this post was submitted on 14 Oct 2024
10 points (70.8% liked)
zerowaste
1307 readers
1 users here now
Discussing ways to reduce waste and build community!
Celebrate thrift as a virtue, talk about creative ways to make do, or show off how you reused something!
founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
If I had the technical ability to repair them myself, I wouldn't be waiting. It's not like the act of repairing them breaks the law, it only breaks warranty with the manufacturer; and these are all out of warranty already.
I only have broken electronics in storage because there's only 1 day out of the year around here to recycle them. And I have to pay for it! :/
The right to repair (at least in the EU) is being written to facilitate both people who have the ability to repair and those who do not. If you do not have the ability to repair, the law will entitle you have the device repaired outside of the warranty for a reasonable price.
If you have the ability to repair, the law entitles you to manuals and parts, and the parts must be at a reasonable price.
I had a proprietary valve fail in a boiler. The valve should be under $10, but because the manufacturer bundles the valve with many other fittings people are forced to buy a kit that’s no less than $100. That’s one thing the right to repair should solve.
While true, I highly doubt this will apply retroactively. Manufacturers wont be forced to make parts available for existing/old tech; devices sold going forward will be required to maintain a supply of parts.
This will also apply to repair technicians not being able to get parts for old tech; so waiting to pass it off to a repair center won't solve this either.
All that is to say; if you can't find parts to repair it yourself now, there's not a lot of point stockpiling dead devices waiting on the law to change, as they won't really be affected by that change.