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10 grand. the Bosch. Cdn pesos.
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We also have an upright freezer for all our meats and such. Samsung is the brand but I don't remember the model. |
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Samsung RF24FSEDBSR 3 years now and it's been outstanding. We really like the french doors with bottom freezer. The middle drawer is for snacks, sandwich meats, cheese, hor dourves, yada yada. Will never go back to the traditional side by side. |
LG
Lotsa Garbage My two cents. Most appliances these days are built to a very poor standard and do not last, |
Bought a new LG fridge a year and a half ago.
We got the side by side with the freezer below, that is the best design IMO. The freezer has two sliding shelves and a compartment below for three separate storage areas, easy to keep things separate and organized. Forget about that door in a door crap IMO, waste of money and space. We bought the largest non-built-in fridge they had, I believe it is 35.5 cu ft. When we were deciding I asked the wife one question: when was the last time you wished you had a SMALLER fridge? She said never. We are very happy with this fridge so far. ZERO issues or problemos, filters are cheep on evil-bay. I believe I paid around $2300 at Pacific sales, my favo-rite store in the whole world. |
An oldie but a moldy:
Back when I was a bachelor I had some yogurt sitting in the fridge so long it came to life. So I taught it to sing opera. You talk about culture .......... ba da bing. I also grew my own bath mat. |
We have a side by side Kenmore with water/ice in the door. Not an Elite but not cheap, I think it was at least $2500 on sale. We are about 3 years in and I have already had to replace the agitator motor in the freezer door for the ice maker, and the door is starting to visibly rust under the ice/water cutout. Cheap POS, I would happily spend double for something that would give me a solid 10 years of reliable use.
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All our appliances will connect to the Internet to provide monitoring, basic controls, and, most importantly, remote connectivity for service and support. It's already happening. |
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As for the other features, I find it hard to believe that anyone cares about having an internet browser on their refrigerator when they have a far superior device in their pocket. It will be much like car infotainment systems - within a year the system is obsolete and inferior to a smartphone app that is continuously updated, running on hardware that is replaced by the user every two years. My wife and I am 35, and I in particular am very tech aware and work in a high tech industry. I could not be more indifferent to the internet features of my fridge. I do, however, greatly care about quality construction, clever features to allow it to store my food more efficiently, attractive industrial design, and reliability. So when I buy a new higher end model, likely within the next six months after we remodel our kitchen, I won't be looking for any of the features that you mentioned. On the contrary, I will avoid such pointless features because they add complexity and cost and reduce reliability. So there's my opinion from a focus group of 1.:) |
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Clearly you don't have kids in the house. Ours are old enough to not do it now... But it has happened. ;) |
Several months ago, I saw an ad for a Samsung fridge wit LED interior lights (wow!!!) on my FB feed. Out of curiosity, I clicked on the ad and started reading the FB comments. There were so many complaints from people whose refrigerators just happened to fail after their warranties expired. I am not sure I would ever advertise on FB, it's too easy for people to post their complaints and make you look bad.
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His comment about getting a text that someone had left the fridge open had me pondering what do you do when you get that text? I'm sure as hell not leaving work and driving home just to close it. |
You silly engineers. I'm a networking guy....I'll be shopping for a refrigerator/router :D
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I'm with Glen, I don't need the added complexity, nor the parts obsolescence that goes along with it. I have a basic fridge, it's never needed service after 18 years and I'm happy with that. Word of advice for the steering committee... Keep it basic and engineer it to last forever. Keep the parts in the supply chain forever. Nothing pisses me off more than to need a $20 part that can't be found anywhere in the universe, so I have to junk something that's otherwise perfectly fine. JR |
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Seems to me that the manufacturers should be worrying about building a fridge to last ten years without service, rather than adding connectivity. How about a fridge that doesn't need service as opposed to one that calls for service and new software regularly? |
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One thing to keep in mind...
You sell something that lasts forever, you can only sell a certain number and then you're done. You sell something that lasts slightly longer than your competitors, you're in business selling new ones forever. |
I was shopping for a clothes dryer many years back.
I walked past one after another of the dryers with LED displays and digital this and that and computers and what not. I walked past all of them and told the store clerk, I'll take THIS ONE as I pointed to a plain white dryer with one analog knob and a push button start switch. It was $100 cheaper than all that built in obsolescence crap and mine is still working fine today. THAT is what consumers want. Simple, efficient, reliable value. |
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