Vintage machines aren't necessarily any more reliable than "modern" units. The 1962 Whirly I grew up with had many repairs in its 15 years -- pump, belt, water valve, wig wag, lid switch, bearings replaced, even the bakelite agitator broke. Others have mentioned the same in regards to machines in their families. The 1976 Whirly that replaced it ran for 18 years (yes, with some repairs along the way) until the bearings wore out. The KA my parents have now that came along in 1994 will soon be 15 years.
The difference "then" vs. "now" is that people then were more apt to have an appliance repaired instead of tossing it out. Nowadays, a 5-year-old Whirly suffers a broken drive coupler, it'll be tossed out and the homeowner complains that the machine is junk ... over a $20 part. I have a 10-year-old Kenmore in my garage that a friend was going to trash. They washed a large rug, the coupler broke. They thought it was bearings gone bad due to the noise involved when the broken coupler runs.
There's more to water and energy conservation than just one's personal bills. With the world's population continually growing, more utility infrastructure is needed. More water treatment and sewer facilities, more power generation. That costs *everyone* in taxes and utility bills for municipal watersewer and power plants.
The difference "then" vs. "now" is that people then were more apt to have an appliance repaired instead of tossing it out. Nowadays, a 5-year-old Whirly suffers a broken drive coupler, it'll be tossed out and the homeowner complains that the machine is junk ... over a $20 part. I have a 10-year-old Kenmore in my garage that a friend was going to trash. They washed a large rug, the coupler broke. They thought it was bearings gone bad due to the noise involved when the broken coupler runs.
There's more to water and energy conservation than just one's personal bills. With the world's population continually growing, more utility infrastructure is needed. More water treatment and sewer facilities, more power generation. That costs *everyone* in taxes and utility bills for municipal watersewer and power plants.