
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Good morning, this is James from SurvivalPunk.com.
Today we’re talking about something that most people don’t think about until it’s too late.
What happens when something breaks… and you can’t get the replacement part anymore?
Planned obsolescence.
And what you can actually do about it.
Planned Obsolescence
When I first learned about planned obsolescence, it pissed me off.
The idea that companies intentionally design products to fail after a few years so you have to buy another one.
Your phone getting slower after a couple years.
Appliances dying earlier than they should.
Meanwhile your grandparents had a refrigerator from the 1950s that ran forever.
The difference?
It wasn’t designed to die.
Modern products often are.
The Repair Problem
Even if something can be repaired, that doesn’t mean you’ll be able to.
Repairmen aren’t nearly as common as they used to be.
And a lot of things aren’t built to be repaired anymore.
Cars are a perfect example.
Older vehicles were simple.
You could practically climb inside the engine bay and remove parts comfortably.
Newer cars?
To replace a starter in one car I worked on, I had to remove the front wheel and drop the part out through the wheel well.
Ridiculous.
And then you’ve got sensors everywhere. A tiny sensor fails and suddenly the whole car refuses to run.
The Real Problem: Parts Disappear
Even if you know how to fix something, there’s another issue.
Replacement parts eventually stop being made.
Say you have a washer — the JamesCo Washer 2000.
For years, replacement parts exist.
OEM parts.
Aftermarket parts.
Repair manuals.
But eventually the manufacturer stops making them.
Suppliers stop stocking them.
And suddenly your washer becomes unrepairable — not because the repair is impossible, but because the part doesn’t exist anymore.
Strategy #1: Stock Common Failure Parts
If you’ve got the space and money, this is a powerful strategy.
Find out what parts fail most often.
Examples:
Ignition coils
Fuel pumps
Sensors
Belts
Filters
Control boards
You don’t need to stock every part.
Just the ones most likely to fail.
I once suspected my fuel pump might go bad, so I ordered a replacement ahead of time.
Turned out the issue was something else… so the pump sat in my garage for months.
Then one day the fuel pump actually died.
And I already had the part sitting there.
Problem solved.
Strategy #2: Learn Workarounds
Sometimes you don’t need the part.
You just need a workaround.
Example: catalytic converters.
A friend once told me two tricks:
One — cut it open and clean it out.
Two — if you live somewhere without emissions testing, cut it out and straight pipe it.
Not always legal everywhere — but the point is there are often solutions people have discovered that extend the life of equipment.
Another time I ran over a rock that punctured my transmission pan.
Fluid leaked out everywhere.
Instead of replacing the entire pan, I used steel epoxy putty and sealed the hole.
Worked perfectly.
Sometimes the “temporary fix” lasts forever.
Strategy #3: Make Your Own Parts
This is where things get really interesting.
With modern tools, individuals can manufacture small parts.
Two powerful options:
3D printers
Small CNC machines
These can produce:
brackets
clips
plastic connectors
housings
mounts
small mechanical parts
And many of these designs are already shared online.
Someone else might have already solved the exact problem you’re facing.
Download the file.
Print the part.
Fix the machine.
There’s Also a Business Opportunity
Think about this.
If a product has a common failure point…
And replacement parts are no longer available…
Whoever figures out how to make that part can sell it.
People do this already.
They reproduce discontinued parts for:
vehicles
appliances
electronics
tools
Sometimes a simple plastic part that costs 50 cents to print can sell for $20 because it solves a real problem.
Preparedness Angle
From a preparedness standpoint, this matters a lot.
If supply chains break down, replacement parts will become extremely hard to find.
You won’t be able to just order them online.
Being able to:
stock parts
repair equipment
improvise fixes
manufacture replacements
…is a massive resilience advantage.
Final Thoughts
Everything breaks eventually.
And the modern world is not designed to help you repair things.
It’s designed to make you replace them.
But if you think ahead…
Stock a few parts.
Learn some workarounds.
And maybe even learn to manufacture simple components.
You can keep things running long after everyone else has given up.
This is James from SurvivalPunk.com.
DIY to survive.
Steel Epoxy Putty Repair Stick
Perfect for sealing cracks, holes, and emergency repairs on metal equipment.
J-B Weld SteelStik, 1 Hour Cure, Steel Reinforced Epoxy Putty Stick – 2 Pack, Dark Grey (8267-2)
Don’t forget to join in on the road to 1k! Help James Survivalpunk Beat Couch Potato Mike to 1k subscribers on Youtube
Join Our Exciting Facebook Group and get involved Survival Punk Punk’s
The post What Happens When Replacement Parts Disappear? | Episode 599 appeared first on Survivalpunk.
By Survival Punk
Good morning, this is James from SurvivalPunk.com.
Today we’re talking about something that most people don’t think about until it’s too late.
What happens when something breaks… and you can’t get the replacement part anymore?
Planned obsolescence.
And what you can actually do about it.
Planned Obsolescence
When I first learned about planned obsolescence, it pissed me off.
The idea that companies intentionally design products to fail after a few years so you have to buy another one.
Your phone getting slower after a couple years.
Appliances dying earlier than they should.
Meanwhile your grandparents had a refrigerator from the 1950s that ran forever.
The difference?
It wasn’t designed to die.
Modern products often are.
The Repair Problem
Even if something can be repaired, that doesn’t mean you’ll be able to.
Repairmen aren’t nearly as common as they used to be.
And a lot of things aren’t built to be repaired anymore.
Cars are a perfect example.
Older vehicles were simple.
You could practically climb inside the engine bay and remove parts comfortably.
Newer cars?
To replace a starter in one car I worked on, I had to remove the front wheel and drop the part out through the wheel well.
Ridiculous.
And then you’ve got sensors everywhere. A tiny sensor fails and suddenly the whole car refuses to run.
The Real Problem: Parts Disappear
Even if you know how to fix something, there’s another issue.
Replacement parts eventually stop being made.
Say you have a washer — the JamesCo Washer 2000.
For years, replacement parts exist.
OEM parts.
Aftermarket parts.
Repair manuals.
But eventually the manufacturer stops making them.
Suppliers stop stocking them.
And suddenly your washer becomes unrepairable — not because the repair is impossible, but because the part doesn’t exist anymore.
Strategy #1: Stock Common Failure Parts
If you’ve got the space and money, this is a powerful strategy.
Find out what parts fail most often.
Examples:
Ignition coils
Fuel pumps
Sensors
Belts
Filters
Control boards
You don’t need to stock every part.
Just the ones most likely to fail.
I once suspected my fuel pump might go bad, so I ordered a replacement ahead of time.
Turned out the issue was something else… so the pump sat in my garage for months.
Then one day the fuel pump actually died.
And I already had the part sitting there.
Problem solved.
Strategy #2: Learn Workarounds
Sometimes you don’t need the part.
You just need a workaround.
Example: catalytic converters.
A friend once told me two tricks:
One — cut it open and clean it out.
Two — if you live somewhere without emissions testing, cut it out and straight pipe it.
Not always legal everywhere — but the point is there are often solutions people have discovered that extend the life of equipment.
Another time I ran over a rock that punctured my transmission pan.
Fluid leaked out everywhere.
Instead of replacing the entire pan, I used steel epoxy putty and sealed the hole.
Worked perfectly.
Sometimes the “temporary fix” lasts forever.
Strategy #3: Make Your Own Parts
This is where things get really interesting.
With modern tools, individuals can manufacture small parts.
Two powerful options:
3D printers
Small CNC machines
These can produce:
brackets
clips
plastic connectors
housings
mounts
small mechanical parts
And many of these designs are already shared online.
Someone else might have already solved the exact problem you’re facing.
Download the file.
Print the part.
Fix the machine.
There’s Also a Business Opportunity
Think about this.
If a product has a common failure point…
And replacement parts are no longer available…
Whoever figures out how to make that part can sell it.
People do this already.
They reproduce discontinued parts for:
vehicles
appliances
electronics
tools
Sometimes a simple plastic part that costs 50 cents to print can sell for $20 because it solves a real problem.
Preparedness Angle
From a preparedness standpoint, this matters a lot.
If supply chains break down, replacement parts will become extremely hard to find.
You won’t be able to just order them online.
Being able to:
stock parts
repair equipment
improvise fixes
manufacture replacements
…is a massive resilience advantage.
Final Thoughts
Everything breaks eventually.
And the modern world is not designed to help you repair things.
It’s designed to make you replace them.
But if you think ahead…
Stock a few parts.
Learn some workarounds.
And maybe even learn to manufacture simple components.
You can keep things running long after everyone else has given up.
This is James from SurvivalPunk.com.
DIY to survive.
Steel Epoxy Putty Repair Stick
Perfect for sealing cracks, holes, and emergency repairs on metal equipment.
J-B Weld SteelStik, 1 Hour Cure, Steel Reinforced Epoxy Putty Stick – 2 Pack, Dark Grey (8267-2)
Don’t forget to join in on the road to 1k! Help James Survivalpunk Beat Couch Potato Mike to 1k subscribers on Youtube
Join Our Exciting Facebook Group and get involved Survival Punk Punk’s
The post What Happens When Replacement Parts Disappear? | Episode 599 appeared first on Survivalpunk.