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'Right to repair' gathers force

I'd be interested to canvas other members views on this. My view is "about time" - not for consumers to mend appliances themselves, but for appliances to be designed and manufactured for long service lives. My perspective comes from experience in three different manufacturing industries where longevity was a given, our products were expected to be serviceable for 20 years, and in practice typically lasted considerably more - 30, 40, 50 years. I get very frustrated if a piece of domestic equipment fails in an unserviceable way after, say, 5 years - recently happened with our gas cooker (which was actually pretty naff from day one). Then of course there's the electronic equipment that fails just after the warranty expires - I'd suggest that's completely unacceptable from a resource point of view. We know a huge amount now about design for reliability and design for serviceability, from an ethical point of view shouldn't we be applying this more?


I'm glad to see this article also considers the question of whether we should be encouraged to replace perfectly serviceable equipment in the name of energy efficiency. As it states, this all depends whether the energy expended in producing the equipment and disposing of the old equipment could actually exceeds the potential saving - which I suspect it often does.  


Cheers, Andy
Parents
  • Yes, that's a really interesting point re MTBF / MTTR. From an electronics point of view decent quality connectors are one item that can hugely push up costs - the connectors can end up costing more than the rest of the electronics, and yet still be the weakest point. There's no "right" answer to that one, I think it's a case for pushing for it at least to be considered.


    I heard a couple of years back, from a friend who used to manage a semiconductor fabrication plant, that the latest "low nanometer" processes resulted in devices with relatively short lives - years rather than tens of years - due to neutron(?) bombardment, I don't know how much of a real risk this is? (And might have misremembered those vague details.) 

     

    (My bit of string (literally) has just arrived in the post so that I can repair another of our old radios - classic case with our kitchen radio where the tuning knob went round and round and nothing happened...) 


    Cheers,


    Andy

Reply
  • Yes, that's a really interesting point re MTBF / MTTR. From an electronics point of view decent quality connectors are one item that can hugely push up costs - the connectors can end up costing more than the rest of the electronics, and yet still be the weakest point. There's no "right" answer to that one, I think it's a case for pushing for it at least to be considered.


    I heard a couple of years back, from a friend who used to manage a semiconductor fabrication plant, that the latest "low nanometer" processes resulted in devices with relatively short lives - years rather than tens of years - due to neutron(?) bombardment, I don't know how much of a real risk this is? (And might have misremembered those vague details.) 

     

    (My bit of string (literally) has just arrived in the post so that I can repair another of our old radios - classic case with our kitchen radio where the tuning knob went round and round and nothing happened...) 


    Cheers,


    Andy

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