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hillview
04-19-2018, 06:30 PM
How long do you expect your
Microwave
Dishwasher
Fridge
Oven

to last?

SnuggleBuggles
04-19-2018, 07:19 PM
How long do you expect your
Microwave
Dishwasher
Fridge
Oven

to last?

I haven’t replaced any of our old appliances, except the dishwasher. I strongly think old stuff was built for longer life. I can’t seem to kill them. ;) Our fridge is minimum 16 years old- it came with our first house. Our oven is also at least 15 years old. I’ve had to replace the heating element twice ($20 each). Microwave- going strong too!!


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AnnieW625
04-19-2018, 07:45 PM
Microwave- our microwave is a 17 years old....it is a $150 or so Sharp my parents bought me when I moved out in Dec., 2000.

Dishwasher- we have an apartment sized 18” Kenmore Elite.....we have had it 5 years.....I would like it to last another 3-5 years which is when we plan to remodel our kitchen.

Fridge- We have a 25 cuft. side by side Kenmore w/o water and ice and it is 4 years old....I would hope it lasts at least 10 years. We outgrew our old 18” top freezer Frigidaire and donated that to our kids school and it was 10 years old and it is still working.

Oven- our oven is a gas range oven GE Profile that was probably a year or two old when we bought our house in 2005 so it is going on 15 years old. Again would love it to last at least another few years as I don’t want to have to get another range before remodeling as I want a gas cooktop and built in oven. I am not counting on that though. If i will most likely have to buy a new range and I want the small double oven range this time.



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DualvansMommy
04-19-2018, 08:15 PM
I hope to expect my appliances to last pretty much 10-15 years, if longer then great! Newer stuff isn’t like the older generation stuff where it seem to last decades!!!!

When we bought our current house 10 years ago, except for the dishwasher everything was still original to 1980 at time house was purchased by previous buyers. So that’s hell of long time for those appliances which we’ve since replaced with our kitchen renovation.


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hillview
04-19-2018, 08:56 PM
so here is the situation -- all appliances purchased in 2012
- dishwasher needed a repair last year
- fridge has a broken latch (cannot close one door without closing the other door first) - this year
- microwave / oven (same screen) screen is on the fritz - this year
- vent hood won't raise -- last year
SO annoyed

specialp
04-19-2018, 09:49 PM
The previous owners of this house did a minor kitchen remodel in 2004 which included new appliances. They left us all the purchase information. The only thing we have repaired or replaced is the refrigerator. It could have been repaired (2012), but I was pregnant, had a freezer full of prepared meals, and zero patience to wait for the repair. I would neither surprised nor heartbroken if our microwave or dishwasher quit. Both work but show wear. In our previous house, we replaced a very old stove/oven and refrigerator just to fit the space better and they were still going strong 6+ years.

I guess I would hope for 10-12 years, but would expect a repair in that time frame.

SnuggleBuggles
04-19-2018, 10:25 PM
so here is the situation -- all appliances purchased in 2012
- dishwasher needed a repair last year
- fridge has a broken latch (cannot close one door without closing the other door first) - this year
- microwave / oven (same screen) screen is on the fritz - this year
- vent hood won't raise -- last year
SO annoyed

For the fridge, that’s something that might annoy me but we’d live with it and not even bother to repair it. It’s not really impacting function (aka keeping food cold if closed properly). How about the microwave and oven? Is the screen issue a must fix or a nice to fix?
The vent hood, ha- we might even live with that. ;) But I can see fixing that.
I guess we are cool with accepting things not being perfect so long as they do their necessary job. Come join me on the lazy side!


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klwa
04-20-2018, 06:45 AM
Hmm. We're on our second microwave since we got married almost 19 years ago. There was a freak incident with our old one (small metal shards in a potato I threw in to bake) so it went kaput. I believe our last dishwasher went 7-ish years.

As for fridge & oven, we moved into our house in 2002 and both are still going strong, so, longer than that.

We recently replaced our washing machine & dryer that we bought in 2000.

KrisM
04-20-2018, 07:26 AM
I want them to last at least 10 years. I think they should last maybe 15 years or so?

For us:
Refrigerator is from 2000 and I hope it lasts forever because the newer ones are so big they don't fit into the hole!
Stove was replaced in 2010. No issues so far.
Microwave is 2009 and has no problems so far.
Dishwasher is 2006. We have to tear it apart and clean it out every few months. It is not working great. That may be replaced soon.

The original stove, microwave and dishwasher came with the house. The house was built in 1997. So those were likely about 9-12 years old when we replaced them.

hillview
04-20-2018, 07:33 AM
For the fridge, that’s something that might annoy me but we’d live with it and not even bother to repair it. It’s not really impacting function (aka keeping food cold if closed properly). How about the microwave and oven? Is the screen issue a must fix or a nice to fix?
The vent hood, ha- we might even live with that. ;) But I can see fixing that.
I guess we are cool with accepting things not being perfect so long as they do their necessary job. Come join me on the lazy side!


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HA HA -- Us too ... have not fixed fridge or vent (no plan to). Microwave/oven screen it a new development and so far it works so fingers crossed). The dishwasher we had to fix as it just didn't work.

mikala
04-20-2018, 09:34 AM
I generally expect larger appliances to last 10+ years. Our small, cheap, microwave is on more of a five year cycle.

Our front load clothes washer is 8 years old and while we haven't had repairs yet I'm guessing they are coming and we're probably due for a gasket replacement because I can't get it truly clean anymore. That said it washes at least ten loads a week and I cloth diapered for awhile. It's probably run at least 4000 (!!!) loads. At $700 originally divided by the number of loads that's about $ .17/load if it died today.

khm
04-20-2018, 10:31 AM
We bought a new fridge 2 years ago. Our old one had been doing a very loud clunk noise that we figured was the compressor. It had been doing it for years, and never did officially die, we just went ahead and got a new one. It was 15 years old. In the same time span, we were shopping for a washing machine, so we went to a lot of different stores because our washer was a difficult one to pick.

Anyways, multiple different sales people told me with the fridges, there are new energy rules. These rules basically have the effect of making them under-powered, so the motor/compressor will not last because it is too taxed. The across the board consensus from them all was a fridge bought at that time would last 6-7 years. 8 would be awesome. So, I think they know the lifespans are short and are therefore putting in flimsy parts like latches and such because they only have to last for such a short time....

We downgraded the fridge based on this. Why pay $700 more for a few extra options for something that was doomed? Those extra options weren't worth the $100/year they'd add to the lifetime cost.

I'm hoping by the time it dies, these rules will be fixed or technology advanced so our next one will be better. (Not holding my breath.)

Same kind of holds for the washer with the new water regulations. We had to get an LG (front loader) because it was the only on that physically fit in our space. I do not feel it'll go the distance. Those buttons, the electronics, the tiny leak down the front panel, it just doesn't have a sturdy feel. I certainly don't think it'll ever see its 14th or 15th year like our old knobbed simple front loader from Sears.

I will say, YouTube is an amazing resource for a zillion repairs. We have utilized and it feels great to fix something that way! Nothing we've tackled has been super complex, but that still..... it makes me feel like a rockstar!

newnana
04-20-2018, 11:33 AM
I will say, YouTube is an amazing resource for a zillion repairs. We have utilized and it feels great to fix something that way! Nothing we've tackled has been super complex, but that still..... it makes me feel like a rockstar!

Totally agree with this. This thread has made me realize I've been living out of my parents house for 24 years and never replaced an appliance. Some of that is because we've moved within 10 years of buying every house (every house that we originally thought was our forever house but circumstances changed...)

When making fish sticks in the 12 year old oven, DD said the oven was shooting lightening. DH freaked out and said we needed a new oven for more money than I'm willing to part with. I checked out my friend youtube, saw it was a super easy heating element replacement, and had it fixed 3 hours and $100ish later. The only reason it was 3 hours was because of the drive time to/from the appliance parts store that carried the part and was open at that hour. Same thing when the dryer timer fell to pieces and was only drying for a couple minutes at a time. Except that fix was more like 2 minutes+ 2 days and $20 because that part was easier to get online. That dryer is easily 20 years old. We have purchased new appliances, but not to replace anything. The 12 year old refrigerator that was in the kitchen when we moved into this house works fine. But the drawers are all broken from the previous owners and the finish looked terrible. We still have it in the garage for overflow stuff and party prep and love having it there, but we bought a new one for the kitchen to make us happy.

I might fix a few things on the list you have, but if it functions and doesn't drive me crazy, we keep it. Heck, the microwave in my parents' lakehouse is the first one they ever bought. That purchase was well over 35 years ago and it works fine. We're just probably all exposed to radiation when we use it?

scrooks
04-20-2018, 01:10 PM
We have lived in our house for 13 years and bought all new appliances when we moved in. Our microwave is the only appliance that remains. Our fridge was just replaced this past thanksgiving. It may have been able to be repaired but Dh didn’t want to deal with it and wanted a more energy efficient model. Our stove was replaced about 6 years ago but we upgraded to a much nicer stove so this doesn’t count as a failed appliance situation. We are on our 2nd dishwasher. We have repaired our current dishwasher (only 5 years old... needed repairs at 2 years). Dh used to work for an appliance company so we always buy extended warranties. It has saved us on the stupid dishwasher.

legaleagle
04-20-2018, 02:24 PM
We replaced the washer/dryer, fridge, dishwasher and over-stove microwave when we renovated the kitchen 12 years ago.

Kenmore (whirlpool made) FL w/d - still going strong, though the dryer takes longer to dry. The door latch on the washer failed w/in the first year and was replaced under warranty (was later subject to class action lawsuit), heating element died in the dryer a few years ago. DH fixed with $50 part (and much swearing!) This is esp impressive because I cloth diapered the first 3 kids (running multiple cycles on each load) and we probably do 12 loads a week now with the 6 of us.

GE Fridge - was never that great - replaced when it finally died at about 9 years w/a whirlpool. We bought the whirlpool garage fridge about 10 years ago (still going strong) and loved it so bought another whirlpool.

GE dishwasher - lasted 10 years. We got an extra year out of it from BBB tip to add lemishine. Replaced with a kitchenaid, so far so good.

KA flat top stove was upgraded to GE induction stove 7 years ago, still works fine. Original KA stove still works too (at my office condo).

Whirlpool over stove microwave/vent - no change from original performance.

We're planning on redoing the laundry room and will replace w/d with stackable set (almost certainly electrolux for size & reversible washer door)

carolinacool
04-20-2018, 02:35 PM
Ha! We were just talking about this this morning at work.




Anyways, multiple different sales people told me with the fridges, there are new energy rules. These rules basically have the effect of making them under-powered, so the motor/compressor will not last because it is too taxed.

One of my coworkers said something to this effect.

Our house was built in 1998 and we bought it in late 2007. I'm pretty sure the appliances are original and they are all going strong. The one issue I'm having with the dishwasher is the tines are starting to rust and snap off. I think I've lost three so far and another looks ready to go. That's weird, so we are looking to replace in the next few months. But the actual performance of the machine is fine.

legaleagle
04-20-2018, 02:41 PM
Ha! We were just talking about this this morning at work.



One of my coworkers said something to this effect.

Our house was built in 1998 and we bought it in late 2007. I'm pretty sure the appliances are original and they are all going strong. The one issue I'm having with the dishwasher is the tines are starting to rust and snap off. I think I've lost three so far and another looks ready to go. That's weird, so we are looking to replace in the next few months. But the actual performance of the machine is fine.

That happened with our prior dishwasher, several years before we replaced it. We bought some kind of sealing paint & plastic cap kit from amazon that worked for several years - final death was unrelated to that!

mom2khj
04-20-2018, 04:42 PM
Used to be 15+ years. Now I'm happy if I get to 8-10.

We've been in our current house for 17ish years. We are on fridge #3 (though #1 was bought 2 years before this house and brought with us), microwave #3, dishwasher #2, range #2 and laundry set #3 (our first set was 18 years old when it conked, next one lasted 3) but going onto #4 soon.

With all the electronics/computers in things now, there are more parts to break down. And often it costs just as much to repair as it does to replace, that has been our experience at least. A lot more plastic is used too, which doesn't hold up as well.

twowhat?
04-23-2018, 09:56 AM
This is a bit of a pet peeve of mine - the new energy requirements force manufacturers to make changes to tried-and-true designs (even Speed Queen!) and cut corners for all the design changes to not impact their profit margins, and as a result appliances are shorter-lived and that means more junk in landfills. I don't know what the happy medium is...

I would hope that a new appliance would last 10-15 years but that's probably unreasonable. When we bought our new LG washer/dryer a few weeks ago, they told us to expect it to last 7-10 years. That's probably an honest answer for LG, who has a better reliability reputation at least for washers/dryers. Our old washer/dryer were going on 13 years and still working when we replaced them, with only one service call on the washer.

We bought all new appliances (everything except our refrigerator, which is 13 years old) with our kitchen remodel a couple of years ago. So far no problems but I feel like I'm tip-toeing around them - I treat them very gently LOL.

Even smoke detectors that are supposed to last 10 years are going bad for us at 6 years.

elephantmeg
04-23-2018, 10:39 AM
My washer I got in 2000/2001, same with the chest freezer. The drier we got a few years ago. The dishwasher/stove/fridge were new with the house in 2005. We're keeping our fingers crossed. Generally though (according to our appliance repair guy-an old family friend) the simpler the appliance the longer it lasts. He's a fan of whirlpool/roper appliances and ones without computer chips (ie basic top loading washing machines). He's also taught us how to declog the dishwasher frequently (we have hard water)- stuff builds up in the twirling thing that shoots water and in the front where the air vents are. We also have to keep after the lint in the dryer hose due to how it is routed out of our house. If it wasn't for him I think we would have replaced appliances more often! We are also faithful consumers of lemi shine :)

Kindra178
04-23-2018, 12:59 PM
We replaced two wall ovens two years ago. Two different salesmen, at two different appliance stores, told us the same thing - the higher end you go, the longer the appliance will last. We were looking at kitchen aid ovens in the $2000-2500 range. They each said, independently of one another, that the kitchen aid wall oven would last 5-8 years. We ended up going with Monogram, about $1000 more, to get the estimated 10-12 years.

The sub zero fridge in our old house was going on 18 years and probably had 5 more. We had many repairs on it, but nothing worth replacing it.

robinsmommy
04-23-2018, 04:28 PM
We replaced two wall ovens two years ago. Two different salesmen, at two different appliance stores, told us the same thing - the higher end you go, the longer the appliance will last. We were looking at kitchen aid ovens in the $2000-2500 range. They each said, independently of one another, that the kitchen aid wall oven would last 5-8 years. We ended up going with Monogram, about $1000 more, to get the estimated 10-12 years.

The sub zero fridge in our old house was going on 18 years and probably had 5 more. We had many repairs on it, but nothing worth replacing it.

Yes. Nowadays you get what you pay for. A water softener built into a DW will increase the life span if you have hard water - similar features/engineering in other appliances are what adds to the cost and the life.

Anyone else worry that posting here is tempting fate to hit you with an appliance repair in the near future?

pastrygirl
04-24-2018, 07:49 AM
I expect appliances to last 7-10 years. Wish it were more! Any more time I get is just a bonus.

pastrygirl
04-24-2018, 07:54 AM
BTW, my fridge came with that “feature”! It drives me nuts. Always have to close the left side first, then the right.

bisous
04-24-2018, 08:24 AM
My washer I got in 2000/2001, same with the chest freezer. The drier we got a few years ago. The dishwasher/stove/fridge were new with the house in 2005. We're keeping our fingers crossed. Generally though (according to our appliance repair guy-an old family friend) the simpler the appliance the longer it lasts. He's a fan of whirlpool/roper appliances and ones without computer chips (ie basic top loading washing machines). He's also taught us how to declog the dishwasher frequently (we have hard water)- stuff builds up in the twirling thing that shoots water and in the front where the air vents are. We also have to keep after the lint in the dryer hose due to how it is routed out of our house. If it wasn't for him I think we would have replaced appliances more often! We are also faithful consumers of lemi shine :)

This has been my experience 100%. My wall ovens are BROWN. I don't know the last time brown ovens were made. They have a "vintage" font as well. Super simple and cook my food. My washer/dryer combo has no frills and is over 17 years old. My microwave is also about 17 years old. I bought my fridge used and the only thing that doesn't work is the water. We've had it for 7 years. The only thing new-ish is my dishwasher.

I think this is a really good strategy. I think once you even move up to "midlevel" appliance maybe it pay to get the top of the line. I think most people don't want to live without all the new features and that's completely understandable. But there is something to be said for fixing a washer that has no digital parts (computer programming) versus one that does. I've been wanting to replace my fridge. I'm sure we can be more energy responsible if we do. I"m afraid for the cost and it sounds like it is also possible it won't last as my old one.

georgiegirl
04-24-2018, 08:48 AM
Sadly I feel like 7-10 years is standard. We’ve been in our house 11.5 years. We’ve replaced everything except the microwave and the range. We’ve even replaced the dishwasher twice! Fridge is currently the oldest at 8.5 years old. The water dispenser hasn’t been working for a few years (it works but if would leak into the fridge so we just stopped using it), but we didn’t want to pay for that repair. We only had to replace the wall oven (2 years ago) because the door hinge broke off. Other than having to prop the oven closed with a chair while roasting the thanksgiving turkey (yes, it broke when I opened the oven to baste the turkey), it was working fine.


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