Honeycomb care and cat hair

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OK, maybe I wasn't clear enough.

I did say I'd fixed the vac with a 10c resistor, I didn't explicitly say it was fixed <span style="text-decoration: underline;">before</span> I vacuumed the sheet - but I had.

No, I haven't changed my story, so I'll make this clear.

I live out in the sticks. I drive 1.5 to 2 hours to town to do grocery shopping.

There are two stores in a town near me that have skips (dumpsters) behind the store, I have asked them both for permission to retrieve things from the skips (dumpsters) and they have agreed. This is an unusual arrangement here, usually trade ins and returns are kept secure from the public, probably due to liability concerns. They cut the power cords off many, but not always. I can fit new cords. The Bissel vac had its cord unharmed.

 

They sometimes have new or almost new small appliances in them, I can only assume they are warranty returns. One (a toaster) even had its price sticker still on it, so it must have been an ex-display toaster, sold unboxed. (as another aside, this toaster's fault, as I could see it, was that it tripped the earth leakage breaker. (RCD.) The actual fault was a raisin stuck inside, shorting the element to the metal frame inside. Remove raisin - toaster fixed.)

Because these stores are both in the one town, and the town is a long way from the city and thus from the manufacturer's warehouses, it appears that the manufacturers don't want the items returned for inspection, it isn't worthwhile them paying freight to transport a broken small appliance a long distance just in case it might be repairable or not faulty. This means inevitably that some small appliances like vacs, toasters, coffee machines are going to be discarded in the skip when there is only a trivial fault, or occasionally because the buyer is an idiot and the item isn't faulty at all. The store staff don't want to get into an argument with customers, they hand over a new gadget, bin the returned one, the manufacturer or importer replaces the gadget and the customer goes away satisfied. It builds goodwill in a small community.

 

Big stuff like washing machines will be inspected/repaired under warranty, but I have also salvaged some good recent model washers, such as a 3 or 4 year old Bosch FL which only had a pump full of pet hair stopping it. I fixed it, cleaned it and gave it to a friend who runs a wildlife rescue shelter - it now washes blankets for orphan kangaroos and wallabies. Its new owner knows how to clean the pump filter...

 

Maybe I should get myself another Bosch, it seemed to get pet hair off the washing and into the pump...
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Any way, maybe we can let this thread die now.

I will eventually resurrect the Frigidaire and use it for overflow rinsing. I might also try another front loader with bigger drum perforations - I have a few. All rescued from the dreaded crusher.
 
Best automatic washers for removing pet here

Far and away the best machines ever were the old combination washer dryers with a huge number of large holes they had in their cylinders. Other machines that we’re good we’re older front loader Westinghouse is with large holes in the baskets again.

My 15 year old Speed Queen frontload machine does a good job, but the two year old Speed Queen has fewer and smaller holes it’s not as good.

Top load belt drive whirl pools were also very good at removing lint and hair. From clothing.

The Miele machines with the honeycomb drums are ridiculous they don’t even get dirt out of the clothing like sand etc.

The overflow rinsing in solid tubs is not particularly effective either,hair is heavier than water so it does not float out some of it is washed over but it’s not that effective.

John L
 
Having the luxury of a Whirlpool Dreamspace and SQ dryer

Down in the shed I use these for all pet bedding and anything covered with hair.

After a wash and dry is done the hair is in the filter and maybe a few in the crease of the door seal but nothing to write home about, I just stopped putting anything hairy in the Miele.

As the ad says... "Simples"
 
Unsure of name

But there are bags you can get that you can put hair covered items in before you wash it the hair is meant to stay in the bag you simply shake outside afterwards, I guess they would be better than a ruined clothes washer.

Austin
 
Have a Hotpoint twin tub

Which has a filter on the top of the agitator with a recirculating pump and that is absolutely brilliant at removing any hair, am always amazed at how much is collected at the end of the wash.

Austin
 
Pet hair does float!

The solid tub GE Filter-Flo washers also are great at removing pet hair as it is recirculating over the top of the tub for the full wash and rinse cycle. When I've had items with heavy pet hair this machine got 99% in one washing.

The early machines AW6 machines with the self-cleaning filter rings also work the same way and get the majority of it out especially with the hair going down through the center of the agitator into the outer tub and back up to the filter screens.
 
3 cats and 1 dog inside...

2 of the cats have long hair and one has short hair, but they all shed a lot! I have a Maytag mvwp575gw (it's a vmw washer, but it has a dual action agitator) and an LG dryer (went with an LG front load washer). I use hot water, a good detergent, and usually Lysol laundry sanitizer (but sometimes bleach).

I wash the dog and cat bedding by balancing it with something like a towel using the Powerwash setting with a presoak (no extra rinse). I haven't had any issues with pet hair collecting in the washer. The pet beds are too large to spin dry. So for these loads, I usually run the dryer for the full time on the same setting I'd use for towels. This dryer also has an anti-bacterial option. I just clean out the lint filter after each load.

When I had the LG front load, I would use the sani-wash setting or something like that. Worked awesome for removing the toughest odor. I don't remember hair collecting inside it or the pump either.

I'm not sure I'd want to put those pet beds in the dryer first. The dog one definitely gets an unpleasant dog odor that I wouldn't want to get on my freshly washed clothes.

For what it's worth, this Maytag washer will be four years old this summer with no issues.
 
Pet hair floats?

Take a handful of pet hair take some lint while you’re at it put it in a quart jar shake it up and check it the next day 90% of it will be sitting in the bottom of the jar it is heavier than water.

Yes it does not sink quickly, and during agitation it stays pretty well in the water but it doesn’t naturally just go to the top and over and out.

John L
 
Just for removing the lint

Perhaps getting an older, used dryer, that maybe the heater doesn't work on any longer, and use it strictly for it's tumbling and filtering benefits BEFORE washing the item normally in your washer.
Then you can use your current dryer to finish.
 
Well I can tell you all this much...

I took this picture about 2002 when I washed our black lab Gladys' blanket that was full of her dog hair. It was washed in my first 1958 solid-tub GE Filter-Flo washer. I clearly remember not finding one hair left in that blanket lol! I didn't have an original copper pan at that time so I made one out of a 70's pan to fit that agitator.

unimatic1140-2022012021012007661_1.jpg
 
Oh Chris I had another idea I just thought of to share with you. You could take your Pulsamatic and overfill it by about 2 gallons, the take the drain hose and put one of those drain hose filter screens on it and angle it over the tub and start it pulsating. This will cause a recirculation filtering system very similar to the GE picture I posted in the reply above this one.

You may not even need a filtering screen on the drain hose if there is a layer of suds in the outer tub. Suds also work well to capture hair and lint in the outer tub. I remember that worked quite well when I had designed that "Super Unimatic" which I incorporated a recirculation system into it.

I have little doubt all of that pet hair will float over and be caught in the screen!

7-22-2007-23-07-19--Unimatic1140.jpg
 
recirculating filter

Yes Robert I had the same idea. Get the Pulsamatic overflow-rinsing, with the drain hose going back into the tub via a filter screen or bag. I'm busy at present, it will be a while but that's what I will do.
 
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