by jimw1949 » Sun Mar 16, 2014 10:30 pm
I don’t think the problem is that manufacturers don’t want stuff repaired, I think it has more to do with the manufacturing costs than anything else. I am sure there are cases where a manufacturer wants to have “built in obsolescence” incorporated into the appliances they make, but I tend to think that is the exception rather than the rule. It is my contention the reason things are made so cheaply today is because consumers don’t want to pay much for the things they buy.
If a manufacturer built a dryer that was super well made, one that would last practically forever, was easy to repair and the repair parts were plentiful as well as fairly inexpensive to buy, but the dryer costs $2,000 to buy it, how many dryers do you think they would sell? As a general rule of thumb, consumers do not want to pay for quality appliances, they prefer to buy cheaper ones and buy them more often. While there are certainly exceptions to this, apparently there aren’t enough exceptions to warrant manufacturers to build really high quality appliances.
I used to work for a rather large appliance/electronics dealership and I can tell you straight out that the number of “high end” appliances we sold were very few when compared to how many of the lower end appliances we sold. It would seem that cost is one of the major concerns in the minds of consumers, if not the biggest concern, when purchasing home appliances. So if a company can save a few dollars by leaving off an access panel, they will do it. In fact, if the manufacturer can save 10 cents per dryer they will do it. That may seem silly to some people, but think about it for a minute. If a manufacturer saves 10 cents per dryer and they sell 10 million dryers this year, they just saved a million dollars. Now suppose they were able to save $10 per dryer. We aren’t talking pocket change here, we are talking major dollars.
Companies will go to great lengths to save on production costs. We may think some of the things a manufacturer does to save money is stupid, but at the end of the day the whole idea of a business is to make a profit. To that end a manufacturer will do whatever it takes to save a buck and make a larger profit. I don’t always agree with what companies do to save money, I tend to think at times they are shooting themselves in the foot with some of the things they do. But, unfortunately, not too many companies call me up and ask me what I think they should do, they just do what they think is right and that’s the end of it.