Can You Believe Washing Tablets Have Only Been Around 10 Years!

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washdayisfun

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Hi Guys

Came across this interesting article while searching for something on the net. I can't beleieve we have only had tablets for 10 years. I guess we are so used to them it feels like they have been around longer.

Ill post the pictures that came with the article first:

11-15-2008-07-39-37--washdayIsFun.jpg
 
ARTICLE:

Monday, May 31, 1999 Published at 13:56 GMT 14:56 UK

Business: The Company File

Soap war froths up

Washing powder and liquids are facing fresh competition in tablet form

The battle is frothing up for control of Europe's laundry baskets, as two global soap giants lock horns over the latest innovation to feed the washing machine.
Automatic powders, liquids and concentrated powders are all an established part of the washing day routine.

Now the battleground for Lever Brothers and US group Procter & Gamble is shifting to a new innovative product - tablets.

Just as Lever celebrates the first anniversary of its solid detergent tablet launch and claims great success in rolling them out across 15 European countries, P&G is lumbering into action with its own tablets.

Tablet takes off

But Lever, the soap detergents division of Anglo-Dutch consumer products group Unilever, has built up quite a lead in winning over British households, who use their washing machines more than five times a week.


Europe's soap detergent market is worth �5.5bn
Lever launched its flagship British brand Persil in tablet form a year ago, and the product already accounts for nearly one in 10 of the nation's washes.

Tablet forms of Lever's other European brands Omo and Skip soon followed.

Retailers' own brands entered the British tablets market nine months later, not a particular surprise given the strength of supermarket brands in Britain.

The surprise was that the world's largest soap maker is still to enter the market.

Better late than never

P&G is now moving into action, saying its product may be late but it will be better and hence more expensive.

Its tablets will flow into Britain with a marketing launch costing �17.5m ($28m), and then roll out across Europe.

Lever stole a march on its rival by persuading households bemused by the choice of standard bulk powders, liquids and concentrated powders that what they really needed was another product that would take the hassle out of wash day.


Lever dominates the UK washing tablet market
Since Lever says that most washing machine users overdose with detergent, what could be more simple than tablets.

Two for a normal load, three if it is extra dirty.

The move worked a treat in Europe's �5.5bn soap detergent market, and tablets soon gobbled up a 5% share with Lever holding 60% of that, or some 25m weekly washes in Europe conducted with Lever tablets.

Sebastian Lazell, Lever's European fabric brands development director, forecasts tablets will account for 20% of the European market soon.

So far the only challenge comes in continental Europe from German Henkel which sells more tablets in Germany and Italy, while Lever leads elsewhere.

In Britain, the impact is more dramatic.

Tablets take 10% of the �900m annual market, and Unilever holds 90% of that with the remainder made up by own-label brands.

Powerful setback

It was not always that rosy. Back in the mid-1990s Lever suffered the ultimate setback when its Power range was found to damage clothing in the wash.

Lever was forced to withdraw a new Power formulation for its Persil, Omo and Skip brands after a patented "accelerator" ingredient was found to weaken fabrics and leave colours faded.

Lever is determined to put the Power fiasco behind it, build up its lead in tablets and stay there. But its record on innovations is not good.

In the early 1980s, Lever pipped P&G by a few months to launch the first liquid detergent, but the US giant bounced back to pinch first place.

Then in the late 1980s, P&G was first to launch concentrated powders and Lever never caught up.

Now there is a difference, says Mr Lazell, at the group's main British manufacturing centre in northwest England.

This time Lever has a one-year lead over P&G, it has rolled out tablets in 15 countries, and has already launched its secondary brands Radion and Surf in tablet form.

US rival fights back

But P&G is fighting back hard. Its new tablets will be available in British shops from the beginning of June.

Lever's round white tablets are placed in a special net dispenser in the washing machine drum but P&G's square, green and white square tablets can be placed in the machine dispenser drawer or direct in the drum with no need for a dispensing net.

P&G delayed its tablet launch by one month to make sure stocks were high enough to meet what it believes will be high demand, but it has priced its product 20% above Lever's counterpart.

The company has to convince its customers that "superior" performance is worth paying for if they are to triumph in the hard-fought soap war.
 
Vim,Salvo,Lestare and Action

Back in the early 1960's,Lever brothers as well as P&G made wash tablets.Lever made "Vim"which were tablets that had bluing and high sudsing detergent in them,"Salvo" was P&G's version in a low sudsing formula and was alot like "Dash" in tablet form,"Lestare" was an oxygen bleach like "Snowy"in a gel type self desolving tablet made by the owners of "Lestoil" a well known,strong smelling,multi-purpose cleaner,then Action chlorine bleach packets were the same as Lestare but were made to be used in place of Chlorox. Two of these were renamed and reintroduced back in the 80's. "Tide","Wisk","Ajax",and "Surf" were available not only in tablet form but,Ajax was also available in packet form which you would continue use of by including it with the laundry loading it into the dryer where it became a dryer sheet to soften and keep the static clean off your clothes.My favorites were Salvo,Tide,Action and Lestare.They worked great in my old Westinghouse laundromat washers as well as my FRIGIDAIRE Jet-Action 1-18's.My friends,the Bairs who owned their own laundromat washer,used Vim but due to its high sudsing formula,Mrs.Bair(Alice)had Mr.Bair(Cub)use his tools to cut the tablets in half.That made a lot of sense and the suds level in the Laundromat was absolutely perfect!Just below the window and great splashing of the suds onto the glass. I only wish that back then there were video cameras because the hours I spent in their cellar sitting on a milking stool watching their Laundromat flush,lift,turn and tumble thousands of times,would be priceless on film or video tape!!The sun came in the cellar widow and shined directly onto the washer's window!They also proudly owned an older Westinghouse electric dryer(1954)a FRIGIDAIRE 40 inch electric range(1949),A gas Whirlpool frost free refrigerator(1963),and a manual pedal powered Singer sewing machine.
 
Lever had the "Vim" brand positioned as a scouring powder for cleaning baths and sinks in the UK. It was latterly sold off, when Unilever had their clear-out of under-performing brands.

It is now owned in the UK at any rate, by a Guaber subsidiary, 'Spotlesspunch'.

 
Salvo [and a question about Surf deterent from the 60s]

I remember Salvo. Mum used to buy it as it was so convenient to use -- ah yes, a mother of the 60s.

Speaking of detergents, I have a question to ask. Do any of you remember the detergent in the 60s called Surf, and in each box of detergent was a utensil? I remember as a kid having a spoon which my sister and I called the "surf spoon." We used to fight over who had it at their place setting to the horror of mummie thinking that our silverware didn't match ... how things change! (I remember a tablespoon but not a fork or knife ... remember mummie used Salvo as it was convenient in our 56 GE Filter-Flo!)

Wikipedia has a small item about Surf (but no mention of utensils):
Surf is the name of a brand of laundry detergent made by Unilever. This detergent brand was introduced in the 1950s and is used to market Unilever detergent products in the UK, Ireland, USA and many other countries.

The brand is international, but the formulations of the detergent and the market segment targeted vary by region.
 
10 years

Its wierd, as Persil tablets came out in 1998 and Ariel fizzing action tablets came out in July 1999, Does anyone remember the advert for Ariel Tablets Dissolving in a drawer of a Bosch Maxx?

here is a old picture taken in 1999 of various detergents that were around, notice the old skool Daz Ultra, and Ariel Futur and the First packaging of Persil Performance Tablets

View attachment 11-24-2008-13-27-33--zanussi_lover.jpg
 
I remember the Salvo tablets advertised on television, though at home we were strictly a (dirt can't hide from intensified) Tide family. Two tablets were used for a single load, presumably a full load. I don't remember water level controls on those vintage washers, some had them but not all, but I imagine one tablet would have sufficed for a small to medium load.

A Salvo ad appears from time to time on "Picture Of The Day" feature of this website. There is also a Salvo video ad on this site at


I use Electrasol/Finish tablets in the dishwasher. If they sold Persil tablets here I would try them. But there is something disconcerting about not being able to control the amount of detergent as one does with liquids or powders. If I had loads of unrised suds at the end of wash cycle with a tablet, I'd have to devise some way to cut them and at that point it's easier to just measure a powder.

 
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