Let's recap the first two strategies for combating obsolescence:
- Refurbishing restores function and appearance but leaves most components original. It is a facelift—valuable, cost-effective, but not a reset.
- Retrofitting adds new capabilities to old platforms but leaves the core systems untouched. It is an upgrade—powerful, but narrow in scope.
Remanufacturing is different. It is total. It is complete. It is the closest thing engineering has to a resurrection.
Remanufacturing takes a used product, disassembles it completely to its core components, cleans and inspects every part, replaces or restores every wear item, and reassembles the product to original (or improved) specifications. The result is indistinguishable from new—and often carries the same warranty.
In other words, remanufacturing is total transformation. Nothing is assumed to be good enough. Every component is inspected, and every wear item is replaced. Period.
Ps: Incidentally, my fourth book Manual PCB-RE: The Essentials, has been dubbed "The Gold Standard" by an Amazon reader.









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