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From: Jonathan Kamens on 14 Jun 2010 07:54 Doc <docsavage20(a)yahoo.com> writes: >I used front load Speed Queens at the local laundry for months. I >can't say I noticed any obvious evidence that it got the clothes any >cleaner. My wife and I certainly noticed our clothes getting markedly cleaner in our front-loader than they ever did in our top-loader. With five young kids, believe me, our clothes get dirty, and we can tell when they're not getting clean. ;-) >Seat of the pants, it doesn't make sense that it would. In a >front loader, the clothes are being plopped into the soapy water over >and over. In a top loader, the agitation action seems to be a more >active approach. I have exactly the opposite perception. In a top-loader, the clothes are crammed up against each other which means that there is little room for them to actually move around and little room for water to flow through them. The motion of the agitator causes the clothes to move gradually and incrementally, and they tend to stay in the same configuration they started in, pressed up against the same clothes they started against. The motion and rubbing action are both minimal. In contrast, in a front-loader, both the clothes and the water move a great deal. Since they are repeatedly essentially thrown into the air and mixed up, there is a great deal of water flow and rubbing action. >Now that I've got a top load washer again, it seems >the clothes are at least as clean as they got in the commercial front >loader. 1) You may have been overfilling the front-loader, which would negate many of its beneficial effects. 2) Washers tend to perform better when they are newer, so a new top-loader may perform comparably to an older front-loader. 3) Maybe your clothes aren't very dirty :-). |