They were made to be fixed. Today's TV are not. They are made to be replaced every 5 years. Soon 8K TVs will be the norm. Funny thing, The human eye only sees in about 2.6k.The picture quality also looked like you were watching TV through wax paper, but hey, you could fix it yourself.
They were made to be fixed. Today's TV are not. They are made to be replaced every 5 years. Soon 8K TVs will be the norm. Funny thing, The human eye only sees in about 2.6k.
Not true.
I have an old Samsung LCD bought in 2008, still going strong.
Another LG LED tv bought 2011, also going strong.
Meanwhile, my childhood tv, an old Zenith CRT, broke after a few years of use, would choose whether to turn on, and if it did another decision to stay on for more than 5 minutes. I didn't get my first flat screen until 2006, a heavy brick plasma, that also broke a couple years later (hence the 2008 Samsung).
Like with any electronic, there are bound to be faulty units and lemons. Most are good, though and can be long lasting.
The diminishing marginal utility of additional picture quality vs. the cost of the amount of data required for streaming 8K will prevent it from becoming the norm. No I don't know about this but my son does. Even today the data requirements of streaming 4K prevents many viewing options.They were made to be fixed. Today's TV are not. They are made to be replaced every 5 years. Soon 8K TVs will be the norm. Funny thing, The human eye only sees in about 2.6k.
So if they were made to be fixed, then they were also made to break. And you can solder things back together in those new TVs. I know a guy who has a nice side racket doing that. He picks up TVs from people that are giving them away because they're broken. Then he either solders broken pets back together or he Frankenstein's them when he has spare parts. He said (in what I'm sure was a very unscientific study) 75% of the TVs just need a little solder.They were made to be fixed. Today's TV are not. They are made to be replaced every 5 years. Soon 8K TVs will be the norm. Funny thing, The human eye only sees in about 2.6k.
So if they were made to be fixed, then they were also made to break. And you can solder things back together in those new TVs. I know a guy who has a nice side racket doing that. He picks up TVs from people that are giving them away because they're broken. Then he either solders broken pets back together or he Frankenstein's them when he has spare parts. He said (in what I'm sure was a very unscientific study) 75% of the TVs just need a little solder.
So what you're really saying is, the TV manufacturing industry hasn't changed. You just don't know how to repair them anymore.
And like @Angry Ram I have a couple of old LED TVs that are still kicking after several moves. Well, I had a couple. I'm down to one. I have neither the motivation to fix it or pay for it to be fixed. It was low quality picture anyway. The one remaining TV I've had since about 2009. The other was a few years older and just died early this year.
The drive to buy new TVs isn't because they're breaking. It's because of improvements. Flat screen was better than CRT. HD was an improvement. They tried 3DTV for a bit (that was dumb). 4k, now 8k. Curved TV for better viewing angles. The whole thing is aimed at driving early adopters to get a TV that makes their neighbors jealous.
The point still stands. Broken TVs are broken TVs if you don't know how to fix them. If you do, then it's all good. The industry isn't different, the technology is.He would be correct in that some of the solder joints become weak, but not all that common. A large portion of failure is the power supplies and or the capacitors as related to the power supply.
Sure you can replace the power supply and capacitors, but compare that repair costs vs a new TV. Same goes for the replacement costs of the screen
Now your buddy is smart about what he's doing. But your average repair shop is gonna charge you 2-3 hundred for a power supply. And we know we can get a 40" for 2 bills.
So when your Flat screen doesn't turn on = power supply related 90% of the time.
The point still stands. Broken TVs are broken TVs if you don't know how to fix them. If you do, then it's all good. The industry isn't different, the technology is.
Saying the old TVs are better because a subset of the population knew how to repair them and had the tools to do, makes as much (or less) sense as saying that typewriters are better because you didn't have to use a printer and new printers confuse you. Portions of it may be accurate, but it's also a personal problem and not a systemic failure of the industry or product.
Not a "subset of the population" just anyone with a screwdriver to take the back off the TV, unplug the vacuum tubes and take them to the tube tester machine at the hardware store or gas station. If the problem was one of those tubes then it was super easy and inexpensive. Sure the technology today is different but that isn't the issue. The issue is the industry adopting planned obsolescence where the product isn't expected to last long and isn't designed to be repaired. To say the cost is cheaper to buy a new TV than repair your old one is playing right into their hands. That logic over a lifetime will be unnecessarily very expensive IMHO. If you want newer technology in your TV then fine. But that TV should be able to be reasonably repaired if you're satisfied with it.The point still stands. Broken TVs are broken TVs if you don't know how to fix them. If you do, then it's all good. The industry isn't different, the technology is.
Saying the old TVs are better because a subset of the population knew how to repair them and had the tools to do,
I'll give you some (most) of the stuff in your "Case in point" section. Car manufacturers have been doing the same thing. They increase the mileage between services knowing that it will die sooner, but probably about the time you're ready to replace it anyway.Not a "subset of the population" just anyone with a screwdriver to take the back off the TV, unplug the vacuum tubes and take them to the tube tester machine at the hardware store or gas station. If the problem was one of those tubes then it was super easy and inexpensive. Sure the technology today is different but that isn't the issue. The issue is the industry adopting planned obsolescence where the product isn't expected to last long and isn't designed to be repaired. To say the cost is cheaper to buy a new TV than repair your old one is playing right into their hands. That logic over a lifetime will be unnecessarily very expensive IMHO. If you want newer technology in your TV then fine. But that TV should be able to be reasonably repaired if you're satisfied with it.
Case in point: My push mower crapped out and I couldn't find a decent used one so had to buy new. Needed a side discharge so ended up buying one of the least expensive ones for $240. I'm hoping I can get more than 5 years out of it. While the technology and some of the design is impressive other things are just designed to fail. And fail fast. It has a Briggs engine but no oil drain plug since they claim it never needs the oil changed. It also has a steel deck but no wash port to help prevent the deck from rusting out fast. Plastic gas tank, air filter housing and deck height adjustment etc. So much stupid stuff I'm going to try to pick up a blown one for parts. I'd be glad to pay $20 more for a new one that had those things designed to last.
Well believe it or not that is exactly how things were designed before the 1930s. Companies took pride in their product and wanted to build their business by earning brand loyalty. The ability to repair was paramount since people thought it foolish to keep buying the same thing every few years. Many of those that did trade their cars in every few years stayed with the brand. Planned obsolescence started during the Great Depression in order to drum up more business. Even today the businesses that do the best are those that make a quality product that at a minimum they support and the product lasts. Think Apple. Think Technivorm. Many others.I'll give you some (most) of the stuff in your "Case in point" section. Car manufacturers have been doing the same thing. They increase the mileage between services knowing that it will die sooner, but probably about the time you're ready to replace it anyway.
However, I will take issue with saying "the product isn't expected to last long and isn't designed to be repaired." If the other TVs were also breaking, were they really expected to last longer? How long was it, generally, between breaks? And finally, were they designed to be repaired or did the design they had available lend itself to repair? Was the CRT the best option they had at the time and it happened to be easy to repair or did the entire industry really say, "You know what would be great? If customers didn't buy more of our products because they repaired the old ones they already bought! That way we don't make more money!! Make all the products easy to fix."
I can see it now. The CFO gets excited and shouts, "Brilliant! That will reduce profits by at least 25%. We'll all miss our bonuses and by next year this time we can be out of jobs."
And the CEO replied, "It's pure fucking genius. Make it happen."
So, designed for repair or coincidentally were easy to repair?
That's all probably true. I don't think you were there during the 1930's for firsthand knowledge of this, but it's reasonable and hold up to logic. That being said, every CRT was designed and built before 1939. So if there was a way to force people into new TV's by making them less repairable after that, I'm sure that all these people who grew up in the 50's, 60's, and 70's wouldn't have the same experience repairing their TV.Well believe it or not that is exactly how things were designed before the 1930s. Companies took pride in their product and wanted to build their business by earning brand loyalty. The ability to repair was paramount since people thought it foolish to keep buying the same thing every few years. Many of those that did trade their cars in every few years stayed with the brand. Planned obsolescence started during the Great Depression in order to drum up more business. Even today the businesses that do the best are those that make a quality product that at a minimum they support and the product lasts. Think Apple. Think Technivorm. Many others.
It's all true. No I wasn't around in the '30s but I grew up listening and interacting with people who were adults in the '30s and I was that kid who listened and asked questions. CRTs being designed before 1939 doesn't mean thats where the innovation stopped. Look at the development of the wheel compared to the automobile tire of today or even those of the 1930s. I well remember the shadow mask CRT and the far superior picture of the Sony Trinitron with its aperture grille CRT since my dad bought a 19in. Sony Trinitron in '75. There were later improvements to CRTs into the '90s.That's all probably true. I don't think you were there during the 1930's for firsthand knowledge of this, but it's reasonable and hold up to logic. That being said, every CRT was designed and built before 1939. So if there was a way to force people into new TV's by making them less repairable after that, I'm sure that all these people who grew up in the 50's, 60's, and 70's wouldn't have the same experience repairing their TV.
Apple is successful because of cultism, brainwashing, and I'm pretty sure they sacrifice children to fuel magic rituals aimed at brand loyalty. However, they also count on people replacing phones and laptops every few years, even though they work. They're trying to drive people to new features, which is what I said a few posts ago.
I've never even heard of Technivorm.
More advanced technology is harder to work on. It requires specialization. That's what all of human society is based on. I can know the ins and outs of networking and security because I don't have to grow my own food or build my own house or maintain a horse. The person at the gas station doesn't have to know how anything with a power cord works because they specialize in running a gas station. All of that also means, that neither of us know how to repair an OLED TV because the person who designed specialized in doing that so that they don't have to worry about either of our jobs. Symbiotic working relationships amongst skilled workers is the core of human and technological advancement. The side effect is that you can't repair your TV. Maybe it's evil business. Maybe it's because many of the things you rely on every day require a skill set to create and maintain that you don't have because you chose to specialize something else.
Take your pick.
I can always depend on you D to come up with an illustration of wisdom and common sensibility,
It's is true today's TVs are not designed to last like the old Tube sets of the past.
Some last longer than others. Parts on today's tvs are not designed to be repaired.
With today's prices it's normally cheaper or more cost effective to replace than repair.
They just don't make them like they used to.