Stopped into our local "French" hand laundry to pick up an order, and was greeted by a new message both on the counter and receipts. Apparently effective in the new year, this laundry will be adding a surcharge to every laundry order where "excess detergent residue" is a problem.
Simply had to find out what was behind this, so asked the owner what was the meaning of this. He replied that too many people use too much detergent/soap on their laundry, and fail to remove it all by proper rinsing. Since his laundry uses softened water all that detergent residue causes his washers (commercial Miele units)to over foam. When this happens the machines go into damage mode using a series of rinses and or aborting the cycle to get rid of the foam. Owner said with utility and labour costs going up he was no longer going absorb the extra water and labour costs in dealing with the problem.
Made the suggestion, instead of potentially turning away customers, why not just stop using softened water (ok, I'm an idiot, aren't I?), this got me a very cold look and informed that his laundering process has gained his laundry a devoted following, and that the surcharge would stay. If I was unhappy if and when the surcharge ever appeared on one of my orders, simply stop using too much detergent/rinse laundry better, or simply find another hand laundry.
Now I know excess foam is supposed to be bad for washing machines, but don't commercial washers have systems for dealing with the problem? In fairness will say this laundry does give excellent results, especially with whites and vintage linens, all without chlorine bleach, but really do think the man will tick off many more people than the charge is worth.
Thoughts?
L.
Simply had to find out what was behind this, so asked the owner what was the meaning of this. He replied that too many people use too much detergent/soap on their laundry, and fail to remove it all by proper rinsing. Since his laundry uses softened water all that detergent residue causes his washers (commercial Miele units)to over foam. When this happens the machines go into damage mode using a series of rinses and or aborting the cycle to get rid of the foam. Owner said with utility and labour costs going up he was no longer going absorb the extra water and labour costs in dealing with the problem.
Made the suggestion, instead of potentially turning away customers, why not just stop using softened water (ok, I'm an idiot, aren't I?), this got me a very cold look and informed that his laundering process has gained his laundry a devoted following, and that the surcharge would stay. If I was unhappy if and when the surcharge ever appeared on one of my orders, simply stop using too much detergent/rinse laundry better, or simply find another hand laundry.
Now I know excess foam is supposed to be bad for washing machines, but don't commercial washers have systems for dealing with the problem? In fairness will say this laundry does give excellent results, especially with whites and vintage linens, all without chlorine bleach, but really do think the man will tick off many more people than the charge is worth.
Thoughts?
L.