An Interesting Test with a New Meter

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One thing that makes towels and the like feel less fluffy as they age is the minerals present in the water. When the towels are dried, the minerals remain, reducing fluffiness. And the next wash does not get them all back out, so they build up over time.

Thus, the more rinse water you can spin out before drying, the less minerals remain in the towels before they go in the dryer, or on the line. So, over time, a faster / longer / more thorough spin should make it take longer for the towels to lose their fluffiness.

Imagine if you could spray in demineralized water during the first part of the final spin! Like the car washes do on the final rinse.

Keith
 
Or you could just get a water softener.
This is true, although they don't remove all of the ions like distilled or deionized water, rather they just exchange undesirable ones for less undesirable ones? I'm not sure how they effect the softness of laundry... What I remember is the inability to ever rinse the soap off one's skin.

I grew up with one, and kept it going after dad died. Then, one day it failed (major leak), so I threw the bypass isolation valve to keep the water on and... OMG. The water was SO MUCH BETTER after that! We could finally rinse off soap!! So, at least with the water quality in that area, they had a negative impact.

Keith
 
Then, one day it failed (major leak), so I threw the bypass isolation valve to keep the water on and... OMG. The water was SO MUCH BETTER after that! We could finally rinse off soap!! So, at least with the water quality in that area, they had a negative impact.

Keith
Deep rinses are crystal clear in the Maytag, maybe a you had a poor rinsing washer.
 
Okay More Results! So today I washed those same four towels again. I first washed them in the 2007 LG, using only the Sanitary cycle without selecting the Steam option. To my surprised it used ever so slightly more electricity for this cycle. Again remember this LG is 18 years old and I would assume (and hope) the power consumption results would be better in a brand new 2025 LG. Here are the results...

2007 LG Sanitary cycle without Steam.jpg
LG Sanitary Test.jpg

Before washing them I weighed the towels on my good accurate scale so I could test the spin drying effectiveness of the 3 machines. The dry towels weighed 9lbs/10.6oz. I weighed them out of each machine's final spin after the cycle was over. I rinsed and spun out the towels in the Lady Kenmore on the Normal Cycle. Then I completely rewashed them in the Frigidaire Unimatic in plain water without any detergent using its full cycle. Here are the water extraction results:

Spin Effectiveness Chart.jpg
spun out towels results.jpg

What surprised me so much was how much detergent was left in the towels after the full LG cycle and a rinse in the Kenmore. Here is a picture of the towels being rewashed (without any detergent or additives). I used Tide HE Free, using the bottle's measuring cup I filled the cup only to the #2 line for the initial washing in the LG. I noticed some suds in the Kenmore rinse, but nothing like I saw in the Unimatic coming out.

This image was taken half way through the wash cycle in the Frigidaire after washing in the LG and re-rinsing in the Kenmore...

Post LG Wash.jpg

and here is the load in the last 10 seconds of final overflow-rinse in the Unimatic which I what I want to see...
Post LG Rinse.jpg
 

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