this post was submitted on 08 May 2025
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Right to Repair
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Whether it be electronics, automobiles or medical equipment, the manufacturers should not be able to horde “oem” parts, render your stuff useless if you repair it with aftermarket parts, or hide schematics of their products.
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I've had a Philips Sonicare brush for ten years at this point. Do they just not make them well anymore, or did I just luck out? I only need to charge it like once very month or two.
How often do you brush?
I guess ours last about 7 or 8 years before they start noticeably degrading. I certainly have to charge at least once a month, though.
Years and years ago, we started with Sonicare, and when that died I got an Oral-B. It was categorically worse, and my dentist even noticed. So I went back to Sonicare. My wife never switched.
Sonicare's QC is very poor. My wife's been lucky, but I went through two Airflosses in as many years before I stopped getting them; the first died within the warranty and I got an exchange; the second, just after the warrantee expired.
My current Sonicare is about 5 years old, and the battery is holding up, but about a year after I got it it developed a loose part in the head and it is super noisy; like, you can tell I'm using it from across the house. My wife's is the same age and is almost silent, so I think it's just a QC issue.
However, to stay in topic: the batteries in these are also not-self-serviceable. Is there an electric toothbrush whose battery is?
1-2/day, using the default 2-minute routine. I do not leave it on the charger after using it. I only charge when it does the little vibrate pattern indicating a need to.
Yeah, me too. You got lucky, or I've been unlucky!