[Electronics-talk] Microwave

Frida Aizenman aizenman at earthlink.net
Sun Jul 22 15:44:32 UTC 2012


With all due respect, I have to disagree with you. That really is putting 
good money behind bad money. We in America, like it or not, are a disposable 
society.
Around 1995, I had a good microwave to which I had to stick Braille labels. 
Due to heavy usage, the microwave broke down within five years. I took the 
microwave to a repair place, and they charged me $19 to just look at it, and 
then they wanted to charge me the price I would have paid for a bran new 
microwave. I politely told them to keep it. I didn't want to take back home 
that useless heavy piece of equipment.
I myself have a Hamilton Talking microwave, but, I understand that they are 
not sold any more.
Cordially,
Frida
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Jude DaShiell" <jdashiel at shellworld.net>
To: "Discussion of accessible electronics and appliances" 
<electronics-talk at nfbnet.org>
Sent: Sunday, July 22, 2012 8:16 AM
Subject: Re: [Electronics-talk] Microwave


> If you think the only problem is with the cord, why not call an
> electrician?  If that's really the only problem the oven has, it might
> cost less to have it repaired than you think and the repair maybe can be
> done with the oven never leaving your place at all.  Magnetometers do
> eventually wear out in the newer ovens but since this is 20 years old it
> may last you for the rest of your life and you may be able to pass it on
> to one of your children.  Newer microwaves especially in office use may
> last five years but thn again they get multiple uses on any given
> weekday.
>
> On Sat, 21 Jul 2012, Sherri wrote:
>
>> I have had a very good and very faithful microwave for about 20 years, 
>> but
>> it is now no longer working. I think the problem is only with the cord, 
>> but
>> probably will cost more to fix than to buy a new one. Anyone own a 
>> microwave
>> that is accessible? I know I can buy one with a flat panel and then just
>> label it, but wondered if there were any others out on the market that 
>> maybe
>> had knobs or buttons? Thanks.
>>
>> Sherri Brun
>> flmom2006 at gmail.com
>> Character is the side of yourself you choose to show the world.
>> Integrity is what you do, what you say and how you act when you think no 
>> one
>> is paying attention.
>>  NFBF Newsline? chair
>> www.nfbnewsline.org
>> E-mail:  newsline at nfbflorida.org
>> Vice-president National Federation of the Blind of Florida Greater 
>> Orlando
>> Chapter
>> http://nfbfgoc.org
>> Chair Orange County Disability Advisory Board
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>>
>
> ----------------------------------------------------------------
> Hardware eventually fails; software eventually works, no amount of band
> width can fix poor design
>
> Jude <jdashiel-at-shellworld-dot-net>
> <http://www.shellworld.net/~jdashiel/nj.html>
>
>
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