Americans like suds!
Americans like suds!
Americans
A little of my super FL biased history here as an American front load user for 50 years:
****My family always had a front loader.****
My dad got the FL Westinghouse Laundromat in 1947. We *ALWAYS* used *ALL* in powder, because it was *THE* recommended soap; and it was the only soap that was LOW in sudsing for a front loader. Other soap { pre HE soap era }was useable; one just had to use a tiny amount, since it made so much suds with our super soft water.
IF one used another soap, one had to use *way* way less or one had soap suds all over the place.
It is like about all soaps from the 1940's to early 1990's were purposely made to make a mess of suds, except *ALL*.
Basically *ALL* was a HE soap for 4 + decades, before HE was coined.
If a relative visted our house and used our FL washer 20 years ago ,they would often use 5 to 10 times the amount of soap, and one would have a big mess in the laundry room. A GIANT mess.
The modern HE soaps are low sudsing, the HE label came out for education, to direct modern FL users to a low sudsing soap. The 1976 Westinghouse guide here for washers recommended ALL for their FL washers since it was low sudsing.
Folks who were raised with top loaders in America often still use gobs and gobs of soap even today with a TL or FL washer. A college roommate in the 1970's Disco era use to wash his white pants and white shirts and disco clothes with 2 to 3 cups of Tide at the laundromat, so his clothes all JUMPED out with the UV blacklights at the disco!
I was at Sams club last weekend and a family I know with 1 kid was buying FOUR giant pails of soap. Each is 32 Lbs {14.5 Kg } per pail. Thus I ponder why a family would need 128 Lbs { 58Kg } of soap. It was not even on sale either.
There are folks who use a cup or two of soap with each load in a TL washer, and they believe there HAS to be massive suds.