Buying appliances is almost as hectic and life defying as buying a vehicle or a house.
There are often more bad openings available than good, and once you commit to something you’re stuck with it for years even if you end up hating it.
You’d guess that buying appliances would be easier with the internet, but the review scamming business has made it strenuous to trust many of these online testimonials from alleged customers. When I was looking for a new oven, I saw a few openings that apapple to all be 4.5 or 5 stars. But when I opened the review section and looked at the low reviews, many of them were all warning about the product being a borderline-scam. When you learn reviews that are flat out warnings to take your money and run, it’s a strange juxtaposition to all of the sycophantic several star reviews. You have to be careful and learn how to distinguish credible reviews from ones that aren’t. I took my time looking for a new a/c for our house. There was never a moment where I expected the process to be self-explanatory, but it was strenuous trying to compare HVAC systems on my iPhone while in my supper break. I asked my boss if he had recommendations for a superb HVAC supplier here in town, and he gave myself and others a business card to his personal a/c serviceman. The tech works for one of the greatest HVAC companies in the state. Now I have a quality a/c with an-inclusive 10-year warranty.