<p>Yesterday, we gave away our ~6-year-old GE French-door refrigerator after a
never-ending slog of repairs. At least the guy and his mother who came to pick
it up have a side-hustle of repairing and reselling appliances. There's hope it
won't end up in a landfill. He offered to sell me a 4-door Sam...
I was astounded at how many refrigerators were described as junk when reading about the different new options available. Repairmen on YouTube were like "Avoid Samsung, Whirlpool, Frigidaire, LG, Midea, ..." Listing almost every brand.
I get asked about what appliances to get all the time because I'm a handyman. I wrote up this short guide to copy and paste:
Tips for buying a fridge or any major appliance:
Don't until you absolutely need to, because...
Most modern ones are crap and won't last more than 5 years, but..
The EU just made it so that any new major appliance must be repaired by the maker for 10 years because they are sick of all the waste created by cheaply made crap
When you do buy one make sure it is one that could be legally sold in the EU so you can get one that lasts.
Do not get any fancy features.
The more features an appliance has the more it costs, obs, but..
The more features an appliance has the more things there are to break which means more long term cost of ownership.
Ice cube trays still work when the ice maker says to change the $40 filter.
Any smart appliances (IoT device) is a network liability and the next thing you know your dishwasher is part of a botnet hoggin up your bandwidth and there will never be a firmware update to fix it.
Really surprising to my that a Bosch / Miele can be had for less than $1000. In the US, it's hard to find anything less than $3k in those brands.
I have seen some places around here sell Beko, but only in white.
The strange thing is: its not like these simple appliances have been out of production. Go to any shop in a developing country and you can get cheap and easy to repair models from well known brands completely new.
Try the same in Europe, no luck. Almost impossible to get an AC without completely unnecessary Wifi for example.
I am not quite sure what the reason for this is. Part might be that the legally required energy efficiency scores are only produced for the higher end models that come with all the stupid unnecessary gadgets that break all the time. But it is clearly a total market failure as I don't think anyone enjoys having a half broken fridge all the time...