third fridge with the simple ice maker in it. I did put a filter cartridge in the line to keep the ice maker from clogging up. We have a lot of calcium hardness in our city water. The old Gibson fridge ice maker did clog and quit working. It was cheaper to just buy a new unit and install it plus the filter. Appears most of the refrigerators with ice makers all use the same ice maker. Sort of like electric stoves, most are actually made by GE and just branded for the company that sells them. The filter did the job and I just have to change it out annually.Have it earmarked on my calendar on this computer so I don't forget. I've seen too many of the ones with multiple functions go defunct and they cost a fortune to replace or repair. The simple things are best. |
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George Shirley wrote:
> I'm on my third fridge with the simple ice maker in it. I did put a > filter cartridge in the line to keep the ice maker from clogging up. We > have a lot of calcium hardness in our city water. The old Gibson fridge > ice maker did clog and quit working. It was cheaper to just buy a new > unit and install it plus the filter. Appears most of the refrigerators > with ice makers all use the same ice maker. Sort of like electric > stoves, most are actually made by GE and just branded for the company > that sells them. The filter did the job and I just have to change it out > annually.Have it earmarked on my calendar on this computer so I don't > forget. > > I've seen too many of the ones with multiple functions go defunct and > they cost a fortune to replace or repair. The simple things are best. Right. Consumer Reports states that the majority of repairs are performed on the water/ice function on a 'fridge. When we purchased our new bottom freezer/top fridge GE Profile fridge we sought out the model that only has a basic ice maker. You have to pull open the freezer drawer to get to it but we don't have gadgets going through the door. We've gotta have our ice, but not a lot of bells and whistles. Goomba |
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On Mon 20 Apr 2009 06:11:13p, George Shirley told us...
> Wayne Boatwright wrote: >> On Mon 20 Apr 2009 06:06:07a, phil..c told us... >> >>> Not talking about water in trays but dedicated ice maker ? >>> >>> Just wondering as they are becoming popular here >> >> That could me one of several things here in the US. The most >> "dedicated" unit would be a standalone unit about the size of a mini >> refrigerator that does nothing but make ice cubes, and generally at a >> fairly high production rate. >> >> Then there are several flavors of refrigerator/freezer combinations >> that have an ice maker in the freeezer. The simplest of these is a >> unit that makes repetitive batches of ice and dumps them into a bin in >> the freezer. You open the freezer door and grab some cubes. >> (Actually, they are almost all semi-circular in shape.) More elaborate >> units, particularly the side- by-side model freezer/refrigerators, make >> ice in much the same way, but are capable of distributing it through >> the door in either whole cubes or crushed. Most of these models also >> dispense chilled water. A couple can also dispense flavored beverages >> in the same manner. >> >> The additional mechanisms of the latter provide many opportunities for >> problems. I currently have a top freezer refrigerator with a simple >> ice maker in it and I prefer it. I've never had a problem with it >> since we bought it 3 years ago. >> >> >> > I'm on my third fridge with the simple ice maker in it. I did put a > filter cartridge in the line to keep the ice maker from clogging up. We > have a lot of calcium hardness in our city water. The old Gibson fridge > ice maker did clog and quit working. It was cheaper to just buy a new > unit and install it plus the filter. Appears most of the refrigerators > with ice makers all use the same ice maker. Sort of like electric > stoves, most are actually made by GE and just branded for the company > that sells them. The filter did the job and I just have to change it out > annually.Have it earmarked on my calendar on this computer so I don't > forget. I put a filter in my water line too, George. Makes a big difference. > I've seen too many of the ones with multiple functions go defunct and > they cost a fortune to replace or repair. The simple things are best. Agreed... -- Wayne Boatwright ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Dyspepsia is the remorse of a guilty stomach. ~A. Kerr |
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On Mon, 20 Apr 2009 23:12:59 +0800, "phil..c" >
wrote: >Reckon it was a steal at $99.00 for folding money NO KIDDING and now you're just bragging. Lucky YOU! Ü -- I love cooking with wine. Sometimes I even put it in the food. |
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On 20 Apr 2009 14:55:48 GMT, Michael "Dog3" wrote:
> blake murphy > > : in rec.food.cooking > >> On Mon, 20 Apr 2009 21:06:07 +0800, phil..c wrote: >> >>> Not talking about water in trays but dedicated ice maker ? >>> >>> Just wondering as they are becoming popular here >> >> i have one. i think there are the rule rather than the exception in >> the u.s. the in-door ice and ice water dispenser is a little rarer. > > Hmmm... maybe I wasn't paying attention but when we were shopping for > new fridges, the ice cube and water dispensers seemed to be the rule > rather than the exception. The cubes and water come right out of the > front of the freezer door. The ice dispenser will also dispense crushed > ice instead of cubes if you want. That comes in handy when making > smoothies. > you're probably right. i have never shopped for a refrigerator - i'm a renter, so i talk to the landlord. the unit here is the same one as when i moved in about nine years ago. your pal, blake |
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blake murphy wrote:
> you're probably right. i have never shopped for a refrigerator - i'm a > renter, so i talk to the landlord. the unit here is the same one as when i > moved in about nine years ago. I read somewhere that the "average" lifespan of a refrigerator is 13 years. So, if it's been with you for nine and there's a good chance it was there before you -- you might be in for a new one soon! If anything, a newer one will cost less in electricity. Much more efficient these days. --Lin |
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Lin wrote:
> blake murphy wrote: > >> you're probably right. i have never shopped for a refrigerator - i'm a >> renter, so i talk to the landlord. the unit here is the same one as >> when i >> moved in about nine years ago. > > I read somewhere that the "average" lifespan of a refrigerator is 13 > years. So, if it's been with you for nine and there's a good chance it > was there before you -- you might be in for a new one soon! If anything, > a newer one will cost less in electricity. Much more efficient these days. > > --Lin BUT would it have a very limited lifespan? -- Jean B. |
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Lin wrote:
> > blake murphy wrote: > > > you're probably right. i have never shopped for a refrigerator - i'm a > > renter, so i talk to the landlord. the unit here is the same one as when i > > moved in about nine years ago. > > I read somewhere that the "average" lifespan of a refrigerator is 13 > years. So, if it's been with you for nine and there's a good chance it > was there before you -- you might be in for a new one soon! If anything, > a newer one will cost less in electricity. Much more efficient these days. Mine is 29 years old. It's funny when the handle broke off the door, how long it took to get out of the habit of reaching for it. |
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In article >, dsi1 > wrote:
> wrote: > > > > My Kitchenaid came with the option to have the ice maker. I decided > > not to...learned my lesson, the wife had it installed during summer. > > Don't know why I didn't have it installed in the first place. Option > > was something like $500 extra at the time. > > My guess is that you didn't install the ice maker in the first place > because the option was something like $500 extra at the time. > > $500 seems like a lot. We bought a refrigerator and installed an ice > maker afterwards. The ice maker was about $100 with about $20 for the > copper line and connectors. At $500, we probably would be using ice cube > trays. Our last fridge cost us US$500. Costco is still selling it for that price. -- Dan Abel Petaluma, California USA |
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Lin wrote:
> blake murphy wrote: > >> you're probably right. i have never shopped for a refrigerator - i'm a >> renter, so i talk to the landlord. the unit here is the same one as >> when i >> moved in about nine years ago. > > I read somewhere that the "average" lifespan of a refrigerator is 13 > years. So, if it's been with you for nine and there's a good chance it > was there before you -- you might be in for a new one soon! If anything, > a newer one will cost less in electricity. Much more efficient these days. > > --Lin My experience has been the a refrigerator will typically have a hell of a long lifespan. It's probably the most reliable appliance you'll own. My guess is that If I bought one today, it would last longer than I would, then again, the one I bought 10 years ago will probably outlive me too! :-) |
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Dan Abel wrote:
> In article >, dsi1 > wrote: > >> wrote: >>> My Kitchenaid came with the option to have the ice maker. I decided >>> not to...learned my lesson, the wife had it installed during summer. >>> Don't know why I didn't have it installed in the first place. Option >>> was something like $500 extra at the time. >> My guess is that you didn't install the ice maker in the first place >> because the option was something like $500 extra at the time. >> >> $500 seems like a lot. We bought a refrigerator and installed an ice >> maker afterwards. The ice maker was about $100 with about $20 for the >> copper line and connectors. At $500, we probably would be using ice cube >> trays. > > Our last fridge cost us US$500. Costco is still selling it for that > price. > Did it come with an ice maker? If so, you scored! Think of it as buying an ice maker that comes with a free refrigerator. :-) |
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![]() "dsi1" > wrote in message ... > Lin wrote: >> blake murphy wrote: >> >>> you're probably right. i have never shopped for a refrigerator - i'm a >>> renter, so i talk to the landlord. the unit here is the same one as >>> when i >>> moved in about nine years ago. >> >> I read somewhere that the "average" lifespan of a refrigerator is 13 >> years. So, if it's been with you for nine and there's a good chance it >> was there before you -- you might be in for a new one soon! If anything, >> a newer one will cost less in electricity. Much more efficient these >> days. >> >> --Lin > > My experience has been the a refrigerator will typically have a hell of a > long lifespan. It's probably the most reliable appliance you'll own. My > guess is that If I bought one today, it would last longer than I would, > then again, the one I bought 10 years ago will probably outlive me too! > :-) Yes, the average life of a fridge is about a dozen years... the compressor is warranteed for like five years, if after five years the compressor goes most folks toss it and buy new... too expensive to repair and a good chance some other expensive part will soon go. If a fridge is used with some care and not abused it can last twice, even three times as long. The average life of a gas stove is more like 40 years, and the parts that do wear out don't cost much relative to purchasing a new stove. A gas stove can withstand a lot more hard use than a fridge. |
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brooklyn1 wrote:
> "dsi1" > wrote in message ... >> Lin wrote: >>> blake murphy wrote: >>> >>>> you're probably right. i have never shopped for a refrigerator - i'm a >>>> renter, so i talk to the landlord. the unit here is the same one as >>>> when i >>>> moved in about nine years ago. >>> I read somewhere that the "average" lifespan of a refrigerator is 13 >>> years. So, if it's been with you for nine and there's a good chance it >>> was there before you -- you might be in for a new one soon! If anything, >>> a newer one will cost less in electricity. Much more efficient these >>> days. >>> >>> --Lin >> My experience has been the a refrigerator will typically have a hell of a >> long lifespan. It's probably the most reliable appliance you'll own. My >> guess is that If I bought one today, it would last longer than I would, >> then again, the one I bought 10 years ago will probably outlive me too! >> :-) > > Yes, the average life of a fridge is about a dozen years... the compressor > is warranteed for like five years, if after five years the compressor goes > most folks toss it and buy new... too expensive to repair and a good chance > some other expensive part will soon go. If a fridge is used with some care > and not abused it can last twice, even three times as long. The average > life of a gas stove is more like 40 years, and the parts that do wear out > don't cost much relative to purchasing a new stove. A gas stove can > withstand a lot more hard use than a fridge. > > That's interesting - guess I better be looking around for a new refrigerator! That's good, I never did like it much. It would not surprise me if new refrigerators came with wimpy compressors. I can't recall ever having one where the compressor has failed. Never seen one fail on an AC unit either. I've had a couple of cars that had bad AC compressors - those are crap... You're probably right about gas stoves. |
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On Apr 21, 7:35*pm, "brooklyn1" > wrote:
* The average > life of a gas stove is more like 40 years, and the parts that do wear out > don't cost much relative to purchasing a new stove. *A gas stove can > withstand a lot more hard use than a fridge Probably not those newfangled gas stoves with circuit boards inside. Cindy Hamilton |
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On Tue, 21 Apr 2009 10:29:15 -0700, Lin wrote:
> blake murphy wrote: > >> you're probably right. i have never shopped for a refrigerator - i'm a >> renter, so i talk to the landlord. the unit here is the same one as when i >> moved in about nine years ago. > > I read somewhere that the "average" lifespan of a refrigerator is 13 > years. So, if it's been with you for nine and there's a good chance it > was there before you -- you might be in for a new one soon! If anything, > a newer one will cost less in electricity. Much more efficient these days. > > --Lin i had one replaced at the place i used to live. for some reason that i can't recall, one or the other was in the living room for a couple of days (plugged in and working), which was odd. these folks have already ponied up a new washer and drier. your pal, blake |
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![]() "Cindy Hamilton" > wrote in message ... On Apr 21, 7:35 pm, "brooklyn1" > wrote: The average > life of a gas stove is more like 40 years, and the parts that do wear out > don't cost much relative to purchasing a new stove. A gas stove can > withstand a lot more hard use than a fridge Probably not those newfangled gas stoves with circuit boards inside. The little computer panel is typically as stable as the controls on a microwave oven, they rarely die. And even if it does go kaput compared to price the high end stoves that contain them they are not a very large proportion of cost, certainly not nearly so much the price of the stove. I don't think too many are going to dump a perfectly good $2,000 gas range over a $300 microprocessor. My gas stove microchip went dead in a horrific lightening storm, just one of those freak acts of nature no one could possibly anticipate or do anything to avoid... I bit the bullet and bought a new chip... the stove was six years old then, it's been another six years since. I don't consider averaging like $25/yr maintenence on a $2,000 appliance anything to blink over... would you not buy an automobile with an AM/FM stereo radio with CD player because the radio could die? |
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In article
>, Cindy Hamilton > wrote: > On Apr 21, 7:35*pm, deleted wrote: > > life of a gas stove is more like 40 years > Probably not those newfangled gas stoves with circuit boards inside. We were having some problems with our gas stove. We read that if your gas stove is more than eight years old, it's cheaper to replace it than fix it! The old stoves had very little to break down. I guess getting rid of the pilot lights was a good idea, but replacing the ignitors (oven and broiler) is US$100 just for the parts over the internet. We aren't real handy with fixing things. And then, maybe something more than the ignitors was wrong. Now you're getting into connecting things with gas going through them. I don't think so. -- Dan Abel Petaluma, California USA |
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dsi1 wrote:
> brooklyn1 wrote: \ > > Yes, the average life of a fridge is about a dozen years... > That's interesting - guess I better be looking around for a new > refrigerator! That's good, I never did like it much. You just never know. I bought a new Frigidare (not real high-end these days) ten years ago. It started going out recently. The repair guy said it wasn't worth fixing, as it was something in sealed system. For now, I'm using the old Amana one in the laundry room that was here when I bought the house. Brian -- Day 79 of the "no grouchy usenet posts" project |
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brooklyn1 wrote:
> > Probably not those newfangled gas stoves with circuit boards inside. > > The little computer panel is typically as stable as the controls on a > microwave oven, they rarely die. And even if it does go kaput compared to > price the high end stoves that contain them they are not a very large > proportion of cost, certainly not nearly so much the price of the stove. I > don't think too many are going to dump a perfectly good $2,000 gas range > over a $300 microprocessor. My gas stove microchip went dead in a horrific > lightening storm, just one of those freak acts of nature no one could > possibly anticipate or do anything to avoid... I bit the bullet and bought a > new chip... the stove was six years old then, it's been another six years > since. I don't consider averaging like $25/yr maintenence on a $2,000 > appliance anything to blink over... would you not buy an automobile with an > AM/FM stereo radio with CD player because the radio could die? > > Strange, ain't it? Electronics and appliances - not a good mix. My dishwasher's weak point is the display panel. After a couple of years it needed to be replaced. I replaced it once but now it displays the same problem, or at least it would except there now seems to be a problem with the power circuit - it won't even light up anymore. On the plus side, it's all black and glossy - it sure is a sexy looking dead dishwasher. |
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Default User wrote:
> dsi1 wrote: > >> brooklyn1 wrote: > \ >>> Yes, the average life of a fridge is about a dozen years... > >> That's interesting - guess I better be looking around for a new >> refrigerator! That's good, I never did like it much. > > You just never know. I bought a new Frigidare (not real high-end these > days) ten years ago. It started going out recently. The repair guy said > it wasn't worth fixing, as it was something in sealed system. For now, > I'm using the old Amana one in the laundry room that was here when I > bought the house. > > My impression is that the old ones were built like a tank. The newer ones must be more like a 70s AMC Pacer. :-) > > Brian > |
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dsi1 wrote:
> Default User wrote: > > You just never know. I bought a new Frigidare (not real high-end > > these days) ten years ago. It started going out recently. The > > repair guy said it wasn't worth fixing, as it was something in > > sealed system. For now, I'm using the old Amana one in the laundry > > room that was here when I bought the house. > > > > > > My impression is that the old ones were built like a tank. The newer > ones must be more like a 70s AMC Pacer. :-) The new one was a nice refrigerator, up until it died. It had the solid glass shelves that slid out, so it was bright and easy to find things in. The only thing I didn't like so much was the size, but that was my fault during the selection phase. Brian -- Day 79 of the "no grouchy usenet posts" project |
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![]() "dsi1" wrote > > My impression is that the old ones were built like a tank. The newer ones > must be more like a 70s AMC Pacer. :-) > I think with appliances like refrigerator freezers, dishwashers, clothes washers and clothes dryers their life span has a lot to do with how they're used/abused. People aren't necessarilly aware that they're abusing their appliances. I've seen people open the fridge and leave the door open while they walk away for five minutes to do something in the next room, return and keep rummaging about in the fridge and still not close the door and walk off again to make a phone call. Some people stuff oversized pans into their fridge so that when they close the door it doesn't fully close, they can leave it like that for days, not even notice when they go in and out over the period, folks permit their kids and guests use their fridge as they will... the fridge gets five years use in one month. These kind of people then wonder why they get only like three years from a fridge. Some folks cram like twice the clothes recommended for their washing machine and run like six of those huge loads every day, then wonder why the transmission fails prematurely. Folks who use due diligence can have their fridge and washer last more than 30 years. There are normal folks with normally functioning brains who live normal lives, and then there are the freaks. |
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Default User wrote:
> The new one was a nice refrigerator, up until it died. It had the solid > glass shelves that slid out, so it was bright and easy to find things > in. The only thing I didn't like so much was the size, but that was my > fault during the selection phase. They must have hypno-rays in the light bulbs of refrigerators - they look so bright and clean and cheerful in the store. However, once you got it home and stuff the box up to the gills, chances are you ain't finding anything except by chance. :-) My problem is one of size too. My refrigerator was too big and interferes with my dishwasher door. I'm an idiot. > > > > Brian > |
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