Appliance Accessory Compatibility Card

Create an appliance-to-accessory compatibility card that tracks confirmed attachments, adapter notes, storage spots, labels, uncertainty, and safe non-repair boundaries.

Audits

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Install

openclaw skills install appliance-accessory-compatibility-card

Appliance Accessory Compatibility Card

Purpose

Use this prompt-only skill when a user wants a simple household card showing which accessories, attachments, filters, trays, racks, hoses, brushes, adapters, chargers, bins, or consumables fit which appliances. The deliverable is an appliance-to-accessory match card with confirmed fits, storage spots, label text, and uncertainty notes.

This skill is a compatibility tracker only. It does not provide electrical repair, wiring, disassembly, bypass, internal service, modification, or safety-testing guidance. It avoids serial numbers, login details, account data, and credentials.

When to Use

Use this skill when the user wants to:

  • Sort a drawer or bin of appliance attachments.
  • Track which mixer, vacuum, coffee maker, air purifier, blender, food processor, humidifier, refrigerator, dishwasher, washer, dryer, or small appliance accessory fits each device.
  • Record confirmed model-family compatibility from manuals, labels, receipts, or official packaging.
  • Make printable labels for accessory bins.
  • Avoid mistaken replacement buys by listing what is already owned.
  • Create a moving, renter, roommate, or household handoff card.

If the user has not confirmed compatibility from a manual, label, packaging, receipt, or official support text they provide, mark the fit as unconfirmed. Do not guess model-specific compatibility.

Required Inputs

Ask for practical, non-sensitive details:

  • Appliance type, brand, and model family or public model name if the user wants it recorded.
  • Accessory names, visible part names, size notes, color, shape, or packaging text.
  • Source of confirmation: manual, product label, receipt, packaging, household test fit without forcing, or official support text provided by the user.
  • Storage location, bin, shelf, drawer, or label preference.
  • Which accessories are duplicates, orphaned, damaged, or uncertain.
  • Whether the user wants a compact card, drawer labels, or a room-by-room map.

Do not ask for serial numbers, warranty account logins, passwords, app credentials, payment data, Wi-Fi details, or private account information.

Safety and Scope Boundaries

  • Track fit, source, storage, labels, and uncertainty only.
  • Do not explain electrical repair, wiring, rewiring, outlet work, internal panels, motor service, battery pack repair, charger repair, heating element repair, gas, refrigerant, plumbing repair, or appliance disassembly.
  • Do not advise modifying attachments, shaving plastic, forcing a fit, bypassing interlocks, defeating sensors, removing guards, or using adapters not approved for the appliance.
  • If an accessory is cracked, melted, frayed, burnt, smells hot, sparks, leaks, has exposed wires, or causes unusual heat or noise, mark it do-not-use and route to the manual, manufacturer, landlord, retailer, or qualified service as appropriate.
  • Do not claim universal compatibility unless the user's provided source says so.
  • Do not browse, call services, register products, or store private account information.

Compatibility Status Labels

Use these labels consistently:

  • Confirmed fit: The user provided a manual, label, packaging, receipt, or official support text that ties the accessory to the appliance or model family.
  • Physical fit only: The accessory appears to attach without force, but no source confirms compatibility.
  • Unconfirmed: The user is unsure or evidence is missing.
  • Do not use: The accessory is damaged, unsafe-looking, forced, mismatched, recalled according to user-provided notes, or tied to a hazard concern.
  • Orphaned: The accessory has no known matching appliance in the household.

Workflow

  1. List appliances. Capture type, brand, public model name or model family, room, and storage area. Leave serial numbers out.
  2. List accessories. Record accessory name, appearance, size cue, label text, condition, and current storage spot.
  3. Pair candidates. Match accessories to appliances only from user-provided evidence or clear household observations. Mark uncertainty plainly.
  4. Check safe-use flags. Move damaged, forced, hot-smelling, sparking, leaking, frayed, melted, or questionable items to do-not-use.
  5. Build storage map. Assign each confirmed or likely accessory to a bin, drawer, shelf, bag, or appliance-side holder.
  6. Create labels. Draft short labels for bins and accessories, including appliance name, accessory name, and status.
  7. Create buying guardrails. Note what to verify before buying replacements: appliance public model name, accessory name, size cue, and official compatibility source.
  8. Build the card. Produce a compact compatibility card with confirmed fits, unconfirmed items, orphaned items, storage, and next checks.

Output Format

Return an appliance accessory compatibility card with these sections:

  1. Appliance List

    • Appliance:
    • Brand or public model name:
    • Room:
    • Storage area:
    • Notes without serial numbers:
  2. Compatibility Matrix

    • Accessory:
    • Fits appliance:
    • Status:
    • Evidence source:
    • Storage spot:
    • Label text:
  3. Unconfirmed or Orphaned Items

    • Item:
    • Why uncertain:
    • Safe next check:
    • Temporary storage:
  4. Do-Not-Use Items

    • Item:
    • Concern:
    • Action: stop using, set aside, and check manual, manufacturer, landlord, retailer, or qualified service.
  5. Drawer or Bin Labels

    • Label 1:
    • Label 2:
    • Label 3:
  6. Replacement Buying Guardrails

    • Verify public model name or model family.
    • Match accessory name, dimensions, and source-confirmed compatibility.
    • Avoid forced fits, unofficial adapters, and private account details.
  7. Boundary Note

    • This is a compatibility tracker only, not electrical repair or internal service guidance.
    • Leave out serial numbers, logins, passwords, payment data, and private account information.

If markdown tables are convenient, the compatibility matrix may be a table. If the chat surface is narrow, use bullets with the same fields.

Quality Bar

A strong result helps the household identify what fits what, where each item belongs, what remains uncertain, and what should not be used. It should reduce drawer chaos and mistaken accessory purchases without drifting into repair, modification, or private-data collection.

Example Prompts

  • "I have a drawer full of vacuum attachments and no idea which fits which vacuum."
  • "Which KitchenAid mixer attachments do I actually own? Help me organize them."
  • "I need to label all my coffee maker accessories and air purifier filters before moving."