Did we know Kenmore put their name on a combo?

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An LG Combo.  Appears to have been around a while given it was added to Sears' web site February 24, 2017

[this post was last edited: 8/17/2018-16:11]
 
A friend's 24-year old son and his new husband moved to a rental house with an awful basement, accessed by a steep, narrow set of stairs. Guess where the washer and dryer were! At the boys' request, the landlord installed new laundry equipment in a little cove by the kitchen. That appliance? A new LG combo (condenser dryer).

 

They are happy with it so far, but are adjusting to having to wash and dry a load before continuing on to the next.
 
wayupnorth, the payoff with a condenser dryer is that it's more efficient and that slow, steamy drying gives you lovely fluffy towels. I went from a vented dryer to a condenser and would never go back to vented...
 
Well, a condenser dryer is not more efficient, a vented dryer always uses less energy to dry a certain load than a condenser dryer would use for the same load. Somehow European manufacturers were able to get a B rating for efficiency for their condenser dryers and a C for most vented ones. Probably due to fooling around with the capacity and so making it look more efficient.
 
Normal condenser dryers are less efficent then vented ones kg by kg.

The reason vented dryers got a C rating a condensers got a B rating was that while a condenser actually heats up the room it is in, a vented dryer not only blows all the used energy in form of heat outside, it actually pulls in cooler air from outside, significantly increasing heating costs if a vented dryer is located in a heated room.

But that gap is pretty close by now anyway...
 
That's why I used a vented (AEG) dryer in the summer and a condenser one (Miele) in the winter season in my previous apartment. Due to less space I needed to downsize and decided it was best to get a heat pump dryer. But here I am line drying more things than in the old apartment because I have a good sized covered balcony, so even more saving on the drying front.
 


adjusting to having to wash and dry a load before continuing on to the next.



 



<strong>This may or may not be a problem depending on the person...
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<strong><strong><strong>Historically, I've tended to spread laundry out through the week. Why should the fun of laundry be restricted to one day? I can easily get by doing a maximum of one load a day. So having a machine tied up from start of wash to the conclusion of drying wouldn't be a huge problem.</strong></strong></strong>



 



<strong><strong><strong><strong><strong>But, of course, a person who does multiple loads a day would find it a pain (at best) or impossible (at worst) to adjust to having one machine tied up for the entire process.
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