I have a Miele W3831 with the honeycomb care drum.
It is a great washer, cleans well, rinses well, fast spin, balances without fuss, quiet.
we also now have a gorgeous ragdoll cat, Simba, discussed on other threads. He has an amazingly soft long coat, like fine wool. We have only had him for a few months, but he is 10 years old. He has shed less hair than any of our other (all short hair) cats... until now. It is summer here and he is changing his coat. I brush him daily, I get long fine cat hairs on my pants, and he sleeps on the bed with us and we are getting the same hairs on the sheets. One sheet in particular is a poly-cotton (didn't notice that when i bought it, everything else is pure cotton) and that sheet in particular seems to hang on to the cat hair. My dark blue linen shorts seem to attract the hair too - fine beige hair that really stands out on the blue background.
The issue, my question, is about cat hair in the honeycomb drum. I reckon the holes are too fine, and the cat hair is retained in the drum between rinses, and stays on the clothes or sheets. Does anyone with a Honeycomb Care Miele washer have any experience with this, or any advice?
In the wash the hairs seem to mat up into fine balls, like pilling on a woollen jumper. These balls remain on the clothes through the wash, I end up picking them off while the washing is on the line. I don't have a clothes dryer, all washing is line dried. It is driving me mad... and it isn't a very long drive.
Are there any techniques to improve this?
I do own a dryer that was given to me, needs repair, so maybe I could give a brief ride in the dryer after line drying? (would have to fix dryer first.)
Rinse in another machine? ( have an Asko front loader spare, that might help? I also have the vintage 1950s non-automatic Frigidaire Pulsamatic that is currently in storage and will need cosmetic repair before being used again. (I have built a new shed and will be setting up a working washing machines section soon.)
I have contemplated drilling all the holes in the Miele honeycomb care drum to a larger diameter - would use a short drill bit so I don't drill the outer drum
. Do you think this would allow cat hairs to pass through easier? Seems a bit extreme, though.
Any other suggestions? (Cat isn't going anywhere - not negotiable.)
It is a great washer, cleans well, rinses well, fast spin, balances without fuss, quiet.
we also now have a gorgeous ragdoll cat, Simba, discussed on other threads. He has an amazingly soft long coat, like fine wool. We have only had him for a few months, but he is 10 years old. He has shed less hair than any of our other (all short hair) cats... until now. It is summer here and he is changing his coat. I brush him daily, I get long fine cat hairs on my pants, and he sleeps on the bed with us and we are getting the same hairs on the sheets. One sheet in particular is a poly-cotton (didn't notice that when i bought it, everything else is pure cotton) and that sheet in particular seems to hang on to the cat hair. My dark blue linen shorts seem to attract the hair too - fine beige hair that really stands out on the blue background.
The issue, my question, is about cat hair in the honeycomb drum. I reckon the holes are too fine, and the cat hair is retained in the drum between rinses, and stays on the clothes or sheets. Does anyone with a Honeycomb Care Miele washer have any experience with this, or any advice?
In the wash the hairs seem to mat up into fine balls, like pilling on a woollen jumper. These balls remain on the clothes through the wash, I end up picking them off while the washing is on the line. I don't have a clothes dryer, all washing is line dried. It is driving me mad... and it isn't a very long drive.
Are there any techniques to improve this?
I do own a dryer that was given to me, needs repair, so maybe I could give a brief ride in the dryer after line drying? (would have to fix dryer first.)
Rinse in another machine? ( have an Asko front loader spare, that might help? I also have the vintage 1950s non-automatic Frigidaire Pulsamatic that is currently in storage and will need cosmetic repair before being used again. (I have built a new shed and will be setting up a working washing machines section soon.)
I have contemplated drilling all the holes in the Miele honeycomb care drum to a larger diameter - would use a short drill bit so I don't drill the outer drum

Any other suggestions? (Cat isn't going anywhere - not negotiable.)