Cousin Hepcat
Practically Family
- Messages
- 777
- Location
- NC
Remember the days when a home appliance broke, you could just go to the store, buy a mid-priced model made by a good reputable name brand like GE, and not worry about it possibly falling apart either out-of-the-box, or within 6 months?
When YOUR dvd player, Microwave, toaster, receiver, popcorn popper, etc finally dies, what do YOU do? - just go to the local Best Buy or Wal-Mart, buy one by a brand you know, and cross your fingers that it won't be a dud?
Or do you have some resources online, in print, etc you check first to get some idea of problematic makes/models to avoid? Ask everyone you know?
Either way, what's your luck been like?
Know any resources where they do this for you?: "Here's the most reliable midsize microwave on the market in last year"; "most reliable DVD burner"; "most reliable space heater"?... (Consumer Reports seems only interested in features: WHO CARES, if it doesn't perform its primary function. CR's repair histories are by brand, which can vary wildly from one model to the next; not always useful.)
Spent nearly ***two*** ***hours*** tonight reading customer reviews of mid-sized countertop microwaves in the $75-$200 range, and cross-referencing with product recalls & product warnings... *finally* found ONE maker without multiple recurring customer omplaints/warnings about wonky/erratic behavior, breakdowns, or blowouts, available in *any* major chain stores locally: Sharp, with their R405KST, at Wal-Mart...
There was a recent similar thread on the Lounge about tea kettles - after reading, immediately ordered a Revere myself. Nice to know I'm not the only nut here who tries to fight the odds lol
The most remarkable was a couple years ago when buying a VCR, and a hot air popcorn popper: couldn't believe 99% of the big-name models repeatedly reported as non-functional junk (went through 2 VCR's & 2 poppers before researching & finding that out)
When you have to buy modern, what's your approach? Suggestions for customer review resources? (besides http://www.amazon.com, http://www.epinions.com, searching the usenet groups for model numbers, or just asking everyone you know)?
When YOUR dvd player, Microwave, toaster, receiver, popcorn popper, etc finally dies, what do YOU do? - just go to the local Best Buy or Wal-Mart, buy one by a brand you know, and cross your fingers that it won't be a dud?
Or do you have some resources online, in print, etc you check first to get some idea of problematic makes/models to avoid? Ask everyone you know?
Either way, what's your luck been like?
Know any resources where they do this for you?: "Here's the most reliable midsize microwave on the market in last year"; "most reliable DVD burner"; "most reliable space heater"?... (Consumer Reports seems only interested in features: WHO CARES, if it doesn't perform its primary function. CR's repair histories are by brand, which can vary wildly from one model to the next; not always useful.)
Spent nearly ***two*** ***hours*** tonight reading customer reviews of mid-sized countertop microwaves in the $75-$200 range, and cross-referencing with product recalls & product warnings... *finally* found ONE maker without multiple recurring customer omplaints/warnings about wonky/erratic behavior, breakdowns, or blowouts, available in *any* major chain stores locally: Sharp, with their R405KST, at Wal-Mart...
There was a recent similar thread on the Lounge about tea kettles - after reading, immediately ordered a Revere myself. Nice to know I'm not the only nut here who tries to fight the odds lol
The most remarkable was a couple years ago when buying a VCR, and a hot air popcorn popper: couldn't believe 99% of the big-name models repeatedly reported as non-functional junk (went through 2 VCR's & 2 poppers before researching & finding that out)
When you have to buy modern, what's your approach? Suggestions for customer review resources? (besides http://www.amazon.com, http://www.epinions.com, searching the usenet groups for model numbers, or just asking everyone you know)?