• Dark ArcA
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    4 months ago

    You might also be experiencing survivorship bias.

    How many other old drill presses were tossed/didn’t make it?

    Just like people machines have variance in their materials and assembly. It’s entirely possible that many other, in your case, drill presses, broke early on in their life but a few have lasted.

    We do have some ridiculously disposable products these days but I do think you can still get things that last.

    My American Giant clothes for instance, I’ve definitely had some fraying on a few pieces but the majority of the clothes I’ve got from them still look like new and leave very very little dryer lint compared to my older department store shirts.

    GoRuck backpacks are built like a tank though I’m upset they moved most manufacturing to Vietnam… Can we not repeat the mistake of empowering/trading with regimes?

    I have a Cannondale bike that’s still in great shape after nearly a decade of fairly regular use.

    My wired Sennheiser headphones (DT 660S) have significantly outlasted just about all of my friends headphones (by like 2-3 headphones). I just recently had to replace the cable on them but once I did that (and bought an extra spare cable) they’re like new.

    I’ve got plenty of TVs (Samsung & Sony), monitors (Samsung, Asus, and Dell), and computers (mostly hand built using various parts … mostly from ASUS, MSI, and Corsair) around that are still running just fine almost a decade later and I know of some early LED panel TVs that are still running just fine.

    I also know of some recent LED TVs and appliances made by “LG” that have started to break horrendously.

    I’ve found Logitech, Corsair mice and Ducky, System76, Corsair keyboards to significantly out last Razor mice and Razor, WASD keyboards.

    My DeWalt tools are running like a champ still and significantly smaller and lighter than what my father’s (also still running DeWalt tools) were/are.

    I absolutely adore my Brother printer vs all the HP printers I had before.

    Meanwhile my Akron, Ohio house that was built in the 60s by professionals has several design issues that have resulted in floors sagging after all these years and will likely need all the pipes replaced in the next 20-30 years because of inferior materials like cast iron plumbing.

    There are still brands that do actually make products that last. The “poor tax” is definitely real though, a lot of these products do cost a lot more upfront but I’ve bought significantly less stuff and paid less over time because I have paid that upfront price.

    Sometimes you pay a lot of money and it still goes bad … but in general, I’ve gotten what I’ve paid for.

    • credit crazy
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      44 months ago

      Another thing to note is ease of repair. My folks have been using my dad’s 65 CJ5 jeep and a 04 John Deere tractor. Can’t remember the exactly the model off the top of my head but they are both used as work wood haulers. The jeep has broken down a few times but it doesn’t take longer than a afternoon to make repairs but the tractor has only broken down less because we don’t use it as often because it always takes a week to fix the things that go wrong. We also have a 15 F150 to haul wood and stuff but because it’s new and we got it in really nice condition so we try to baby it as much as we can when loading up fire wood into the bed. My 56 bel air is surprisingly straight up reliable I’ve never had to work on it as often as our modern cars but yet again we use it less and baby it when we can.

    • @inclementimmigrant@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      Again, the Sam Vimes ‘Boots’ Theory of Socio-Economic Unfairness still holds but planned obsolescence where shit, even good shit, falls apart more readily than before.

      Sure there could be survivor bias as you state but I still own a crap ton of stuff inherited from the 50/60/70’s that’s holding up much better than today’s cheap plastic junk and items that are literally designed to fall apart, including your dewalts, deltas, milwalkees, mikatas. Not saying that planned obsolescence wasn’t a thing back then, it certainly was but it’s a fuck ton more prevalent now than it was back then and repairing, something that today’s companies are actively fighting consumers against makes it even worse in today’s throwaway culture.

      That and I still think that the OP of this conversation thread is a bit of pretentious dick.