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I liked it enough to wonder why Whirlpool in the later part of that decade coming, the appliances to me, were in for getting a bit of cheapening and nary the features and workmanship I thought I was seeing just in that presentation...

Thank you, Corey for showing...
 
How I wish every appliance had this build quality in 2026.

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Yes, as I said: it should be mandatory to keep building this much consistency and durability into every new appliance and never cut corners nor reduce in quality in workmanship or materials...

Decade, after decade, and again, many appliances never kept on looking as good nor maintained the features or even reliability as these here, did...

Even General Electric could hang onto "a way they used to build theirs", after everyone else was charging more and offering less, before they also went that way...
 
Yes, as I said: it should be mandatory to keep building this much consistency and durability into every new appliance and never cut corners nor reduce in quality in workmanship or materials...

Decade, after decade, and again, many appliances never kept on looking as good nor maintained the features or even reliability as these here, did...

Even General Electric could hang onto "a way they used to build theirs", after everyone else was charging more and offering less, before they also went that way...
Thats true of course.
It makes no sense that a 1968 washer that sold for $250, and was so reliable, well built, has turned into a 2020's washer that sells for $700 and lasts maybe 4 years.

Corporate Greed stinks.
 
Thats true of course.
It makes no sense that a 1968 washer that sold for $250, and was so reliable, well built, has turned into a 2020's washer that sells for $700 and lasts maybe 4 years.

Corporate Greed stinks.

I think part of that is inflation and raw material costs. For example, $250 in 1968 would be about $2,300 today. Of course with economies of scale, tooling, automation and efficiency manufacturers have been able to bring that cost down ie a Speed Queen top load which is built similar to a vintage machine runs for about $1,500 today.

The difference is, back then you usually got your money's worth. Where as the $750 washer today isn't even worth half the asking price.
 
Yes, as I said: it should be mandatory to keep building this much consistency and durability into every new appliance and never cut corners nor reduce in quality in workmanship or materials...

Decade, after decade, and again, many appliances never kept on looking as good nor maintained the features or even reliability as these here, did...

Even General Electric could hang onto "a way they used to build theirs", after everyone else was charging more and offering less, before they also went that way...

I think so to. If not legally, at least morally in the eyes of the public. Real change will only come if people wake up and demand it. Putting quality and longevity over bell, whistles and apps.
 
I think so to. If not legally, at least morally in the eyes of the public. Real change will only come if people wake up and demand it. Putting quality and longevity over bell, whistles and apps.
That is why years ago, in my 20's, I sensed that some things being manufactured were in my opinion, somewhat inferior to earlier products.
I must have a keen sense to smell things like this.
The jobs that I worked at reinforced this feeling within me.
 
That is why years ago, in my 20's, I sensed that some things being manufactured were in my opinion, somewhat inferior to earlier products.
I must have a keen sense to smell things like this.
The jobs that I worked at reinforced this feeling within me.

You saw it, the public did not unfortunately.
 
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