Redetotry wrote:Sorry it's happened but it sounds normal, appliances don't last long now and it is pretty typical for them to break down either soon after you buy them or within 5 years. Mine is 23 years old and I need to start shopping as I think it's running on borrowed time. Call a couple of appliance repair places and ask which brand they recommend. My friend bought a new gas stove and it has caught fire twice thankfully her son was home and knew how to turn off the propane. When the repair person comes if he doesn't have a mask on ask him to wear one, if he won't don't let him in.
Wow, B.J. I guess it is now "normal" for appliances to break down after a short time. . . but pretty disappointing, and not a credit to our "modern age". Good suggestion, also, to call a repair place in order to find out which brands need the least number of repairs. Thanks! And that story about your friend's gas range catching fire. . . twice!. . . OMG. I have a gas range that I bought new 11 years ago when I first moved to my current home. It is a Frigidaire, and seems to be going strong - never has had any problems, thank goodness.
If my current fridge dies dead (currently, after setting it on the lowest setting it finally cooled down to about 34 - 35, so bumped the dial back up a bit to keep things inside from freezing) I'm going to try for a Frigidaire side-by-side. Which is what I wanted when I bought the one I have, but during the wind-up of the pandemic I didn't want to let anyone in my house. I was able to wrestle the smaller fridge inside myself, after they left it on my front porch.
Good advice, also, about the mask thing - no one comes inside my house without a mask.
JudyJB wrote:My grandmother bought my mother (her daughter) and my dad a refrigerator for their wedding in 1938. We used it up at our cottage as a second refrigerator until 1995. Actually, it was still working, but the freezer area was tiny and did not keep stuff frozen hard. It was also not self-defrosting, so much less to break on it.
Also, I can barely operate my kids washers and dryers because they have become so complex. The ones I had in my old condo had just hot-warm-cold, small or regular wash size, and a gentle or regular cycle. The big advantage over the newer "electronic" ones is that with the old ones, you can start and stop the cycles at will. When I stop RVing, I will get the most simple, top-loading washing machine possible.
And I'll get a refrigerator without the ice and water in the door. Every time I try to get ice from the doors in my kids refrigerators, it flies all over the floor, plus the water drips all over the place, as well. Dog likes the ice, however, and is always there scarfing it up, so I guess that is an advantage. Cats don't care.
Judy, that is a really long-lived refrigerator!! I'm with you on washing machines as well. I think all of the computer stuff they come pre-loaded with contributes to the unreliability. God forbid that I need to stop my washer mid-cycle. It gets totally confused to the point I have to wriggle around until I can get the thing unplugged, then plug it in again, before I can get it going. I don't expect this washer, which I have had about two years, to last that long either. When it goes, I am going to look around to see if I can find one that is really simple.
These kinds of washers
must be available - one see all of the fancy doo-dads and multiple settings on washers found at the local laundromat. Washers there are dead simple. And I am sure they must be at least semi-reliable, or else the laundromat would be constantly swamped with expensive repairs, and probably not be able to stay in business! Next time I am going for one of those laundromat machines.
And I HATE refrigerators that have ice makers and/or water dispensers. Who uses that much ice, anyway? The water hook ups needed, the extra electricity needed to make ice - what a waste! Won't buy one of those, either, if I can possibly avoid it - but a fridge lacking an ice maker these days is hard to find. Sometimes one can get one without an ice maker only by making a $$special order$$!!
monik7 wrote:Don’t buy an LG.
Sandi
Thanks, Sandi. I won't.
MandysMom wrote:My problem fridge is a Samsung. I'm not alone with flooding and ice and water issues. There are over 180,000 of us in a FB group all with similar issues with Samsung. Those within the six year warranty may or may not get repairs, usually repeated repairs, some get refund or partial refund. Those of us outside the 6 year warranty are hung to dry. All complaints are similar. This 26 cf fridge with bottom freezer, a cold cuts drawer, and two upper doors, cost over $2000 in 2013 when Mel chose it!
Still keeps food cold up top and frozen in bottom, but ice maker is done and I've been advised not to let Samsung in as they may remove parts that could be evidence in the class action suit in progress.
Velda
Oh my, Velda!! Thanks for the tip!!
When I was looking at refrigerators last year, in 2020, I think Samsung had the worst reviews, and the largest percentage of negative reviews, of all of the brands I looked at. Sounds like Samsung has only gone downhill from when you bought yours in 2013!
180,000! Holy smokes! What a can of worms!! That is a LOT of people to be unhappy with their Samsung refrigerator. Sounds like the Samsung "warranty" is, basically, worthless!! I definitely will not be putting a Samsung on my list!!
The warranty I have on my current fridge is through Lowe's, not through Whirlpool (the brand of my new-ish fridge).
I have had pretty good luck with the Lowe's-backed warranty. Two years ago, when the washing machine I purchased from Lowe's died in a really spectacular fashion, I went looking for the receipt to find out when I had purchased it, because I couldn't remember the year. When I found the receipt I saw that the machine was over four years old, and I was surprised to find that I had at the time also purchased the "extended 5-year warranty" for an extra hundred bucks or so. LOL - there was only about 5 months remaining on this warranty, but after speaking to the store manager, and explaining what had happened, Lowe's replaced my washer with a new one (the failed machine was not repairable)! That made the warranty purchase definitely worth it - and probably influenced my decision to get a warranty on the fridge.
Thanks for all of your thoughts, ladies!!
Anne