See Chet, this is what you never seem to understand when you say this constantly.
You’re taking MY choice away. I will then be forced to buy washers on the market only vetted by you, his majesty.
Nope. Because the appliance stores in addition to rows of old fashioned top loads would also have sections with front load washers of various kinds, Calypso style top loads, Neptune rotating disk type top loads, twin tubs, portables, compacts and various laundry alternative with semi automatic and non automatic machines. There would actually be more selection, a lot more, not less.
Another thing, you want a washer that uses 1500 watts every cycle?
I think the disagreements that we have stems entirely over selective reading and selective interpretation of information.
I used the term
watt hours, not
watts. Big difference. Watts is the amount of energy used in one second, watt hours is the total amount of energy used over a given period of time.
To address your question the point that I was trying to make the legal limits for maximum water and energy consumption per load would be a LOT higher than it is today.
It doesn't mean manufacturers have to build a machine that uses 1500 watt hours or 40 gallons of water per cycle, just that they can legally do so if they wanted to.
I have a gas dryer that shares the breaker with the washer. Is your magical government going to subsidize me running a new breaker line to my laundry room so I can run both at the same time? Or is that on MY dime?
You do realize that a washer drawing 500 watts continuously for 3 hours is is the same as a washer drawing 1500 watts continuously for 1 hour?
But to answer your question you have the freedom to choose a washer and dryer where their combined current draw does not exceed 20 amps at 120 volts.
Am I also to pay for running this 1500w washer now, when doing laundry, especially now that my electric bill looks like a hockey stick?
You are free to choose a washer with the water and energy use you think are appropriate for you as much as I should be able to chose a washer with the energy requirements that I think are appropriate for me.
Do I now also HAVE to use 30-40gal of water a load? That’s expensive too when my private profit driven water supply company charges me 2x for water what the public city charges just .5mi away….
Nope, you can choose a machine that uses 15 gallons of water per cycle. There are people who shop on energy and water use alone so there would be manufacturers out there catering to that.
These things cut both ways, boss.
People gripe that efficiency mandates cost people money. Well your INefficiency mandates will cost me even more.
Right, they do go both ways. Except in your world, the one I am living in right now, you can buy an new HE front load, however I can't buy a new 40 gallon top load.
Machines that break down in 5 years cost society more in the long run than something which lasts 30 years.