July 04, 2008

Read our annual kitchen-remodeling special

Combine expert advice on the best appliances and materials with the real-life remodeling experiences of thousands of homeowners and what do you get? The annual Consumer Reports kitchen guide, part of our August 2008 issue.

Our engineers spent months sizing up refrigerators, running dishwashers, staining countertops, and punishing flooring. Some products impressed, while others fell flat.

Use our kitchen-planning guide to find expert advice on the appliances and materials that will make your project—whether a face-lift or a full-scale remodel—a success and help you stick to your budget. Here's what new for 2008:

Secrets of a successful remodel

Where to get the best deals on appliances

Cabinet upgrades

Countertops buying guide

Flooring review

Cooking appliances review

Dishwashers review

Refrigerators review

May 08, 2008

Vintage Consumer Reports: Appliance Woes

Planned_osolescence Most of you probably find Consumer Reports a pretty serious publication and ConsumerReports.org a fairly staid Web site. Both are certainly great sources of testing-based product reports, compelling investigative features, and expert advice for all aspects of your life. But beyond the entertaining Selling It column, neither the magazine nor the Web site has much of a reputation for humor.

At least that's what I thought. I recently was looking at issues from 1967 and came across the amusing cartoon shown here. We've reported on how appliance makers are shortening their warranties, and everyone's heard of planned obsolescence being a business model of some manufacturers. But I never imagined that these were concerns more than four decades ago. Call me naive, but I believed that companies were somehow more consumer friendly back then. As this cartoon from our March 1967 issue illustrates, that wasn't the case. (Click on the cartoon to enlarge it.)

Obviously appliance longevity and extended warranties remain issues today, and Consumer Reports regularly covers those topics. If you're looking for information on whether you should fix or nix an appliance, read "Repair or Replace It?" (available to subscribers). The article  includes  repair-or-replace timelines for many products, including appliances.

And before you buy an extended warranty for a refrigerator, washing machine, dishwasher, or other appliance, read "Why you don't need an extended warranty," which includes repair rates for a number of 3- to 4-year-old products.Steven H. Saltzman

Essential information: As I mentioned in this recent post, I'm going to tap into our archives to bring you interesting articles and photographs from over the past 70-plus years. Click on my name above to let me know what interests you.

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