[Electronics-talk] Microwaves

evelyn weckerly weckerly at i2k.com
Mon Mar 17 21:58:34 UTC 2014


Hi, charlene,

I'm glad you have a good dealer.  He sounds a lot like mine.  I'm 
also glad he will have his installer put the labels on for you.  
Then if you have a means of reading the manual, you'll know what 
the abbreviations referred to in the manual are.  I made a list 
of the abbreviations used for the four appliances I have bought 
in the last eleven years along with what they stand for.  I 
hardly ever have to use it now, but it's there if I need it.

Regards,

Evelyn



 ----- Original Message -----
From: "Charlene Elder" <1ladychar at sbcglobal.net
To: "Discussion of accessible electronics and 
appliances"<electronics-talk at nfbnet.org
Date sent: Mon, 17 Mar 2014 15:19:17 -0500
Subject: Re: [Electronics-talk] Microwaves

            Thank you, Evelyn.  The dealer I have is one I have 
had for
years.  My Maytag washer and dryer as well as my Bosch dishwasher 
came from
that appliance store.  GE does have the Braille labels for the 
microwave I
will purchase.  The installer will install and apply the labels.  
They even
were able to match the bisque color of my range.  That makes my 
range
Whirlpool and the microwave GE.  Hope this info helps others on 
the list.
Charlene Elder


-----Original Message-----
From: evelyn weckerly
Sent: Friday, March 14, 2014 1:47 PM
To: Discussion of accessible electronics andappliances
Subject: Re: [Electronics-talk] Microwaves

Hi, charlene,

I did not saveany of my messages.  Here's the gist of what I
wrote.

I have an over-the-range microwave from Maytag and have bought
three other appliances during the first ten years of this
century.  Whirlpool owns Maytag and a number of other brands.  I
got Braille overlays for all four from Maytag.  The last I knew,
Whirlpool had them too, but GE did not at the time.  The
advantage of getting these overlays is that they are
printstbraille and therefore easy for sighted assistance to apply
them if you need or want it.  In addition, you have the
abbreviations that the manuals use-handy if you have a book
reader on your computer.

My best advice to you is to go shopping.  Don't forget
family-owned dealers.  They compete fairly with price and give
you better service as a rule.  In my case, all appliances were
held by my family-owned dealer until the Braille came, sent
directly to me.  The advantage of examining a variety of units
from various brands is that you are likely to be the most happy
with a unit that gives you the features and operational set up
that fits you.

Well, that's more than the gist (smile).

Geards,

Evelyn

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