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Other Vintage Household Electrical or Electromechanical Items For discussions about other vintage (over 25 years old) electrical and electromechanical household items. See the sticky thread for details. |
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#21 |
Nonode
Join Date: Jan 2016
Location: Stafford, Staffs. UK.
Posts: 2,506
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Oh, and back to the programmer. I also saw a failure of a very similar looking programmer, back in the mid 80's though from memory a Hoover. Overheated contacts. Bought a replacemnt programmer but still didn't get it working. My suspicion was the original fault had been caused by the early electronic motor speed control.
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#22 | |
Tetrode
Join Date: May 2020
Location: Lincoln, Lincolnshire, UK.
Posts: 80
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#23 |
Dekatron
Join Date: Jan 2012
Location: Brentwood, Essex, UK.
Posts: 5,208
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In the mid-1970's I remember reading an article in one of the engineering journals we had circulated at work, which was an interview with someone from Zanuzzi. He said that they were going up-market, the design life of their washing machines was being increased from 5 years to 7 years.
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#24 |
Pentode
Join Date: Jun 2020
Location: Manchester, UK.
Posts: 230
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Those old machines are worth hanging onto if you can keep them going. I too had an old Hoptpoint that lasted donkeys years before it finally expired. Bought a Bosch to replace it. You'd think that would be a good move, but no. After eight years the bearings went on the Bosch. "No problem" says I, "I stripped the Hotpoint, split the drum and changed the bearings on that, I'll do it again." Only to find that the outer drum on the Bosch is a moulded plastic unit, one piece, and can't be split and rejoined - you have to replace the ENTIRE THING.
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#25 |
Nonode
Join Date: Jan 2016
Location: Stafford, Staffs. UK.
Posts: 2,506
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Back in the 80's I had a machine, Hotpoint I think. Outer drum didn't need to be split (and couldn't be) the bearing was replaced by just removing the spider.
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#26 | |
Dekatron
Join Date: Jan 2012
Location: Brentwood, Essex, UK.
Posts: 5,208
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#27 |
Dekatron
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Oxfordshire, UK.
Posts: 4,739
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Certainly, Bosch tools have had a very good reputation, but even there, I'm not sure things are quite what they used to be.
B
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Saturn V had 6 million pounds of fuel. It would take thirty thousand strong men to lift it an inch. |
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#28 | |
Dekatron
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: Cottingham, East Yorkshire, UK.
Posts: 5,575
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Robert Bosch GmbH, commonly known as Bosch, is a German multinational engineering and technology company headquartered in Gerlingen, Germany. The company was founded by Robert Bosch in Stuttgart in 1886. Bosch is 94% owned by the Robert Bosch Stiftung, a charitable institution. It a gargantuan company with a complex network of over 440 subsidiaries and regional entities, operating in over 60 countries worldwide. Including sales and service partners, Bosch's global manufacturing, engineering, and sales network covers nearly every country in the world. At 125 locations across the globe, Bosch employs roughly 64,500 associates in research and development. It employs 5,200 people in the UK at 40 locations, including Worcester-Bosch central heating boilers at Worcester. One of countless brand owned by Bosch is Dremel. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bosch_...%20institution As to 'value engineering', done properly, it's good engineering practice. If the expected life of the most expensive item in say a washing machine - perhaps the motor - has a design life of ten years 'mean time before failure', it makes no sense to make other components such as drum or the cabinet last for an eternity. Where things go wrong, and Bosch tumble dryers are a good example, is that the door handle - which has to be opened frequently and is held shut with a strong catch - is flimsy plastic. As a consequence, the securing pillars tend to snap off and it's a fiddly job to remove the fragments and fit a new handle. Properly designed using value analysis - not simply scrimping, the handle would have been designed to last as long as the rest of the machine. In one respect it's trivial, but in another, it tarnishes the myth which still abounds about German engineering. I've lost count of how many handles I've had to replace for my daughter-in-law (who is the chief engineer in the household). With three daughters at home, the washing machine and drier are in constant use. E-spares supply replacement handles, and say it's one of their most popular items, which comes as no surprise. In fairness, the dryer still otherwise performs fine and is at least ten years old.
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David. BVWS Member. G-QRP Club member 1339. |
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#29 |
Dekatron
Join Date: Jan 2012
Location: Brentwood, Essex, UK.
Posts: 5,208
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Flimsy plastic detents have been the problem with our fridge. The handle was originally a plastic strip along the top of the door, secured by small detents that were totally inadequate to withstand the force requred to overcome the magnetic attraction of the door seal. I got a thin metal cupboard door handle from Screwfix, made up a thin steel fishplate drilled with holes to match the handle's M4 fixing holes, and used that to bolt it to the door. The other flimsy detents were on the round plastic plugs that mate in sockets in the sidewalls to hold the drawer runners in place. Not available as spares, but drilling holes in the stationary part of the runners and screwing them to the plastic sidewall with self tappers, has kept the plugs upright in their recesses. The plugs handle the vertical force of the drawer, the screws only have to do the job of the detents. It avoided scrapping the fridge.
Last edited by emeritus; 7th Aug 2023 at 4:32 pm. Reason: typos |
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#30 |
Heptode
Join Date: Oct 2018
Location: Blackburn, Lancashire, UK.
Posts: 720
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I was very sad to say goodbye to my Servis Quartz 6035 in 2016.
It was bought new from the Norweb Electricity Showroom in 1989, and gave almost 28 years untroubled service. It was just the motor that failed. Nothing else. The day before my new machine was delivered, I took off the lid to have a look inside, just out of curiosity, and it was spotless. Everything looked as new as the day it was assembled. It gave me pause for thought, I must admit. I really began to wish that I'd sourced a new motor and had it mended! When the delivery men who brought my new machine were humping it out the the front door I actually felt quite tearful. When a faithful appliance has been resident in your kitchen for the best part of thirty years, it's hard not to feel sad when you watch it leave your house forever. I actually felt like I was betraying it by just letting it go to its fate. Daft, I know. But I still feel damned sad about it.
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Best Regards, Peter. Last edited by Lancs Lad; 8th Aug 2023 at 5:18 pm. |
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#31 | |
Dekatron
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Oxfordshire, UK.
Posts: 4,739
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I have this spooky view of tools, especially, very old hand-tools, and wonder about all the time they were owned and used by people in the past. I have a couple of ancient G-clamps, obviously hand made, perhaps in school or during an apprenticeship. Pity they cannot talk. B
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Saturn V had 6 million pounds of fuel. It would take thirty thousand strong men to lift it an inch. |
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#32 |
Pentode
Join Date: Jun 2020
Location: Manchester, UK.
Posts: 230
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At the risk of straying off-topic, that's the sentiment that besets me when I *have* to save some old receiver from the tip...
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#33 |
Heptode
Join Date: Feb 2022
Location: Leicestershire, UK.
Posts: 690
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Quote: I was very sad to say goodbye to my Servis Quartz 6035 in 2016.
It was bought new from the Norweb Electricity Showroom in 1989, and gave almost 28 years untroubled service. We bought a Servis washer in the early 80's which I can best describe as a Friday afternoon machine. Programmer went then drum bearing, all within a couple of years. Servis customer services upset me when they told me it was my fault because we did not take out an extended warranty. I scrapped he machine but kept the motor & later on when I decided to weigh it in, I was astonished to find the winding's were aluminium, not copper. I seem to recall that Servis went bust after our bad experience so maybe the 2016 reliable machine was made by another company retaining the name ? |
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#34 |
Heptode
Join Date: Oct 2018
Location: Blackburn, Lancashire, UK.
Posts: 720
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Well, Roger Ramjet, my Servis machine definitely wasn't a Friday afternoon model.
Uninterrupted service for 28 years. No rust on the bodywork, no slimy gunge in the rubber gasket around the door, and absolutely spotless inside when I had a look. It even still had the original WG Norweb plug on the cable when it departed my house. I still regret letting it go. If I'd just had a new motor put in, I bet it would have soldiered on for many more years.
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Best Regards, Peter. |
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#35 |
Dekatron
Join Date: Jan 2012
Location: Brentwood, Essex, UK.
Posts: 5,208
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Mum had a Friday Afternoon Servis experience with the first one we had in the late 1950's. It was the upright with power mangle type, and the mangle didn't survive the first couple of Monday washing days. Servis came out promptly, found knackered bevel gears, fitted new gears. A week or so later, same thing. New gears fitted. When it happened again, they gave us a new mangle and the machine worked faultlessly after that.
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