this post was submitted on 02 Jul 2025
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Right to Repair
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Whether it be electronics, automobiles or medical equipment, the manufacturers should not be able to horde “oem” parts, render your stuff useless if you repair it with aftermarket parts, or hide schematics of their products.
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Great channel covering and advocating right to repair, Lewis Rossman
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That's a bit on you, after your third why did you keep going? I've got the same Dyson I've had for 15 years, the plastic is definitely getting fragile. I won't buy another when this one goes.
That is a fair assumption but I only bought the first two… the other three were “joint” purchases, where I came home to a new vacuum, and phrases like, “I can’t carry the old one up the stairs”, “we needed a new one, and this is purple!”, “the old one doesn’t get the dog hair up properly, and this one has an Animal head” etc.
That totally makes a huge difference....I was really disappointing thinking...."man my plastic is brittle, but now they break every 8 months."
I mean that's still on you for not establishing never buying a Dyson again. I always talk about this stuff with family/friends at some point when I get frustrated with current tools. Surely there's better out there, and someone knows about it.
I'd never buy one because they're exorbitant, and I can tell from touching one the plastic is brittle (and clear plastics seem to always be less flexible than colored plastics).
The price alone is insane. $500 for a vacuum? I can buy five of my current vac for that price. There's no way it works 5 times better, it's a vacuum.
The Dyson is just the 21st century equivalent of the Rainbow from the 1970's. (Wow, apparently people are still sucker's for the Rainbow).
That’s fair, I’ve told her now… no more surprise Dysons. Just thinking though for the ~£500 a new one would cost I could buy a lathe, and enough tooling, titanium, glass Fiber reinforced plastic etc to remake every failure prone component.