Reflection: Good Products and our "Throwaway Culture"

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There are times when I get rather frustrated with the "throwaway" nature of our modern world.

Because we have a good bit of tree pruning to do this spring, I decided that it was time to get a new blade for my long telescoping pruning saw that we use to cut dead things and water shoots out of considerably tall trees... without having to balance precariously on a tall ladder.

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I really like my tree pruner. I can reach branches that are 20 feet (6m) above the ground.

I bought it when I was living in Texas, circa 1992, so I could keep the Live Oak trees around my house fairly neat and tidy. I also created my own basket-like contraption for it that I used to pick pecans in the fall.

It has basically been a great device and I've used it everywhere I've lived ever since.

Anyway, I went online and ordered the replacement sawblade, making sure that I was getting the right kind for the right model tree pruner.

Thanks to the magic of modern Amazon delivery, a couple of days later I had a brand new razor sharp saw blade!

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But Not So Fast!

I went to install it on the saw this morning, and discovered that it didn't "exactly" fit.

That is, it certainly appeared to be the right sawblade but the two holes for the bolts that mount it to the telescoping saw handle were not exactly in the right place (off by a couple of millimeters) and one hole was supposed to be larger than the other... except on the new blade they were exactly the same smaller size.

So I took the packaging and went back and double checked the seller's information and double checked the manufacturer website and yes that is indeed the correct replacement blade.

Except it doesn't fit.

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So what I eventually determined was that even though it is the same make and model number, the design has "wandered" ever so slightly over the past 30 years, as a result of which the replacement saw blades have also wandered ever so slightly in their design.

I suppose from the manufacturer's perspective it's no big deal... they would simply assume by that now I've gotten 30 years of use out of my tree pruner, so it would be high time that just throw it away and buy a new one... so why don't I?

Well, because it's a perfectly usable and serviceable tree pruner!

This is one of the things I don't like about our world. Products wander ever so slightly in their design, and then all of a sudden you can't use them anymore because the spare parts now only fit the design that has already wandered.

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I wasn't about to be defeated by a saw blade, however.

Thankfully, I have a number of very delicate and small grinding tools that are used for putting holes in my painted stones to use for jewelry... so I spent about 30 minutes of my life with diamond coated grinding bits reshaping one whole to be oval and slightly larger so that it would accommodate the larger bolt on the original model and allow me to fix the blade even though the whole location was off by about 1 1/2 millimeters.

Yes, of course the problem was solved!

The annoying thing is that these were 30 minutes of my life I will never have back. So what's the big deal about 30 minutes? After all it's just 30 minutes, right?

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What's "wrong" with just 30 minutes is that this sort of thing happens all the time and there is definitely something wrong with 30 minute time eaters happening all-the-time, to do things like modify spare parts to keep original equipment working.

And yes, I'm perfectly well aware that the entire intention is that I should throw away the old one and just get a new one and stop bellyaching.

However, I just don't like wasting resources.

Thanks for reading and have a great remainder of your weekend!

How about YOU? Ever encounter situations where perfectly good items have to be REPLACED, rather than REPAIRED? Ever encounter spare parts that no longer fit the product? How do you feel about such incidents? Comments, feedback and other interaction is invited and welcomed! Because — after all — SOCIAL content is about interacting, right? Leave a comment — share your experiences — be part of the conversation!

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Created at 20220122 22:16 PST

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25 comments
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I suppose from the manufacturer's perspective it's no big deal... they would simply assume by that now I've gotten 30 years of use out of my tree pruner, so it would be high time that just throw it away and buy a new one... so why don't I?

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Hah, indeed!

Coming soon, to a movie theatre near you: "The Lost Commandments."

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It would looks as if the big consumer product companies already had found and rebuilt that long-lost piece ages ago without informing to the rest of mortals what it contained written over it. Eh? LoL

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I love that you had the tools and the know-how to fix the problem and didn't need to chuck it out! Bellyaching, perhaps. But well done you ;)

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Thank you @consciouscat, I guess I come from a long line of people who keep things until they are so far beyond "unfixable" that it truly is their time. And I just hate waste...

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My partner is the same: He keeps so many things I wish he would throw out. But he does then seem to pull things out of his hoard to build me useful things, from scratch, out of parts. At these times I remember to keep my mouth shut 😅

And I also keep too many things, as I always hate waste.

Here's to all of us finding a more healthy relationship with stuff, whichever direction our respective needles must move in order to achieve that 🙏

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It's an annoying thing, but it's good that you were able to solve it. Don't let things go through a crappy hole! I’m often annoyed that different brands of stuff aren’t compatible with each other. Examples include the size and shape of the battery in different cameras. Many times the USB port is not the same, plus the wire is very short. And why is it that smartphones today can no longer be disassembled? If the battery breaks, I can throw away the phone!
Let me not talk about household appliances (eg toaster, stick mixer). They break down in 1-2 years and are unrepairable. The old Russian machines could still be assembled.

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I've long been of the opinion that we could have a lot less "stuff" if things were more interchangeable.
My biggest example of this is: why can't I just have different cups/blades and one base to serve as blender/coffee grinder/food processor? All the base is, is "make blades spin around in a circle." Why can't I just interchange different functions on one spinny base? IT MAKES NO SENSE

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This is because big companies only consider us humans as consumers to whom all sucks can be sold at a good price. Even our needs are determined by them pounding their brainwashing ads on us.
The only way out of being a consumer is to shape small communities and create self-reliance, which, although with many renunciations, is the only way forward. What we are in now is leading to the destruction of civilization through the complete waste of the earth’s resources

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I'm a big supporter of the whole "right to repair" movement, which is just a variation on this experience... I'm also a fan of standardization of many things.

Appliances are a sore point with me. In many cases, all that's needed is some 25c part to make them work again.

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I'm with you on the keeping good things and repairing rather than replacing, but they make it so hard nowadays. And of course, if you do replace, the new ones break so much easier because they are purposefully built to do so.
And if something breaks under warranty, you often have to fight them to honor said warranty, as I had happen to me with my blender a couple of years ago. It was a whole months-long process, and in the end I think they only honored it because I didn't give up and also sent them a photo of the many products of theirs that I own (Oster kitchen appliances/gadgets) and said that they were losing a lifelong customer - and my mom was also a lifelong customer - and I was for sure telling her and everyone that they don't honor their warranties - and they finally replaced my broken blender (the motor just died completely). They kept trying to tell me that they only do one-year warranties now, but I had bought the blender under a 10-year warranty and it died only 1 or 2 years old. I was like - okay, so your current warranties are shit, but my warranty is still the old one and you have to honor it! Arrrrgh. Anyway yeah I have a new blender now. xD

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It's very annoying, to be sure. That's quite an odyssey you went through with the blender!

Although I don't like to go down that route, I find that the "twitter/YouTube threat" tends to be fairly effective.

When someone with a warranty service starts balking, I pull out the "It's all right, don't worry about it... it'll make for some very interesting story telling to my twitter/trustpilot followers" and suddenly things start moving. Mrs. Denmarkguy is world champ at that... she's even friendly with someone who brings class action suits (and wins!) against bullshit scams. We don't do it because there's money, we do it because that kind of crap should not be permissed to go unchallenged.

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Lawyer Threats will often get the work done - when I first moved in to my old apartment, apparently the resident at that address before me had some things in collections and I kept getting mail and phone calls - don't ask me how they tied my number to my address but I guess they can - for his debts. I even had someone personally tape a summons to my front door. I called that number and told them for the last time, he doesn't live here anymore, I don't even know the guy. And the collections person was all "he's your boyfriend and you're just covering for him!!!" And I snapped and was like, "OK that's it. I'm calling a lawyer and suing you guys for harassment. Since I have your company name and info on this summons, you can expect to hear from them shortly." Real quick their tone changed and they left me alone.
Like yeah, a**holes, people frikkin' move.

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I detest the throw away culture that manufacturers created. The old saying they don't make them like they used to is so true. They just want you replacing perfectly good equipment every few years. I remember fixing a washing machine of my mother, it was oldish and worked perfectly well, but I needed some rubber seal replacements for the door. Nope, we don't make that part anymore I was told. I did improvise and had running perfect again. Yes I am with you, the older we get those 30 minutes are 30 minutes we really notice now.

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Well done for getting the washing machine to work again! It IS very annoying, because most of the time these are perfectly fine pieces of equipment, and it's just some small 25-cent plastic bit that's broken!

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Thanks I appreciate that. Yes very annoying, just another ploy to make us buy more stuff and fill up landfills faster!

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I'm glad you were able to adapt what you got to make it work.

That gets me about a lot of things.

For instance, a vacuum that needs filters, they make a new model and before too long you can't get filters for the old-not-so-old one that is working as well as the day you bought it. Washing machines that folks want to charge you the price of a new one to fix ! It's terrible about all the things that should have simple fixes that we are supposed to throw away to buy more. That leads me to where all the trashed ones are going. Nowhere really left, so things are being pitched into the oceans. Then people want to complain about garbage patch that is floating out there and etc.... and etc. What a mess humans in general have made.

I could have a good rant any day about all of that.

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