In the same year, Alfred Neff, the son of Adolf Neff, joined his father's company. The trademark that is still used today was registered on November 22, The company was mandated to produce armaments in the second world war.
Located away from large industrial centers, the factory built special parts for aircraft construction. Large sections of the plant were destroyed during air raids in spring After the war, Dr Alfred Neff set about rebuilding the plant with a workforce now reduced to seven employees. The influence and contacts made when appointed Mayor of Bretten and District Administrator of the rural district of Karlsruhe in by the American occupation forces were to prove useful in his efforts to quickly restore the company.
Approval to continue operating the plant was thus granted to him as early as July 15, by the US military government and on October 18, by the District Administration of Karlsruhe.
Using left-over metal from the production of aircraft parts, he succeeded in carrying out makeshift repairs on the destroyed and damaged production halls, paving the way for production to commence again. In addition to the plant in Bretten, an appliance factory had been established in the Ruiter Valley by along with a factory for large-scale kitchen equipment in Bruchsal as well as a foundry in Rinklingen. The product range was extended and modernized.
Our Siemens dishwasher needed a new heater this week, the control panel has now gone loopy. They just rebadge a generic Chinese item, which is why they only last a few years. There are usually places about at will take your working stuff and give it a good home where they will run it til it is well and truly dead. Have a Google, ask around.
And a different department deals with that and only the engineer can speak to them etc etc… Would still be quid to get it working again Thinking the kitchen ornament is the way forward! Not quite, but they do buy up cheap Turkish, Spanish, Romanian etc. Their higher end stuff is made in Germany and UK. Chakaping — yes and put a disposable BBQ in one of your other drawers?
We have a few Bosch appliances in the house and all of them are doing pretty well. Good reliability hence would consider buying again.
Miele hoover though has been a good purchase and is still going strong. They also offer the option of a service that will bring it back pretty much as good as new if you do get an issue. Difficult to know who the go to manufacturers are now for white goods as so many of them are just conglomerates that put different badges on the front depending what market they are trying to sell to.
Currently have a Hotpoint fridge had it for probably 8 or so years so far and a Beko freezer also around years. Apart from the freezer door handle snapping off it has done its job. Bosch washing machine, now 11 ish years old, still going strong. Also, first gen Dyson hoover, again never been touched bar cleaning out the various tubes — still sucks plenty.
And the fridge drawers now have a few cracks. This topic has 36 replies, 29 voices, and was last updated 2 years ago by mrmonkfinger. Viewing 37 posts - 1 through 37 of 37 total.
Part of a 2k plus appliance bill was a warming drawer — bloody quids worth! Regards An ex Neff customer Posted 2 years ago. Posted 2 years ago. What's new New posts Latest activity. Search forums. Members Current visitors. Log in. Install the app. JavaScript is disabled. For a better experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser before proceeding. You are using an out of date browser.
It may not display this or other websites correctly. You should upgrade or use an alternative browser. Bosch Siemens Neff made by the same people but how can you tell. Thread starter la gran siete Start date Nov 2, There are others of course but I fancy ones made in Germany as i am told they are manufactured to a higher standard.
So how does one tell? Ia read somewhere that if they have the GMBH sticker on the back then they are german made. Could this be true? I didn't know Neff was part of this group. Click to expand Oh, so you want poncey German stuff, which will probably have a higher markup on than the cheaper Polish or Turkish models.
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