passatdoc
Well-known member
As most of you know if you read this board, front loaders now constitute a majority of washers currently sold in the USA, but if you count washers <span style="text-decoration: underline;">still in use</span> around the country, top loaders still are a majority. Since TL use 2-3 times as much water as a FL, we have a dual population of laundry detergent here:
conventional: higher sudsing, intended for use in a large volume of water
HE (High Efficiency): low sudsing, intended for use in a small volume of water, supposedly able to keep dirt/oil in suspension and allow it to rinse out of the clothes.
Whether US HE products work as well as European products (e.g. Persil or Ariel) is open to debate---I think that US products such as Tide HE or Gain HE work fairly well, but not as well as Euro products. Not surprising, given that front loaders have been in widespread use in Europe for far longer. Launderess and others have posted here in the past with questions as to how reformulated the US HE products really are. Are they totally reformulated, or did they just add an anti-sudsing agent?
I see the difference enough to make it a point to bring back detergent from European trips (last trip to UK in May resulted in a haul of four boxes of Ariel bio w/Actilift, Sainsburys didn't have Persil bio on the shelves so I went with Persil). When shopping in the US, products approved by appliance makers for low water use machines are identified by a blue oval "HE" icon, though I question whether it's copyrighted, as I've seen detergent in Costco bearing the icon and the box says "for both front and top loading machines". (um, don't think so).
So my question is-----at one time, people in the UK used a lot of twin tub machines which were essentially top loaders with respect to water use (tub filled with water and clothes propelled by center agitator or a side wall agitator e.g. Hoover). Was there different detergent formulations in, say, the 1960s and 70s when both twin tubs and FLs were common in the UK? Or did they make do with the same formula and just vary the amount used?
Reason I ask: my cabin bag was selected for additional screening at Heathrow Terminal 3 security, due to all the electronic toys (chargers for netbook; camera and chargers; two phones and chargers, etc.) They basically unpack the bag and look through everything. I had one box of Ariel in a gallon-size ZipLock bag and he asked why someone was bringing detergent to USA. I explained that the quality of US detergent for FL lags behind European standards, in part because a majority of the washers here are still TL. He seemed amazed that two versions of each brand--HE and regular-- are sold in the US). Of course, I'd guess that twin tub machines today in the UK are mostly in the hands of aficionados and that the average Brit uses a modern FL, so the market today in the UK for a TL formula would be rather sparse.
conventional: higher sudsing, intended for use in a large volume of water
HE (High Efficiency): low sudsing, intended for use in a small volume of water, supposedly able to keep dirt/oil in suspension and allow it to rinse out of the clothes.
Whether US HE products work as well as European products (e.g. Persil or Ariel) is open to debate---I think that US products such as Tide HE or Gain HE work fairly well, but not as well as Euro products. Not surprising, given that front loaders have been in widespread use in Europe for far longer. Launderess and others have posted here in the past with questions as to how reformulated the US HE products really are. Are they totally reformulated, or did they just add an anti-sudsing agent?
I see the difference enough to make it a point to bring back detergent from European trips (last trip to UK in May resulted in a haul of four boxes of Ariel bio w/Actilift, Sainsburys didn't have Persil bio on the shelves so I went with Persil). When shopping in the US, products approved by appliance makers for low water use machines are identified by a blue oval "HE" icon, though I question whether it's copyrighted, as I've seen detergent in Costco bearing the icon and the box says "for both front and top loading machines". (um, don't think so).
So my question is-----at one time, people in the UK used a lot of twin tub machines which were essentially top loaders with respect to water use (tub filled with water and clothes propelled by center agitator or a side wall agitator e.g. Hoover). Was there different detergent formulations in, say, the 1960s and 70s when both twin tubs and FLs were common in the UK? Or did they make do with the same formula and just vary the amount used?
Reason I ask: my cabin bag was selected for additional screening at Heathrow Terminal 3 security, due to all the electronic toys (chargers for netbook; camera and chargers; two phones and chargers, etc.) They basically unpack the bag and look through everything. I had one box of Ariel in a gallon-size ZipLock bag and he asked why someone was bringing detergent to USA. I explained that the quality of US detergent for FL lags behind European standards, in part because a majority of the washers here are still TL. He seemed amazed that two versions of each brand--HE and regular-- are sold in the US). Of course, I'd guess that twin tub machines today in the UK are mostly in the hands of aficionados and that the average Brit uses a modern FL, so the market today in the UK for a TL formula would be rather sparse.