Early D&M Built Frigidaire Portable DW
Barry Thanks for taking the time and effort to show everyone here at AW this DW, it is always neat to see how an early machine operated. Your test results really show the need for a DW to have a detergent dispenser and at least a dual wash, your tests also shows how poorly most impeller DWs washed dishes. If I were going to use this machine to actually wash dirty dishes I would stop it after the first or final rinse add more detergent and start it over again. Of the impeller DWs that I have had direct experience with only the GEs with the SS bow-tie impeller and the WH top loading DWs with the flush through detergent dispenser did a half decent job.
The best and only impeller DWs to have a separate roto-rack for the top rack were undoubtedly the best overall performers, all made by D&M in the early 1960s.
It is easy to see why the impeller style DWs disappeared, it was a cheap and easy type of machine to build and it was fairly durable but they were no match for DWs that used a real pump and wash arm. It is also worth noting that every [ decent ] DW built today has a full wash arm under rack washing UP and no one uses a silly center wash tower that only washes the middle of the top rack, also gone are the DWs that attempted to wash dishes from the top down.
Barry Thanks for taking the time and effort to show everyone here at AW this DW, it is always neat to see how an early machine operated. Your test results really show the need for a DW to have a detergent dispenser and at least a dual wash, your tests also shows how poorly most impeller DWs washed dishes. If I were going to use this machine to actually wash dirty dishes I would stop it after the first or final rinse add more detergent and start it over again. Of the impeller DWs that I have had direct experience with only the GEs with the SS bow-tie impeller and the WH top loading DWs with the flush through detergent dispenser did a half decent job.
The best and only impeller DWs to have a separate roto-rack for the top rack were undoubtedly the best overall performers, all made by D&M in the early 1960s.
It is easy to see why the impeller style DWs disappeared, it was a cheap and easy type of machine to build and it was fairly durable but they were no match for DWs that used a real pump and wash arm. It is also worth noting that every [ decent ] DW built today has a full wash arm under rack washing UP and no one uses a silly center wash tower that only washes the middle of the top rack, also gone are the DWs that attempted to wash dishes from the top down.
