Designgeek
Well-known member
- Joined
- Dec 12, 2004
- Messages
- 865
I'm new here and don't see a topic on this, so I hope it's not redundant or otherwise obnoxious to create one.
I'm looking into appliance designs for energy & resource efficiency at relatively low cost. The conventional answer in clothes washers is the horizontal axis drum, but there are a few other designs that intrigue me.
I've seen ads for a type of compact washer that use an agitator that consists of a flat or slightly concave circular disc with ridges, which seems to be referred to as a "pulsator." Some of these (or perhaps only larger models primarily outside the US) have smaller circular elements within them that also spin as the main element rotates. I can't tell from the ads, but I would assume that these either a) rotate at a speed of 30 -100 rpm in one direction only, or b) rotate at that speed range but reverse direction periodically.
Question is, how effective are these compared to conventional vertical-axis agitators? Do they cause clothes to tangle because they don't extend to the top of the washtub to above the waterline? (I can recall using a friend's machine many years ago that had a similar impeller mounted on a horizontal axis; I think it was a Hoover. It certainly caused my clothes to get tightly tangled. Perhaps I wasn't using it properly, but I doubt that because I tend to under-load washers rather than overload, to reduce strain on the mechanism.)
In general, what are the most efficient agitator designs in terms of maximum cleaning capability for a given input of water and electricity, without causing undue wear on the clothing?
I'm looking into appliance designs for energy & resource efficiency at relatively low cost. The conventional answer in clothes washers is the horizontal axis drum, but there are a few other designs that intrigue me.
I've seen ads for a type of compact washer that use an agitator that consists of a flat or slightly concave circular disc with ridges, which seems to be referred to as a "pulsator." Some of these (or perhaps only larger models primarily outside the US) have smaller circular elements within them that also spin as the main element rotates. I can't tell from the ads, but I would assume that these either a) rotate at a speed of 30 -100 rpm in one direction only, or b) rotate at that speed range but reverse direction periodically.
Question is, how effective are these compared to conventional vertical-axis agitators? Do they cause clothes to tangle because they don't extend to the top of the washtub to above the waterline? (I can recall using a friend's machine many years ago that had a similar impeller mounted on a horizontal axis; I think it was a Hoover. It certainly caused my clothes to get tightly tangled. Perhaps I wasn't using it properly, but I doubt that because I tend to under-load washers rather than overload, to reduce strain on the mechanism.)
In general, what are the most efficient agitator designs in terms of maximum cleaning capability for a given input of water and electricity, without causing undue wear on the clothing?