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- Feb 13, 2017
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This post could generate political content very easily. Both my own, and responses. . . For this I apologize. I am doing my best to avoid any political statement, but such will be an inherent part of what I want to say.
In older days, my father's days,(pre WW2) a local fix-it shop was a common sight. And marginaly profitable. Not a lot but a man that was mechanicly inclined and liked to tinker could "tickle his fancy" and get paid for it. There wasn't enough profit margin to meet today's living standards but in Pop's day, living "standards" weren't so expensive. People walked instead of rode, there was no TV or video, many modern appliances or devices are just that, modern.
Then there was the manufacturing base, every thing was made fairly locally. There was no "off shore" manufacturing, no "Chinese" cheaply made replacement. No plastic this, or pot metal that. Well, there were but mostly for toys. Appliances were repairable, and parts could be acquired. It may be that junk pile of acquired broken devices that provided replacement parts, today folks are culturlly steered away from keeping those "junk piles". Intentionally?, I don't know.
Many (most?) modern appliances are made, engineered from the ground up, to be disposable. You don't fix anything, you run down to the store and buy a new replacement from China. Or VietNam, or India, or whereever. The old one is meant to fail relatively quickly so there would be a replacement market for developing nations that would buy their product.
With the present animosity with mainland China, the source of most of today's cheap appliances, this disposable society is coming to a very abrupt end. "Things" will still be disposable for a long time, engineers have forgotten how to build repairable "things". But to a true tinkerer, even unrepairable items can be repaired. The end result is usually not very pretty, but the device will work. The question is whether the tinkerers of the world will still be around to repair those "disposable" things. Or will they too have become disposable.
I happen to enjoy rebuilding the old, repairable, models I have acquired. And/or "scratch building" something that is not available or replacement parts for something broken. By most modeling "standards", I and my kind am considered to be anomolous, old buzzards that still use the old methods where nothing is "scrap", literally anything can be repurposed. I do trains, called "Model Railroading", there are others that do model airplanes, or model ships, or old (12":1') cars and trucks, or people that do machine work as a hobby.
Those are the people that will become the modern equivilent of the "local fix-it man" of the future. Those that are still alive. . . Their time will become a sellable product, and it will seem expensive to the rest of the world. But as things degenerate, they will find that the price is really necessary if they want to maintain their "standard of living".
.
In older days, my father's days,(pre WW2) a local fix-it shop was a common sight. And marginaly profitable. Not a lot but a man that was mechanicly inclined and liked to tinker could "tickle his fancy" and get paid for it. There wasn't enough profit margin to meet today's living standards but in Pop's day, living "standards" weren't so expensive. People walked instead of rode, there was no TV or video, many modern appliances or devices are just that, modern.
Then there was the manufacturing base, every thing was made fairly locally. There was no "off shore" manufacturing, no "Chinese" cheaply made replacement. No plastic this, or pot metal that. Well, there were but mostly for toys. Appliances were repairable, and parts could be acquired. It may be that junk pile of acquired broken devices that provided replacement parts, today folks are culturlly steered away from keeping those "junk piles". Intentionally?, I don't know.
Many (most?) modern appliances are made, engineered from the ground up, to be disposable. You don't fix anything, you run down to the store and buy a new replacement from China. Or VietNam, or India, or whereever. The old one is meant to fail relatively quickly so there would be a replacement market for developing nations that would buy their product.
With the present animosity with mainland China, the source of most of today's cheap appliances, this disposable society is coming to a very abrupt end. "Things" will still be disposable for a long time, engineers have forgotten how to build repairable "things". But to a true tinkerer, even unrepairable items can be repaired. The end result is usually not very pretty, but the device will work. The question is whether the tinkerers of the world will still be around to repair those "disposable" things. Or will they too have become disposable.
I happen to enjoy rebuilding the old, repairable, models I have acquired. And/or "scratch building" something that is not available or replacement parts for something broken. By most modeling "standards", I and my kind am considered to be anomolous, old buzzards that still use the old methods where nothing is "scrap", literally anything can be repurposed. I do trains, called "Model Railroading", there are others that do model airplanes, or model ships, or old (12":1') cars and trucks, or people that do machine work as a hobby.
Those are the people that will become the modern equivilent of the "local fix-it man" of the future. Those that are still alive. . . Their time will become a sellable product, and it will seem expensive to the rest of the world. But as things degenerate, they will find that the price is really necessary if they want to maintain their "standard of living".
.