JumbleDuck
Well-Known Member
Coming from the days when cars were less common and being a poor student in the 1960's and 70's we had to learn how to fix out cars at zero cost. Don't know your vintage but RichardS is about the same vintage as myself.
Today it all throwaway and replace as RichardS described in his last post. This is encouraged by the manufactures who have to keep their "agents: happy by reducing the ability of the competent DIY'er to repair their own equipment themselves.
I hate throwing away stuff which is working or easily repairable - it just feels wrong. Sometimes this has irritating consequences - I have two IBM X31 Thinkpads knocking around which are in perfect working order but which with 1.4GHz single-core processors really aren't up to much modern software. I've replaced them for use, but can't bear to chuck them out.
On the bright side, yesterday evening I managed to get all the indicator lights on my Citroen DS dashboard working again. Took a lot of fiddling and parts from three spare ones ...