After a little over 50 years of use, my parents’ blender finally died. It was a wedding gift from 1975.

    by fanrva

    26 Comments

    1. Rolling_Beardo on

      My parents had the same blender, I wonder if it was a wedding gift too. They got married the year before.

    2. Old appliances were designed to have a virtually infinite lifespan, with components running FAR from their limits. we also have a few ancient refrigerators in the family

    3. NECESolarGuy on

      The classic Avocado Green. 50 years ago, I was ringing these up for sale at Caldor

    4. I bought my harvest gold version in 1974 when I moved away from home. Had the blades sharpened and the capacitor replaced by a friend last year ($12) and it’s still going strong! Along with the hand mixer that I bought at the same time. Money well spent

    5. Head_Razzmatazz7174 on

      I had to zoom in. That’s a Hamilton Beach and those things are workhorses.

      We’ve gotten several of their appliances over the years and they lasted way longer than the warranties.

    6. an_older_meme on

      What’s wrong with it? I wonder if it’s something like motor brushes you can get for $0.87 at a hardware store and bring it back to life for another half century.

    7. Repair it. My grandmothers toaster that was a wedding gift in the 50s quit so I fixed it for her and she’s still using it every morning

    8. LastDirtyMartini on

      Matching that Avocado Green is going to be a challenge of Herculean proportions.

    9. Dont you dare throw that away. Its probably simple to repair and you can have it blending for another 50 years.

    10. Candyman051882 on

      Yup and it can probably still be fixed fairly easily. Compared to newer ones.

    11. BORT_licenceplate on

      Don’t bin it. People like to display vintage items like this in their kitchen even if they’re broken so someone might give him a second life to sit beautifully on a shelf instead of landfill

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