Is there an appliance repair tech on here or am I getting my forums crossed?
If not, hey appliance repair tech...please dm me.
If not, hey appliance repair tech...please dm me.
LG linear compressor?I have been pretty lucky repairing most appliances and finding how to's on YouTube. This is a fridge compressor failure and I don't have the tools.
Yup. And I am full aware of the POS this is.LG linear compressor?
Oof. They might make decent phones and TV's, but they mostly make absolute junk appliances. One thing I've learned over the past 10 years of buying houses that came with with Korean appliances, it's that they all fail sooner than later, and if a repair is possible (it wasn't on one Samsung french door fridge with a known major unfixable defect that they continued to sell for years), it's often approaching the cost of a new unit. LG is better than Samsung in some categories, worse in others.Unfortunately, anything other than LG or Samsung doesn't really fit what we want well.
I've always been of the mind that I buy the best I can afford that also fits our needs. I don't like making compromises and won't for a few hundred dollars. The unfortunate part is that the "better" options do not fit well. They are too big or do not have features we use daily. The house is busy and the space is tight so making compromises has impacts that will constantly be a point of frustration.Oof. They might make decent phones and TV's, but they mostly make absolute junk appliances. One thing I've learned over the past 10 years of buying houses that came with with Korean appliances, it's that they all fail sooner than later, and if a repair is possible (it wasn't on one Samsung french door fridge with a known major unfixable defect that they continued to sell for years), it's often approaching the cost of a new unit. LG is better than Samsung in some categories, worse in others.
We had an LG fridge with the cursed linear compressor that came with our current house, and it died within a year. The cost to replace/repair was high enough that we just bought a Bosch instead. It's not likely a huge amount better, but it's better enough...
I'm curious, considering most fridges are a fairly standard size (e.g. counter depth, standard depth), what was it that LG offered that the others didn't?Welp, we spent days hunting...another LG. This is the only manufacturer that makes a fridge that fits the space and our needs. I usually never buy the extended warranty but this time I did.
We use the water and ice dispenser daily. It has become a feature that just couldn't be a compromise.I'm curious, considering most fridges are a fairly standard size (e.g. counter depth, standard depth), what was it that LG offered that the others didn't?
I instinctively stay away from added features in fridges, as they just add to the list of bits that can fail. The most reliable fridge is the top freezer, single door, no ice maker, no water dispenser, basic unit. My in-laws have one that's going on 20 years, and my folks have one that's 35+ years old, no fuss no muss. I was angling for one but was overruled by the missus as she wanted a French door unit...
I went through all that with my step kids. I was constantly fixing appliances. Don’t know how many times I had to fix the rollers on the upper rack on our Kitchen Aid dishwasher. They would jam anything that would fit into it, oversized cutting boards, cookie sheets, you name it. I was replacing those rollers at $200-$300 a shot every 6 months. We were lucky to get 4 years out of a dishwasher. As for fridges, we’ve been lucky, we’re on 13 years but had numerous leaks on the ice maker/water dispenser. You really have to watch those things. I’ve seen small constant leaks on those things do thousands of dollars of damage to floors, cabinets and the ceiling below many times.If you suspect a leak on any of your appliances, get them fixed. They generally get worse before they get better.A friend always seems to be buying new appliances because his family has a way of breaking things. He always seems to be buying a new fridge, washer, drier. microwave etc. Short of blunt force, how do people damage stuff?
He works hard and makes good coin. It seems that the family thinks "It's only money"
Some people have no mechanical sense. They don’t try to sense when something is sticking and just push harder. They overload shelves, cars, tools and friends.I went through all that with my step kids. I was constantly fixing appliances. Don’t know how many times I had to fix the rollers on the upper rack on our Kitchen Aid dishwasher. They would jam anything that would fit into it, oversized cutting boards, cookie sheets, you name it. I was replacing those rollers at $200-$300 a shot every 6 months. We were lucky to get 4 years out of a dishwasher. As for fridges, we’ve been lucky, we’re on 13 years but had numerous leaks on the ice maker/water dispenser. You really have to watch those things. I’ve seen small constant leaks on those things do thousands of dollars of damage to floors, cabinets and the ceiling below many times.If you suspect a leak on any of your appliances, get them fixed. They generally get worse before they get better.
Just remember that one side of the element is live, even if the switch is off. Shut the breaker off. Don’t ask.Oven element went kaput Friday new one should be here Tuesday I would love a new stove but if 50 dollars fixes it it will be fixed.
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Sometimes it's just the appliances that suck. Our appliances were all new in 2020. Since then I've had the washing machine flood the house because it was assembled incorrectly at the factory, dryer repaired under warranty twice because of a known defect (the second tech told us about the TSB on it and did the fix and it's been fine since), 2 furnace thermostats died (both Honeywell Smarts, replaced with a Ecobee Smart last month), main computer board in the wall-oven replaced under warranty, 2 fan motors died in the heat pump (apparently Bosch had a batch of bad motors and we got two of them).A friend always seems to be buying new appliances because his family has a way of breaking things. He always seems to be buying a new fridge, washer, drier. microwave etc. Short of blunt force, how do people damage stuff?
He works hard and makes good coin. It seems that the family thinks "It's only money"