• plz1@lemmy.world
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    18 hours ago

    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?

  • oyzmo@lemmy.world
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    19 hours ago

    Read the article - they do lots of stuff right, better than other well known toothbrush makers, and you can open the brush. But it may hamper the waterproofing, so they don’t recommend it.

    I will consider this instead of OralB or Philips the next time I need a new brush 😊

  • sunzu2@thebrainbin.org
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    20 hours ago

    Well don’t fucking buy it. The one that has it, post it here so rest of us know the option tbh

    • Brave Little Hitachi Wand@lemmy.world
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      17 hours ago

      It isn’t a massive issue tbh. My wife wanted one. She’s had it since December and has only needed to charge it like 3 or 4 times.

      A replaceable battery would be a good feature, but after years of different mechanical toothbrushes I don’t recommend choosing based on repairability. They almost all seem to just keep working for ages, and by the time something breaks they’re so nasty you’d rather buy a new one anyway.

      Fun fact, my kid used to call them cannibal toothbrushes. Toddlers are fun.