A Philips toploader turns up in the Netherlands, pictures of the famous CC1000!

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Greg,

Yes, the older European machines were waterhogs! There is however a difference between American toploaders and these ones. These machines use less water for washing and more for rinsing. Most of them have 4 - 5 rinses. My compact Miele toploader even has 6! They needed that many rinses because there were hardly spins between rinses or often not at all.

Diomede,

Does your Ignis spin between rinses?

Years ago, in the late 90's I think, I mailed Miele and Bosch if they were planning to sell their toploaders on the American market. I never heard from them. At that time Bosch had a toploader that matched their dryers, it would have been a smart looking set. And conveniently compact!
 
My vintage Miele w1070 which was produced from about the 1980's through early 1990's indeed has four deep rinses on "cottons". If you count the water added at the end of the wash cycle it makes five, since quite allot of water is put into the tub to cool down the suds. And yes, there are only two spins during rinsing. One short spin after the second rinse, and a longer after the third.

This is basically rinsing by dilution and have to say it works. Not for those who pay high water rates though, or have septic systems.

L.
 
....and what about the 80's Philips tumble dryers????

My cousin had a matching set and apart from the movement of the clothes against the door, it was practically silent!
You can't say that about the Whirlpool UK dryers....
PHILIPS MACHINES (before WP took over) WERE THE BEST!!!
Peter
 
great pictures Louis.
I am glad you took a piccy of the information plate as my next question was going to be any idea of the model number.

I remember one or two of these from when I was a kid and they were very quiet in comparison to other stuf on the market at the time.

I loved the matching washing machines - I have a bit of a thing for clasy metallic silver facias - Hoover matchboxes and Hottie liberators.

I am pretty sure that my best mates grandparetnts had the very matching washer to the dryer shown above. Their machine also had bronze coloured programmer insets. I haven't been to the grandparents house for years and years and, like the house opposite their's which use to have a Hoover 3223H Keymatic, that classic Philips might still be there.

Oh to cook up a valid excuse.
Keep on posting Philips - a classic brand which I would love to know more about.

Before I click the post button, does anyone know the history of the right hand drive Philips machines shown below - were they continental machines only, or did they also appear in the UK?.

Cheers
Paul

10-15-2007-06-29-1--matchboxpaul.jpg
 
Hi Diomede.

The pictures I posted were also from on here, no doubt posted by Marco. The years written on underneath were put there by me and were from info from when they were first posted. The year is therefore not official and so may be inaccurate.

As far as the UK is concerned we had the left hand drive model 707 back in 1976 and I personally had bever known of right hand drive Philips washing machines until Marco posted the adverts. So this may mean either that the 1978 year is wrong or the machines shown were produced for Continental European sales only and not UK sale.

Sorry for any confusion and over to Marco for confirmation of the year (or anyone else if they know for certain).

Cheers
Paul
 
thanks Foraloysius...

Great photos of the Philips dryer!!!
They were almost silent!!! Great brand, great loss to us here old enough to remember them. As far as I am concerned, they were the "Miele" of the 70's and 80's!
Thanks again for the memories!
Peter
 
Now the scary part....

Some years ago I came across a Ruton (a brand name owned by Philips) washer that was put on the curb. I went home to get my camera and took these pictures. The control panel is almost the same as the Philips Slimstar (Ruton used orange accents on it's control panels for a long time) but the machine is totally different undere the lid! I just discovered that!

10-16-2007-08-29-38--foraloysius.jpg
 
More Philips information

I found this in another map on my computer. It's a scan from a Philips jubileum book. This is the translation of the text:

"Apart from a groing number of small household appliances new Philips fridges, freezers, washers and dishwashers enter the market. With possible overproduction in Western Europe Philips starts cooperating with other companies. In 1969 an agreement is reached with Ignis for founding a joint venture for coolers and freezers: Industrie Reunite Eurodomestica S.p.A. (IRE) in Comerio, Italy. Together with Bauknecht a factory for dishwashers is built in 1970 in Neunkirchen, Western Germany: Euro Hausgeraete G.m.b.H. The centre of the division for large household appliances is founded in Comerio."

10-16-2007-08-50-4--foraloysius.jpg
 
COMERIO!!!!

I really didn't think that Ignis started to fail so far early!!! 1969? But it was just a few year after it was born!!

The machine you see posted by Louis was invented by "Cavalier Borghi"... and that's why then during all the 70s and on this kind of machines were largely found with the Philips brand too.

From 1969 so until 1991 when this joint-venture (Philips-Ignis-Bauknechnt) entered the Whirlpool brand here in Europe...

By the way here you are the new Ignis website...it was recently created!

As you can see no 60cmwide TLHA left...

 

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