The survey found that over three – fourths of respondents possessed major household appliances and 75% were said to be 10 years of age or younger.
Almost one in three indicated in less than five years, their apparatus has collapsed.
Kenmore was called more than any other brand, representing 21 percent — or approximately one in five — of all apparatus downfalls in Canada when the producer is required to recall the device that broke down.
In this online interview of 1,522 adult Canadians, respondents shared details regarding refrigerators, dishwashers, furnaces, washing machines, and dryers on big domestic devices.
The Canadians were asked to identify their brands, and Marketplace classified them as per the answers they stated they experienced failures with. Brun del Re has difficulty in finding a cure for his comparatively new refrigerator Kenmore. The process took over two months of appeals, together with diagnostic and repair visits, to manufacturers and repair businesses.
He finally found out that the LG-made compressor had stopped.
More than 9 out of 10 (92 percent) Canadians reported that if the repair was too expensive, they would choose to replace the devices, the poll revealed the majority (58 percent) indicated that they didn’t spend above $300 on repairing a device that was initially costing $1,000.
The European Union aggressively supports the repair of household equipment over the replacement by a newly implemented law called the “right to repair” throughout 27 countries.
The new standards require manufacturers to provide spare parts for at least seven years the following purchase. It’s at least 10 years for certain equipment such as washing machines and dryers. Manufacturers also need to supply replacement components within 15 working days of calling a repair professional to arrange a replacement.
Furthermore, any substitute pieces must be compatible with ordinary tools and installed without hurting the device permanently. In addition, companies must provide all skilled repair technicians, not just workers, with diagnostic and repair guidance.
Why do we continue to make devices which survive for shorter and shorter lifetimes, with all this experience and technology?
If you want to have longer, environmentally better products and lower maintenance costs, you should want to fix them right. You must still want the ‘right to remedy’ even if you never bring your product to someone but the manufacturer because these regulations prevent the producers from overloading you or leading you mistakenly to find out whether something can be corrected.