Friday, December 29, 2017

Thank you for 35 years of reheating leftovers and other microwaving activities



Someone discarded their microwave on 12th Street and Avenue A last evening... but not before leaving a note of appreciation on the appliance... "Broken. 35 yrs of service. RIP."



Thanks for @PerJennifer for the photos!

19 comments:

Eden Bee said...

Sniff.

Giovanni said...

And they are still wondering why they could never manage to have any children.

Anonymous said...

They don't make 'em like the used to!

Anonymous said...

I have a similar model nuke from Sharp, in white. My mom bought it for me when I moved away from home and into my 1st apartment. That was 1989. The plate that goes on the carousel is long gone, and the door sticks, but it still works!

Anonymous said...

35 years is pretty good. I'm willing to bet no appliance today would last that long.

I had a vacuum cleaner from the 60s that lasted at least 40 years (before I gave it to someone else). Best damn vacuum ever.

Anonymous said...

Be kind to the environment: Sanitation doesn't take electronics, so either take such things to an E Waste event at Union Square or give to Salvation Army (they take everything, even if it doesn't work) via the shop on 4th Ave & 12th St or they will pick up, as well (and they'll come upstairs to a walkup apt).

Anonymous said...

anonymous @ 6:05 PM missed all the humor boats. debbie downer over there.

Anonymous said...

Theory:

The longer a product lasts, the more money you have to spend on other things and save.

Therefore the better made product, the stronger the economy.

Thoughts?

Rob D said...

Thirty-four and still going strong.

https://imgur.com/a/rBf1W

JQ LLC said...

I have a 19 inch TV I bought in 1995 and it still works. DTV compatible too.

7:34 is right on. Considering the recent controversy with the Apple batteries.

Anonymous said...

We have a GE frost free refrigerator, purchased from J Eis & Sons in 1981. Still works great. Bucking the throw away economy.

Anonymous said...

Todays marketing strategy is built in breakage. Why sell something that last a lifetime, when you can makes sales for life. How new are our electronics? Less than five years old?

Trixie said...

FYI There is going to be an Electronics Recycling Event at Union Square on January 7th 2018. These things have a tendency to sneak up on one, amidst the holidays and all, so I just thought I’d mention it. I have a printer that I need to get rid of, it’s not anywhere near 35 years old, but I do have a 50’s fridge and stove that still work.

Anonymous said...

Yeah, a clean street and recycling for environment is a real downer, @6:43 pm

Makeout said...

Folks have a toaster from 1937! That toasts!

Anonymous said...

You can recycle your printer at staples, best buy et al at any time, don't need to purchase to recycle

Gojira said...

1955 Westinghouse push button refrigerator bought off Ebay, 1920s double-wide gas stove with decorative enamel found on the streets of Little Italy in 1994, 1930s Art Deco Electrolux turquoise steel vacuum cleaner on sled legs found with attachments in the trash on 11th and A, 1981. They all work perfectly.

Giovanni said...

I still have the original iPod, the first Nintendo Gameboy, a Zune music player which I found on the street, and a 1930s Toast-o-Lator where the toast marches from one end to the other on a conveyor belt while being toasted to perfection, and then the toast falls out right onto your plate when it’s finished. Everything still works except for the Zune, which was obsolete a week after Microsoft started selling them.

Gojira said...

Holy crap, Giovanni, you have a Toast-o-Lator?!? I've always wanted one of them, coolest toaster ever!