1901 Hospital Laundry

Automatic Washer - The world's coolest Washing Machines, Dryers and Dishwashers

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hi

No, these washers were all metal - we had these in this time in Germany, too!
They were heated by steam which came from a boiler that also drove the steam-engine which was the motor for the machines.
The presoaked washing (soaked often with chlorine bleach and soda to kill the germs) were sorted and, if necessary, pretreated by hand (2. pic: the woman with the woodden wash-board washer in front of her and the soaking basins in the rear of the pic) then put into the drum. Warm water was filled in via the tubes, soad and soap-powder added and the gear was switched on to make the machine run. Then the valves for the steam were opened and the boiling process started. Later, suds where drained and the hot water valve was opened for a first hot rinse. Then, after thus having been drained the cold water tap was opened and the cold water cooled and rinsed the clothes in an overflow rinsing process. Finally washing was drained again and a last cold rinse had to be made by opening valves and taps, sometimes with blueing added. In the end the washing had to be transferred into the spinner and water was extracted before the washing was hanged into gas or steam heated gallery dryers (huge cabinet dryers) to pre-dry them. Some articles were (heavily) starched and spun again and together with the others, still lightly humid items, sent through big steam-mangles, with often 5-6 rolls, to iron, disinfect and totally dry the clothes in one go!
Ralf
 
woodden thing...

Just a few days ago there was one of this at Ebay/Germany!!

And there's another old washing-machine, guess it's a MIELE one: see link! It's a "Rocker-Washer"! The container swings back and forth (no roll-over!) and washing/suds roll over inside in the form of a laying eight when it tosses into the round molded sides.
You fill it with water of the aquired temperature up to about a third or half of the tubs height in horizontal position, add powder and put the washing in - it's said about 10 men's shirts will go in one load! Screw down the lid and start the machine and let it do its work for at least 5-20 minutes, depending on the fabric...
Ralf

 
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