When Good Electronics Go Bad

Wed Nov 28, 2007 7:30AM EST

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I don't often get my tech advice from Real Simple magazine, but there are times when its straight-ahead, let's-just-deal-with-this approach to technology makes lots of sense. The September issue had a simple a story about when to pull the plug on your various pieces of aging electronics. Plus, it gave tips about how to extend the life of various gadgets so that they don't die an early death.

Some simple wisdom:

Flat-screen TV: Keeping your fingers off the screen and keeping the unit well ventilated will help prevent damage, but if your flat screen is more than five years old, you're probably better off replacing it than paying the hefty labor and parts charges for repair.

DVD player: Keep the unit cool and try not to jolt things. A DVD cleaning kit can sometimes revive a player that skips. But if you've tried cleaning the player and the disks, but your disks won't play, it's less expensive to buy new than repair. DVD players have gone way down in price. (Even Blu-ray and HD DVD players — the new high-definition contenders — have come down in price significantly in the past few months.)

Cell phones: The best advice is to let your battery drain fully once a week, say the editors. Try keeping your cell phone away from extreme temperatures, too. The most common fix is trying a new battery (which you should purchase from a reputable dealer). If you have an inexpensive phone, just recycle it. (Information for recycling can be found at your carrier's web site.) If it's fallen into the drink, take it apart and dry it out for a day or two. It may come back to life. Finally, get an estimate on repairs, but if the repair cost is more than half the price of the phone, buy new.

Curious about whether to call it quits with a printer or your iPod? CNN ran the Real Simple story in its entirety.

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  • 126 Posted by wwwaller@sbcglobal.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:51PM EDT Report Abuse

    The advice on completely draining a cell phone (or laptop) battery is wrong. This advice dates back to the time when batteries were NiCad.. Completely draining a NiCad battery will help prevent the memory problem--loss of capacity--that occurs on this type of battery. Most cell phone and laptop batteries are Lithium ion, and the best way to prevent capacity loss for a lithium ion battery is NOT to fully discharge it. Discharging below 10% capacity will accelerate the capacity loss of a Lithium ion battery.

  • 127 Posted by kak7757@prodigy.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:46PM EDT Report Abuse

    It's here. I just ordered a new notebook and they charged environmental fee, but it's just nominal. We all should pay the price for landfills we create. Not all countries replace cars and electronics, look at Cuba. Sometimes I feel that Environmental Agency need to educate us how to recycle and re-use.

  • 129 Posted by changse@sbcglobal.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:21PM EDT Report Abuse

    Have you ever heard of planned obsolescense? That's what's at work here. Don't get attached to inanimate objects or mechanical devices. Even if you have the skill to repair certain devices yourself, after a certain amount of time, the parts are no longer available or the parts suppliers/sellers may require a tax stamp or certificate before they'll sell the part to you.

  • 130 Posted by lbhawkes@verizon.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:57PM EDT Report Abuse

    To asnow316: The cost of new printer cartridge is rediculous. Try buying store brands. Staples used to sell their own brand $5 to $10 cheaper. Also you could order a refill kit on line for about $9-$12 or bring in used cartidges into a computer or electronic store that refills them for you for slightly more. Used cartidges can be refilled as many as 5 times in most cases. Do the math : $3 coupon for each cartridge you return every time it runs dry or $80-$100 in savings when you refill a cartridge several times and then return it for a $3 coupon. One more thing. Buying a new printer because it comes with free ink isn't necessarily a good deal. The cartridges that come with the printer are like demos. they don't have as much ink as a new cartidge fresh off the shelf.

  • 131 Posted by rideropurplesage@att.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:40PM EDT Report Abuse

    It's called asssured indemnity it is engineered into the product so about the time the warranty expires so does the product. we as consumers are powerless against "whats good for business" so you can ----- about it or do something about it (try not buying chineese products for starters) next I would practice smart shopping with a check with the consumer reports we need to be able to hold big business responsible for junk start in the court room and take away big businesses absolute power and bribery

  • 132 Posted by rideropurplesage@att.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:40PM EDT Report Abuse

    You don't get what you pay for. I have a $19 dvd player that has out lasted two $130 dvd players and three playstations it's not wht you pay but the luck of the draw instead so don't opt for higher dollar amounts you take less of a risk with the cheaper ones

  • 133 Posted by jkassowitz@prodigy.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:36PM EDT Report Abuse

    with all the outsoursing and quality dropping to keep costs as low as poissble purchasing the intial extaned guarantee is not a bad idea. AFter its over 6 years old and it breaks then you should look to replace it.

  • 134 Posted by drumsetit@sbcglobal.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:48PM EDT Report Abuse

    draining your cell phone battery is not a good idea. It used to be the case with the older nickel batteries. But the new lithium batteries last longer when they do not get drained fully, and do not get charged fully.

  • 135 Posted by ericmjomba on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:55PM EDT Report Abuse

    Ithink battery perfomance depends on temperatures it is exposed.In cooler temp.most batteries perfom poorly and do not last long.

  • 136 Posted by jeffrosbadass97mustanggt on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:32PM EDT Report Abuse

    the big companies do the same with cars now.look on the road next time your driving,and you will see maybe a 65 chevy or a 79 ford.car manufactuars made them to last a long long time now there disposable.and u cant even work on them with out a stinking computer!so i guess what im saying is as time goes by cars electronics homes and everything else we use will be built to last a predetermined time with cheaper materials and we will probably pay more for it oh yeah thanks microsoft for my 400.00 paperweight u call an xbox 360 only had 8 months and its dead stupid red ring of death buy a playstation 3 it might last longer god knows its only 600.00.sorry to rant on like this maybe it was helpful

  • 137 Posted by azlyhasan on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:00PM EDT Report Abuse

    i buy chinese dvd player at cost 40 dollar. In one year, it got problem and then i sent to repair and it cost me around 10 dollar. Now after 5 years, this dvd still working and in a good condition.

  • 138 Posted by hrose9999 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:21PM EDT Report Abuse

    What a terrible article, wose than no information is MIS-Information. Where? Telling people the "best advice" is to drain your cell battery once a week... What a terrible thing to do to a Lithium Ion battery. She is living in the past, that ONLY worked with Ni-Cad which a cell phone has not used for over 10 years. Best advice is to know what you are telling others is true and accurate. Best advice for Cell Phone / Lithium Ion battery is to opportunity charge, keep it topped up. Cell phone is "smart" enough to prevent overcharging.

  • 139 Posted by jonassono on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:40PM EDT Report Abuse

    With respect to desktops and notebooks, if the subject machine is more than 3 years old and the repair or upgrade is more than $100 buy an new one. I just upgraded my HP notebook memory from 512 Mb to 1Gb at a cost of $100. My son just bought a brand new Dell Inspiron Notebook (a real beauty)with an AMD TK-55 Dual-Core processor, 15.4 WXGA Widescreen, 1 Gb memory, 3-in-one media card reader, XP Home Edition, 80 Gb SATA disk drive, X4 DVD reader/burner, built in 802.11g wireless, a 10/100 built in RJ45 Ethernet port and RJ11 Modem port for $499. You'd have to be nuts to waste anything more than $100 bucks on an old PC or Notebook

  • 142 Posted by f5ndme on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:57PM EDT Report Abuse

    You Know what yahoo cenosors on it content and rats you out to the government like they did with communist china. No wonder people know this and are going with other engines like google who dont disclose as much infromation to the government. If you dont belive me see their layoffs and look it up. Thanks and be informed

  • 143 Posted by alandbarbi@rogers.com on Thu Sep 3, 2009 2:49PM EDT Report Abuse

    I bought my 27 inch Sharp TV 20 years..6 children ago.. and it is still going as good as the day it was purchased. No repairs ever. I am beginning to think the older products have higher quality built into them than the newer ones which look great and are exciting but are not built to last. It seems two to five years is about average on the newer products but most of the older stuff electronics is still going with good quality.

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