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Blueporch t1_jb03h1k wrote

They probably thought they were replacing them with more cleanable plastic ones 🙂

Edited - my phone put some extra words in there

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EveInGardenia t1_jb0omqx wrote

I’ve never seen one like this, close shape to like a construction dumpster or like a business dumpster here! Love learning things that are a little different than where I’m from. Confused on the downvotes 🤷🏻‍♀️

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EveInGardenia t1_jb0otgq wrote

Yeah I guess they’re like a dumpster! Pretty much the same thing just a different shape and name! Wonder if it has to do with the trash truck style? (I’m way too invested in learning about this trash receptacle haha)

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5552020 OP t1_jb0p6v2 wrote

Ok. Lets say you are having the builders in to demolish your old patio and build a new one. They will usually hire a skip and throw all the remains of the old patio in there, hire another guy with a big truck with a crane to haul it away. This doesn’t happen on your side of the pond?

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Decimator714 t1_jb0vy6w wrote

Because plastic sucks and it's going to be the next lead.

Not only that, but most dislike new technology due to intentionally inhibiting repair in it's design. Arguably they aren't intentionally sabotaging repair, but instead they are not thinking about repair as a priority as they used to in the past.

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Daddysown t1_jb0ywo4 wrote

School furniture keeps getting worse- I'm a school custodian and have to fix it when it breaks- the stuff from the 80s is ugly and heavy but at least repairable- now they are buying cheap Amazon bullshit that is in the dumpster at the end of the year- it's not repairable. The nicer plastic chair tend to be pretty durable and somewhat repairable depending. Wooden is 100% repairable and takes skill and craft which schools do not care about anymore - they only care about (short term) cost

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i-choose-moss t1_jb19cnh wrote

That's a very chairy chair. I'd put a plant on it.

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hanimal16 t1_jb19dhe wrote

How could you throw something like this out??? It may be simple, but damn that’s a fine chair.

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FerdinandRusdelton t1_jb1e4kn wrote

I completely disagree. I had terrible posture in my school chairs because my tailbone wanted to slip forward on the indented plastic. Thus, I put a ton of pressure on my tailbone and always had pain. Old wooden chairs typically align your spine better since they have flat bottoms. I always favor my antique rocking chair over my couch, simply because it fits the shape of my body better.

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BurnTheOrange t1_jb1g6ho wrote

In the States a similar activity takes place, but the container and the truck to remove it are differently shaped. The trucks in the States tend to have rollers rather than a crane and the bin is longer and flatter. Seems it is a case of parallel evolution to solving the same problem.

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CRoss1999 t1_jb1ipwh wrote

It’s cool that it’s so sturdy and all but honestly plastic chairs in school where fairly comfy compared to wooded ones

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PRSArchon t1_jb1rs5i wrote

Soulless stackable cleanable light ergonomic plastic chairs, why would anybody want that over old heavy creaky painful wooden ones.

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FupaHorizon t1_jb1wu9a wrote

Whenever systems do shit like that I’m always like “soooo who’s cousin owns the chair store?”

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SweaterWeather4Ever t1_jb1yf6q wrote

I love it! Like your dad, I have a history of rescuing chucked-out chairs. I also have a great solid wood table with side leaves I found by a dumpster. People toss out fantastic wooden pieces!

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embiggened_mouse t1_jb1yqsr wrote

Geez I wish they had donated them or put that stuff in a charity shop. It sucks that they tossed out wooden furniture and perfectly good clocks.

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rand0mmm t1_jb39rlf wrote

I have a really small one of these. It's solid and wonderful.

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Fromanderson t1_jb3f1xp wrote

Planned obsolescence is a thing.

I own an old cabover truck from the 60s. While finding certain parts is challenging these days everything on it is serviceable. Even after owning it nearly 5 years I'm still finding lubrication points I hadn't noticed before. Even the shafts that operate the cams for the air brakes have grease fittings.

By comparison some of our newer company trucks have the brake rotors on the inside of the axle flange. Every time the rotors have to come off , the axles have to come out of the differential. That means new axle seals, diff gasket and gear oil are required for a brake job.

Seriously, all they had to do was make the axle slightly shorter and put the rotor on the outside, like every other manufacturer has done for decades.

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Ilovefishdix t1_jb3lcsv wrote

I have one that we found somewhere. It's heavy, solid wood. It looks like someone cut off the table part and kept the chair. There's a shelf below the seat, so I'm fairly certain it's an old school desk. I bet it outlives me

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BradleyyBear t1_jb3trgy wrote

This isn't the best designed of these old chairs I've seen. But still a good long lasting chair. I'd throw a cushion on it and it'd be great.

I've sat in some old wood courtroom chairs that were all wood with no cushion but designed so well it was like sitting on a cloud. Didn't feel like wood at all.

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Dr-Fat t1_jb4kepa wrote

Well, I now want a possessed chair in my house too.

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