I have had success with a dryer heating element, a couple of ice makers and a 55 and 75 inch Samsung TV--that break just as easy. These new TVs are surprisingly easy to fix.
The hvac guy wanted your furnace. Probably thought he could con you into buying a new one for $3,000 and them sell your old one as a used furnace for $1,000.An HVAC buddy helped me install a new gas furnace in the year 2000. About 5-6 years ago during the winter the furnace gas valve started to sometimes stick in the closed position. I would notice the drop in the room temperature, check to make sure the thermostat was calling for heat, etc. Tapping the gas valve with a screwdriver handle would let it open and function normally for few weeks. The wife insisted I call a heating contractor to get it "professionally" fixed. It's a good quality furnace, lifetime heat exchanger, etc.
The contractor came out to have a look after I had told him I just need the gas valve replaced. He noted the age of the furnace and said I should replace it. (It did not need replacing, only a new gas valve!) I told him I know it's just a bad gas valve and can you replace it and when. He said he'd see if he could even get one and get an estimate for me and I shouldn't be tapping the gas valve meanwhile. A few days later, he came with a $3000 estimate for a new furnace install. Didn't want to just replace the valve, if he could even find one. (Adios, to that contractor!)
I went online and quickly found a new replacement gas valve delivered for about $70. I also bought a digital manometer to set it up. For under a $100 I installed, tested and set up the new gas valve and it's been working fine since! those digital manometers sure beat using the old "U shaped" tube & water setup for adjusting the gas pressures.
Bill - I’ve gotten so I do the same for the pellet stove. It’s our primary heat. Have both blowers, circuit board and a couple other parts just in case.Deer season I have a refrigerator in the basement I use to put the quartered deer in and then Wife and I process over a couple days. Well I plugged it in the day I got one and it wasn't cooling in ref but the freezer was. So I see it was the evap fan. I Had a spare evap and condenser fans for kitchen one, but the fan was a little different and shaft was longer. I checked and it would fit in the mount and plug in. So a couple seconds with a cut off wheel and slide the fan blade on. plugged it in and cooling.
So I went back to the internet and re-ordered the spare fan and an exact one for the basement one.
I try to keep spare parts for the appliances on hand and it definitely paid off this time.
In the tractor department I have some hydraulic hoses and a box of adapter fittings so I can fix one right away with even if it is too long or the wrong sizeI can get them back to the garage until I can get the correct one
Bill
I replaced my washer and dryer just about a year ago with a front loader pair. So all my spare parts I had for the whirlpool toploader probably won't work. That was over 20 years old. I need to start a list and get some for them.Bill - I’ve gotten so I do the same for the pellet stove. It’s our primary heat. Have both blowers, circuit board and a couple other parts just in case.
Heck, a while back I could have built a pellet stove if I had the panels and a burn pot…
I always have spare filters and fluids for the tractor.
Reminds me I need to check shear pins for the snowblower…..especially with the weather you and I have coming…
I hear you Jay, I looked at a lot of top loaders and they have eliminated the agitator on a lot of them and they had terrible reviews. My wife is under 5' and it is difficult for her to reach down in the new ones. So we took a chance and got an Electrolux pair. they had decent reviews. There is a cleaning cycle it has and I try to cycle that every week or so. It also has a steam cycle I want to look at further as I wonder if that would affect the mold potential if that was used.When you see the price for new door seals and the MOLD leaky ones cause, you'll really,really wish you'd KEPT the top loaders.
Bill - - I think our first kitchen table, stove, and washer/dryer all came from Wernicks on Homer Ave. First place my family always went. Can't guess how much stuff we bought there over the years.We used to have great appliance and furniture store here but when lowes and home depot came in the area they called it quits So we have to deal with that too. They had parts and service at Wernicks Something the box stores lack.
Bill
So true. internally, these things are very lightly built. Amazed me that nearly all parts for that dryer are no longer available (NLA).It is sad that 'white goods' are built so shabby.
I think you are right that nobody builds home appliances to last but they used to.If you step back and think about it, nobody builds ANYTHING to last. If they did, they'd make one batch and be OUT of business. Be it 'white goods', cars, computers, TVs,houses virtually everything is designed to fail and be replaced. I bet there aren't many here who are still driving their ride from 1997, using they're first 'smart device', in their first house ?? Pretty sure 'they' only make enough parts for 2-3 batches ,then onto the next 'new' model, with all new parts of course....
My daily driver is the first car my wife bought when we started dating, 2005 focus, around 210,000 miles. Current truck is 05 Super Duty, 230,000 miles, I bought it as soon as it was traded in and it had 170-180,000 miles on it at the time. Not looking to replace either one any time soon . Not 97s but to be fair I was 11 in 1997 .I bet there aren't many here who are still driving their ride from 1997,