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gorgoiler | 18 days ago

I bought a new salad spinner recently, after having broken yet another one.

I’ve had fancy brands like Zyliss and OXO. I’ve had cheap store brand models and cheaper Amazon MYSSNGVWL type stuff as well. Knowing they would probably break didn’t make it feel better when they eventually broke.

Anyway the new salad spinner is large, heavy, with a steel pin into a brass bushing, has a metal handle and nylon gears in a sealed gearbox with exposed stainless screws for servicing. I opened it up and greased it on first use, mostly just to pretend to be servicing it, just to see what that felt like. It felt good!

The best part is it came with a catalogue that had order codes for spare parts. They wanted to help you maintain it. It was built to last and the manufacturer was on your side.

https://www.dynamicmixers.com/en/our-products/salad-spinner/...

I’m starting to feel silly writing all this about a salad spinner, but where is my car version of this?

discuss

order

grugdev42|18 days ago

The car version of this stopped being produced 15 years ago.

Old petrol Toyotas and Hondas met your criteria.

And the back catalogue of parts is huge and supported for a long time.

Modern cars aren't built as well.

Maybe the modern non-turbo petrol Mazdas are the best fallback.

bobchadwick|18 days ago

Modern cars aren't built as well.

Can you cite a source for this? There's no question that they're vastly more complex, but I would think that modern car manufacturing is far more exacting (and efficient) than in the past.

If you're saying that older cars are more repairable, I'm happy to agree with you, even without a source to back up that claim.

cschmatzler|18 days ago

This won’t fit the usual hate, but.. https://epc.tesla.com Vast majority of parts can be ordered directly from the catalogue.

tw04|18 days ago

I mean, the vast majority of parts for the vast majority of cars can be ordered from:

https://www.rockauto.com/

Ordering parts feels like less of the issue than the ability to fix and service it yourself.

Has tesla started supporting third party shops doing battery replacements for instance?

FranklinJabar|18 days ago

How can you replace the idiotic console and door handles with manageable parts? Is there a sane charging port yet?

mschaef|18 days ago

That's a $125 salad spinner... I get the appeal, but it's definitely a premium product.

simonsarris|18 days ago

> but where is my car version of this?

It's the status quo? Cars last longer than they ever have in history. In 2 decades average age of cars on the road increased from 9.5 to 14.5. They are a little more difficult to maintain for the home mechanic because they are packed with electronics, but what you want seems to exist perfectly. Many use timing chains instead of timing belts that last 20+ years. Radiators rarely crack whereas they used to all the time. Alternators last the life of the vehicle. Cars are often upgraded because the owner is bored or does not feel like paying for rust repair at the 15 year mark, more than unfixable problems.

AH4oFVbPT4f8|18 days ago

While I can't help you with a car, I share your desire of wanting things with replaceable parts, so I leave you with this, the coffee maker version your salad spinner, https://us.moccamaster.com. All parts replaceable.

dgently7|18 days ago

espresso machines are maybe in a different class of "coffee maker" but it seems like even the cheapest of those is pretty easy to service/repair/source parts.

or in some cases even upgrade to improve capabilities...

I did the gaggiauino mod to my gaggia classic and basically everything in there is just pipes and wires... the most complicated single part on the original is the vibratory pump. I'm pretty sure i could keep that same machine going indefinitely with access to parts.

gorgoiler|18 days ago

I ‘ave already got one!

ragazzina|18 days ago

>Fast and efficient, it respects the product’s fragility.

>Heavy duty construction for an intensive daily use.

Wait is it fragile or is it heavy duty? I guess they used "product" instead of "produce".

screye|18 days ago

2 reasons

Electronics and code ruined replaced pure mechanics. Components aren't physically maintainable or hot-swappable, because they aren't just physically connected.

Second is that maintenance is how dealerships make money, so there is a monetary incentive to make it seem esoteric.

For your purposes, the upcoming slate truck is closest analogue - https://www.slate.auto/en

LeafItAlone|18 days ago

I’ve had a cheap (was $15) single salad spinner, for about 15 years. Decent amount of usage in that time, but not professional level.

So my question to you is: what the heck are you doing to your salad spinners?

tgrowazay|18 days ago

If you spin low-grade uranium ore just right, the heavier particles will deposit on the edges, giving you high-grade uranium.

baq|18 days ago

Also if you’re dealing with sensitive information intelligence agencies can’t hack your car to go 100% on the throttle in a suburb. (Not sure if this is relevant in any way to salad spinners, though.)

7bit|18 days ago

Every car manufacturer has a catalog of spare parts you can order. I really don't understand what you're on about with your post.

fransje26|18 days ago

That it should be possible for somebody with a reasonable understanding of car maintenance to actually fix or maintain their car instead of having a blob of proprietary nonsense only meant to lock you in and milk your wallet with mandatory dealer repairs and subscriptions.

antasvara|18 days ago

That's a salad spinner with a price of ~4x the cost of the OXO one. Would you buy a new car that cost 150,000 dollars?