Yes, Jon, you are right in saying so! But we do not use our FL very often anymore as we prefer "to bath our washing in a toploader" as we believe is more fabric friendly than tumbling with just a cup of water!
And we do our washing just in cold water in our SpeedQueen TL as we do not have hot-water taps in our basement. First we thought only to wash during summer-time our lightly soiled items in it, in cool water, but found out that even normally soiled items became clean and really stained fabrics just needed a little help by a slight extra treatment.
In my Twinnies I wash with warm water (which needs to be heated up first by the integral heater) as the wash-times are very short (Hoovermatic = 1-4 minutes per load!) and won't be able to clean with cold water.
Oxydolfan, I know the problems in areas with hard water when I lived in Andalucia/Spain to where in comparision Rheinland-Pfalz has rain-soft water - it should actually come out of the tap as sand than liquid down there! But we have soft water here and do not need any treatment than the softener that is already in it.
I never heard of "Blütenweiß" (ooooops! the computer cannot read the u with trema nor the beta-s!!)- "Bluetenweiss" must be a special brand of a supermarket chain....I believe; guess it's something like Oxyclean or SIL.
And we are very content with the new ARIEL Cold-Active Power, too!
Concerning chlorine bleach (here available under the brands "Dan Clorix" from Colgate-Palmolive and "Eau de Javelle", the french name for chlorine bleach, from WalMart; but WalMart is now closed down here!), Germans really believe it is bio-hazardous-radioactive-poison! Can't understand that as I use it frequently for cleaning the bath, in the kitchen or on really stubborn stains on whites. But I do not add it to the general wash nor use it in bigger amounts (cups wise) in the washer! Germans, especially the older ones, really make a science out of it and could not imagine to wash cold or cool - all that is resistant to high temperatures MUST be boiled here, still! What do these cranks think? If only boiling makes washing really clean, do they then run arround all in dirty clothes, as most of the modern textiles do not withstand temperatures over 40°C!?!?
And yes, traditionally the Monday was the wash-day here in Germany as you got the key to the laudry-room and the attic from your neighbour on Saturday or Sunday. So you were able to wash every third, fourth or sixth week, depending on how many appartments had to share one laundry-room that usually was situated in the basement. There were also plans, telling each party when they will have "the week", and the user before you had to hand you the keys of the cleaned rooms to you at the end of the week, to make you able to start with the soak already on Sunday in big zink-tubs for the wash-start on Monday morning, mostly before seven o'clock by liting the fire under the copper-boiler to start with the boiling of whites first. It was forbidden by law to have washing arround the house for drying or even do washing on Holy Sundays, so the earlier you started in week, the more drying-time you had and the earlier you could start with ironing, too!
Now to you Jonv112.
What do you mean with shock-level, and all these ppm? I know what ppm is - but can't see the connection to the chlorine bleach and so....?? Please do not leave me so puzzeled!! Help me to understand and let me become more intelligent! Smile!
Cheers to you all - Ralf