Buy It Direct Appliances
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As the go-to place for savvy shoppers, we specialise in high quality integrated and freestanding appliances. We offer exceptional discounts on some of the UK's greatest brands and own a 330,000 sq. ft warehouse, providing most products with speedy delivery and a one-hour time slot.
Buy It Direct chief executive Nick Glynne said Due to the exceptional demand for online goods, partly as a result of Covid, we urgently required a large warehouse to support our increased stockholding of kitchen appliances, bathrooms and furniture.
Buy It Direct, which was set up by entrepreneur Nick Glynne 20 years ago, owns a number of mainly online brands in consumer electronics, kitchen appliances, IT and furniture. These include Appliances Direct and Furniture123.
Based on Leeds Road and founded in 1999 by Nick Glynne, Buy It Direct sells products such as laptops, kitchen appliances, TVs, furniture and bathrooms through a network of websites including Laptops Direct, Appliances Direct and Furniture 123. The group now employs around 1,000 employees with sites nationwide serving the whole of the UK.
Those in attendance included Jacqui Gedman, CEO of Kirklees Council, Daniel McGeachie, head of partnerships & business development at Huddersfield Town, Kristen Holley, head of UK operations from Thornton & Ross and Nick Lancaster, director of research, innovation and knowledge exchange at the University of Huddersfield, who took part in a discussion panel on the day.
Buy It Direct has made a name for itself by housing and supplying the UK with a wide variety of furniture and appliances. At Buy It Direct customers can shop from a range of products including furniture for the bedroom including beds, mattresses and various storage options, furniture for the dining room, kitchen, living room, office and garden as well as multiple lighting solutions. The brand also houses a selection of home appliances like fridges, ovens, dishwashers and washing machines as well as aircon and heating products. All Buy It Direct products are eligible for delivery within Ireland.
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Use this comments section to discuss problems you have had with Appliances Direct, or how they have handled your complaints. Initial complaints should be directed to Appliances Direct directly. You can find contact details for Appliances Direct above.
3. Consider your health insurance options. Under the Affordable Care Act, you must have health insurance or pay a penalty, but you'll want a policy to prevent an illness or injury from jeopardizing your financial future. If you're under age 26, you can stay on a parent's health insurance plan, although you'll need to see how the cost of that plan compares to the options provided by your employer. (If you're not eligible for health insurance at work, or you're a freelancer, you can buy insurance directly via the Obamacare exchanges).
4. Build an emergency fund. Even on a low starting salary, you should aim to set aside some money regularly for unplanned expenses and emergencies. Try to set aside about 10 percent of your income until you have three to six months' worth of expenses in this rainy day fund. That way you don't have to dip into your retirement accounts or run up high-interest credit card debt if your car breaks down or you find yourself temporarily unemployed. Set up automatic transfers from your checking account into a designated savings account (or if your employer allows it, direct deposit part of your paycheck into savings) from the start, so that you get used to living on less than you earn right away.
It's always a good idea if you have a product in mind from a specific brand, e.g. KitchenAid (opens in new tab) or Dyson (opens in new tab), to check the brand's website and see if it has a refurbished or renewed section. The company might call it something different but after some digging, you'll soon find out. If you buy direct, you normally get better perks such as a longer guarantee period.
AFB TECH returned to the appliance departments of the big-box stores in midsummer and evaluated the controls on the current crop of major appliances. I can report that the picture is a bit brighter than it was in earlier visits. Several categories of appliances, including both wall ovens and free-standing ranges, were virtually unusable at the time of my previous visit. I was pleased to observe that at least three manufacturers have included some manageable controls in the current models of wall ovens. The most promising of these controls are found on some GE ovens, which I found at Home Depot, Lowe's, and Best Buy. These controls resemble the bubble-style controls on Whirlpool dishwashers. They behave well, allowing you to set not only the oven temperature, but the oven timer, by hours and minutes, independently.
At the same time, Frigidaire, Professional Series, and some Whirlpool wall ovens offer tactile textured regions on the surfaces of controls that make nonvisual use much easier than did the earlier, all-smooth, controls. The Frigidaire controls are found on a range of models at several price levels. Some include direct key entry of the temperature, using 10 numbered controls, while others offer an up-down control. In both the GE and Frigidaire ovens, the default temperature is 350 degrees for the Bake setting, with 5-degree changes when using the up-and-down controls.
Stoves remain the glaringly inaccessible gap in accessible appliances. I found that GE ranges, which included textured controls only a year or so ago, now use totally smooth oven control surfaces. This is also the case with Frigidaire, Maytag, Bausch, Sears Kenmore, and Whirlpool. I did encounter a Frigidaire slide-in range that features tactilely identifiable controls of contrasting textures and a Whirlpool slide-in range that uses textured regions on a smooth background. The Whirlpool model was discontinued, however.
Since not all sales associates are equally knowledgeable, it is worth noting that among the associates whom I talked with while conducting this survey, those who were trained by Whirlpool regional representatives all knew about the tone controls on the Whirlpool laundry equipment. They included those at two Best Buy stores and two at Lowe's stores. As I noted in the past, our experience at Sears was the most consistent. Of the six associates I talked with, five clearly grasped the concepts that were important. Similarly, the four at Best Buy were engaged and able to offer informed observations once I explained the concepts. Since the Lowe's representatives know the AFB TECH staff, an accurate assessment is not possible. Unfortunately, Home Depot and the Great Indoors are at the bottom of the pack again. We visited a Home Depot and the Great Indoors, spending at least half an hour examining dozens of appliances. Despite the amount of time we spent in these departments, we were never approached by a sales associate offering assistance.
Technology moves forward at an increasing pace, or so the technology prognosticators, pundits, and proponents observe. If the appliance industry is any example, then their predictions of ever-faster changes in technology, and in our lives, are certainly true. For this reason, tracking the availability of today's appliances through traditional AccessWorld articles is difficult at best. We also realize that information that describes the features of yesterday's appliances is of no assistance if the appliances are not available today.
For all these reasons, and to direct you to the most current information about this continuingly important topic, we are pleased to introduce you to the AccessWorld Appliance Accessibility Guide (www.afb.org/Section.aspSectionID=4&TopicID=380), which is designed to accomplish three important objectives.
The first objective is to bring together, in a clear and consistent layout, our current understanding of the accessibility of major household appliances. We offer an introductory section with important information about purchasing an accessible appliance, as well as a description of some basic concepts that AFB TECH research indicates are important.
The second objective is to offer a category-by-category focused breakout for the major appliance groups, including stoves, dishwashers, washers, and dryers. In these category-specific sections, you will learn about the important characteristics of the appliances and read an overview of the appliances' current accessibility.
The third objective is to build an index of specific brands and models of appliances that the staff of AFB TECH believes are worthy of particular consideration. This index is new and will grow with time. It will also reflect the ever-changing nature of the accessibility beast as out-of-stock models are removed.
The purpose of the index is to call to your attention models of appliances that may offer controls that are more usable than those of other brands and models of appliances in the same category. It is important to note that the most accessible stove may not be as usable as the most accessible washing machine, so comparisons of usability are relative to the category.
We are refining the index and appreciate your feedback. Please keep in mind that each individual has certain techniques to accommodate his or her nonvisual or low vision use of appliances. Earlier articles in AccessWorld described some of these techniques and highlighted our research findings.
GE model JTP70sMSS convection oven, at $1,399, and GE Model JKP30BMBB standard oven, at $949 (note that other models with similar controls are available in a range of colors and with different features), have bubble controls, some with direct-entry keys, others with up-down controls. The more elaborate models have round and oval controls and separate
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