• grue@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    Samsungs don’t just fail; they are incredibly precisely engineered to fail on purpose not too long after the warranty ends.

    I had a Samsung front-load washing machine that failed after maybe six years or so: the drum quit turning and it started making a terrible banging noise instead. I decided to take it apart to see what went wrong. Every single part in it was pristine and in perfect working order – electronic parts, mechanical parts, rubber parts, plastic parts, even the stainless-steel parts exposed to the water and detergent all that time – everything looked brand-new.

    That is, except for the “spider arm,” which is the large bracket that connects the axle to the drum. That one single part was made out of a completely different kind of metal and had corroded completely through. It was blatantly designed not to stand up to water and detergent. It was the most brazen, shameless instance of planned obsolescence I’ve ever heard of before or since.

    (Not my pic, but it looked pretty much like this – except mine was in three wholly separate pieces!)

    • BearOfaTime@lemm.ee
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      4 months ago

      Wtf?

      Think I’d be making an aluminum or stainless plate to put on there and use through-bolts to mount it with some silicone to seal them.

      • Joe Cool@lemmy.ml
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        4 months ago

        It’s true. I fixed a Samsung LED TV that wouldn’t turn on. They used a tiny resistor that I thought was a fuse.

        That resistor was chosen so that it always ran hot and failed after about 3 years of normal use. I put in a bigger one with the same resistance that stays cold and now have the TV for 5 years.