Dishwashers losing popularity in US Homes???

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I can completely relate to this article. As many members here are aware I’ve not used my DW since April 2018 when just before the 1 year warranty was up and it conked out.

I had to wait almost 3 weeks for the warranty repair to be completed. During that time I realized how liberating it was to just do the dishes by hand and have the task over with in 10 minutes, rather than have to wait for almost 2 hours for the DW cycle to be complete and then have to either haul my ass into the kitchen, interrupting whatever TV show I may have been watching, to put the dishes away, often having to wash one or two items by hand anyway that didn’t get completely clean. Or wait until the next morning, when the last thing I wanted to do was unload the DW.

I also found that I always had every pot, pan, bowl and utensil available for use at a moments notice and didn’t have to fish a crusty pan I needed outta the DW to wash it by hand anyway.

Plus I learned that the hands on task of washing the dishes was strangely calming, which in these last few years of strife and upheaval was a welcome benefit.

I now use the DW to store things I don’t often use or need very often.

It works for me.

Eddie
 
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Between long cycles and poor reliability with the newest models, people are getting fed up and not sinking money into them. The cost for a repairmen to show up at the door combined with parts and labor can exceed a cost of a new one. Liquid detergent with a bit of hot water is cheap and reliable. I really don't blame them.
 
Between long cycles and poor reliability with the newest models, people are getting fed up and not sinking money into them. The cost for a repairmen to show up at the door combined with parts and labor can exceed a cost of a new one. Liquid detergent with a bit of hot water is cheap and reliable. I really don't blame them.
All I can say is, keep your old Whirlpool power clean dishwasher on running or keep your old one period!
 
I've noticed that the neighbor without a dishwasher has Pyrex that is over 60 years old, and still looks new - no fading of the color finish. The same with her Regal cookware. Another neighbor (now deceased) who also did hand dishwashing had new looking 50 year old Pyrex and Ekco Flint cookware. We had a machine starting in 1958, and our colored Pyrex and Revere Ware looked dull.
 
GEE!!!! I hope not! Why the heck would I wash dishes by hand? I hate doing it.
I couldn’t agree more. There’s very few things that I like less than the feeling that my hands have after about 15 minutes worth of exposure to dish water. The only things I’ll hand wash are things that either don’t come clean in the DW (I.E. pans with stuck on egg), or things that aren’t DW safe.

Between long cycles and poor reliability with the newest models, people are getting fed up and not sinking money into them. The cost for a repairmen to show up at the door combined with parts and labor can exceed a cost of a new one. Liquid detergent with a bit of hot water is cheap and reliable. I really don't blame them.

Truth. I used to work at an appliance repair company, and we condemned so many dishwashers that it was not even funny. Most of them were only about 5-8 years old too. In fact, I recently scrapped a 2017 G.E. Dishwasher that was given to me with a bad UI. Today’s DWs really do seem to have about the same longevity as a crappy pen. That’s one of the main reasons my collection now includes a 1985 KitchenAid.

Thatwasherguy.
 
I am to this day just blown away how the US supposedly still has DWs using more than 4gal and takeing 4h if my DW connected to hot water uses just shy of 3gal in 2 1/4h - and that's not even the Eco cycle. Maybe add like 20min for the lower heating power - but that's still not 3h.

I am further amazed how many people apparently don't look at the DW and see most have a 1h cycle if cycle time is still important that's probably still cheaper to do run than hand washing.



If it's meditative for you, sure, that's certainly a point.
I "waste time" sitting in front of my washing machine in my free time, just because it relaxes me.

But a bad dishwasher is a bad dishwasher because it is a bad dishwasher, not because dishwashers in general are bad.
 
To each his own, but I cook a lot and rely on my dishwasher. I feel the dishwasher does a far superior job than I can do by hand and frankly I did way too many dishes by hand growing up, so I will never hand wash again.
 
I am further amazed how many people apparently don't look at the DW and see most have a 1h cycle if cycle time is still important that's probably still cheaper to do run than hand washing.


In the US 1 hour cycles skimp on heat and doing so give terrible results. Clean dishes and fresh interiors come from 4 hour cycles. However even the 4 hour cycles can not handle the amount of soil that a Whirlpool Power Clean Filter Module could, forcing some level of pre-rinsing.

People thought they would be happier with a quieter dishwasher at the expense of taking longer and as it turns out people would rather put up with 45 minutes of noise than design their day around a 4 hour cycle.

Some people want to put the dishes away after lunch or dinner, others want to load up their dirty pan after being outside and have it ready in an hour for the next meal. Some people actually find it more convenient to run smaller loads with a full standard tub than wait for their tall tub to fill up with everything in the kitchen including utensils and bowls which they might need more than once in a full wash period.

I myself much to frequently run partial loads because when ever a meal fills my tall tub full half the dirty dishes and bowls end up being left on the counter because there is no room for them inside the machine. I rarely had this problem with my standard tub. 3 meals were just enough to fill the machine 1/3 full each time. So at the end of dinner typically everything fit inside, cycle ran, and it was ready in 1 hour.
 
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