What’s your top BIFL purchase, that might not in itself has been all to frugal, but long term, will be?

After having 5-6 different office chairs over the last 10 years, none of which I liked. I went and bought a Herman Miller Aeron chair. It’s ridiculously expensive, but I’m so pleased with it and hope to keep it for well over 15-20 years. If that actually succeed, I will have spent less money one chairs than if I hadn’t bought it.

What similar items (cheap or expensive) do you feel the same about?

  • Gorgeous_Sloth@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    Just wanted to let you guys know that Bifl sounds a lot like “Bifle”, a unique french word. It’s a quite precise verb that means “slapping someone with a dick”. It merges the words bite (= dick) and gifle (= slap).

    That’s all folks

  • Pons_Aelius@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    My hiking boots.

    Scarpa full leather, purchased in 1999 for ~USD300. They have been on 3 different continents, covered thousands of kilometres.

    They turned 24 a few weeks ago, I still wear them a couple of times a week and they are the most comfortable shoes I have ever owned.

    All for the cost of about $1 per month.

    Money well spent.

  • FireTower@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Big fan of Osprey packs, they also do free lifetime repairs.

    Also I hear Aerons can be had for 1/4-1/3 of MSRP if you buy used.

    • rem26_art@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Used office chairs can be a pretty good deal, esp if you’ve got a used office furniture dealer nearby. I got a used Haworth chair for a bit over 1/4 of the price new and is way more comfortable and well built than the crappy gaming chair i had.

      Also, those higher end chair manufacturers have very long warranties, so if you check the manufacture date before you buy, you may find that its still got some warranty left in it.

    • AA5B@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      That’s great! I was able to get one overstock for half price. It’s still expensive, but it’s made working from home so much nicer, should last a long time, and I feel like a scored a great deal. Not as great as your deal, but still a thing

  • amio@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Maybe not literally for life, but having family that’s into the whole thrift store thing is pretty decent. Got a big honkin’ cast iron skillet and a stainless pan for super cheap, easy to fix and they’re likely to last a long damn time at least.

    • Bizarroland@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Quick note about cast iron, they are great on induction stoves, but if you have an induction stove and you want to get cast iron for it, before you buy the cast iron put it on a flat surface and see if it wobbles.

      If the cast iron has a warp to it it will not be ideal for an induction stove and the only way to fix it is to Mill it out which costs more than buying a high quality piece of cast iron.

    • AA5B@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      The last couple years, I’ve mostly switched over. After yet another over-priced set of non-stick “good” cookware started peeling, and now that I’m the one in control of the kitchen ….

      • set of Kirkland (Costco) stainless 5-ply, for less than a similar set of non-stick, it should last forever
      • set of cast iron skillets. Lodge is a great bargain, should last forever, and is frequently on sale.
      • a couple ceramic knives. Cheap ones are much sharper than steel, stay sharp longer, and can go through the dishwasher without fear. While good steel knives might literally last forever if you give them the attention they deserve, this is last much longer than standard, without any attention
  • Ersatz86@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Purchased a Tom Bihn Aeronaut 45 convertible shoulder bag/backpack in 2015. BIFL as BIFL gets. This bag has flown 100k+ miles, bi-monthly transcontinental flights and multiple trips to Europe. Massive YKK zippers, bulletproof waterproof shell, sensible compartments, multiple sturdy handles, fits underneath airline seats, and in cramped overhead bins, looks like the day I got it. If you occasionally get off the beaten path, place a high value on mobility, find roller bags silly and wasteful for anything but pure urban airport-to-hotel travel, and adhere to the one-bag school of travel, make this your one bag. At $330, it’s spendy, but my cost per mile/hour/level of satisfaction approaches zero.

    They also make a 30L Aeronaut bag that fits smaller bodies and goes in European budget airline overheads with no trouble.

    Disclaimer: maybe Tom Bihn has been acquired by another company? so cannot speak to current-day manufacture standards. I can’t verify from the website if this is true. You should check it out for yourself, though. It’s pretty cool. Going purely by the “about us” section I can’t believe a single thing has changed.

  • Lexam@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    Doc Martens. But not your Doc Martens. I was lucky enough to get in to the For Life program before it closed. Anytime my boots wear out or are damaged I send them in and they send me a new pair. I usually have to do an exchange about every three years.

  • karpintero@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Years ago I bought an insulated coffee cup and water bottle (klean kanteen) that get used every week, especially if I travel. When I get iced coffee and I can walk around sipping it and there’s still ice floating around hours later. Plus I can avoid single-use plastic cups if the coffee shop fills personal ones (some even give a discount!). The water bottle has saved me from having to buy overpriced bottled water dozens of times over.

    Another one is my bike. I bought a used Marin Muirwoods commuter bike from a local co-op and it’s saved from having to drive to any place less than a few miles away, like the gym. Less gas burned and wear & tear on my car. Plus it’s fun cruising around and is great exercise.

  • IonAddis@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I got a backpack from LL Bean over 10 years ago, and I use it for everything. Like, walking a few blocks to the grocery store to get groceries everything. I use it so much. Aside from one zipper on one pocket going weird, nothing has worn out/through.

    And although I got a new bag, I still find myself going back to the LL Bean one.

    Unfortunately–and I just checked their site–they don’t seem to make the backpack I have anymore. It was about $100 when i got it, but on their site all I see is cheap-looking LL Bean-branded school backpacks, or Osprey-branded high-tier hiking backpacks. And mine was LL Bean branded, but closer to the hiking daypack sort of thing than an ordinary cheap school backpack. It was perfectly positioned in the middle.

    Edit: It was the “Escape” daypack.

  • beeng@discuss.tchncs.de
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    1 year ago

    Osprey backpack

    Zwilling and wüsthof knives

    De Buyer carbon steel pans

    RM Williams boots

    Dynaudio speakers

    Thinkpad laptop (on Linux)

  • Ookami38@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    How’s that chair? Big guy here, and most chairs are absolute shit, barely coming up high enough to adequately rest my head.

    • ribboo@lemm.eeOP
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      1 year ago

      That’s the one negative, there is no headrest. Not even to purchase. Though there is a company that specializes on headrests for their chairs, that are made with great quality and looks as official as it gets. I’m about to purchase one of those, which sucks considering what I paid.

      I’m fairly tall 187 cm / 6”2. And have zero struggles with the size of the chair. I’m on the medium size, so there’s a larger one available. Depending on your size, I’d imagine that one would work for you.

      It’s 100% the best chair I’ve ever sat in. Took 3 weeks to break in, had some crazy pain in my lower back. Realized afterwards that what had happen, was my posture was being corrected. I sit with much better posture on regular chairs now as well, it basically forced me into learning how to sit properly. I never ache, never feel like I have to stand or move. It’s just awesome.

    • AA5B@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      Definitely one of the advantages of mine, over the crap I’ve tried before.

      How big? I’m 6’3”, 300+ lbs, and it is so nice. Arron comes in three sizes and I do have the largest, but it fits, with room to spare.

      I usually have the worst problems with posture, because office chairs do not adjust high enough to match my legs, but this does! I don’t have a headrest and don’t know if they make them, but I don’t even notice that since I can now sit upright!

  • Astroturfed@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    A good quality kitchen knife. It’s a bit of personal preference but I like Global for their price/value.

    Whatever kind of pan you use the most, good quality. Le crueset or all-clad.

    • ribboo@lemm.eeOP
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      1 year ago

      Actually just purchased a set of global knives. I’m extremely happy so far!

  • Showroom7561@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    Arkel bike panniers.

    Expensive (like most high-quality panniers are), but they are built solid with repairable/replaceable parts, lifetime warranty that can be transferred*, and they are highly functional.

    Adding these to my bike has saved money by not having to use the car as much, and i don’t have to worry about replacing them every year.

    *The transferable warranty also means that if you buy one used, you’re covered! Ultimate frugal win.

    • ribboo@lemm.eeOP
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      1 year ago

      Those look nice!

      I bought a pannier backpack from Two Wheel Gear a couple of years ago, it’s been through so many miles both on the bike and on my back. Really sturdy.

      Can’t go wrong with a great pannier!

  • MasterBlaster@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    My aeron is 20 years old and still good. The mesh is a little looseer, giving a bit less support, but I’m still happy. You made a good choice.

    • glitch1985@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I bought a used aeron a few years ago after using them at work forever. A few weeks after I bought it i turned it over to replace the pad on the front of the chair and saw that it was manufactured over 22 years ago. I would have never thought it was older than a couple years by how good of shape it was in but these things are built like a tank.