packardmanken
Well-known member
I was researching a particular wringer and stumbled on this article. The writer for "Families.com" a frugal living website, claims that a standard washer uses 40 gallons of water to fill the tub? She is touting the economic virtues of a wringer (of which I agree), but I dont agree with here numbers. My Kenmore wringer will only hold approx 18 gallons and its BIG. What do you think?
This is an excerpt from the article, and the link to the complete article is attached.
"Wringer washers can save money on water, heating and electricity costs. A typical washing machine uses 40 gallons of water to fill the tub for one load. It also uses another 40 gallons to rinse the water. In comparison, a wringer washer can use that save 40 gallons of water to wash three loads. rinsing is the same. So three loads of wash would use a total of 80 gallons of water, as compared to 240 gallons of water for three washes in a typical washing machine."
Do these numbers add up to you?
This is an excerpt from the article, and the link to the complete article is attached.
"Wringer washers can save money on water, heating and electricity costs. A typical washing machine uses 40 gallons of water to fill the tub for one load. It also uses another 40 gallons to rinse the water. In comparison, a wringer washer can use that save 40 gallons of water to wash three loads. rinsing is the same. So three loads of wash would use a total of 80 gallons of water, as compared to 240 gallons of water for three washes in a typical washing machine."
Do these numbers add up to you?