I've never thought much about this until acquiring an old Kitchenaid Hobart. I noticed that it has very short sequences after someone here mentioned it and I finally paid attention. I don't think the sequences make sense (to me anyways).
'Normal' does the following:
-drain for a minute or so
-fill
-heats the water for about 5-10 minutes
-Prewash for 1.5 minutes no detergent
-drain (bye bye heated water)
-fill
-Prewash for 1.5 minutes with detergent
-drain (bye bye detergent)
-fill
-rinse (I think)
-fill
-Wash for 1.5 minutes
-drain / fill
-Wash for 5-10 minutes with detergent (stopped paying as close attention at this point
-drain/Fill/Rinse
-drain/Fill/Rinse
-Non Heated dry
If I were to redesign this (as if I know more than KA engineers)... I would do the following:
-Drain
-Fill with enough water to pressurize the sprayer arms plus a residual on dishes plus a margin of error now plus a margin of error when the lines get caked from hard water (or better yet use a float valve as the fill level)
-Heat to a set temp of 155F (sensor)
-Run this water for 3 minutes without detergent
-Drain / Fill
-Heat to 155F
-Run this water for 3 minutes without detergent
-Dump detergent
-Continue pumping with this water for 20 minutes
-Reheat (probably too much for a 15 or 20A circuit to run pump and heat simultaneously)
-Pump this water for 20 minutes
-Drain / Fill / Rinse
-Drain / Fill
-Heat to 155F
-Rinse
-Drain
-Air Dry
This would be easy to program into a microcontroller. It wouldn't be as easy to wire it all up and fit into the space in the machine. Actual sensors would also add much more complexity than just timers. It would be an interesting project if time ever allows. I'm sure it's been done. The result would be a very nice dishwasher no doubt. Maybe even an energy efficient one.
'Normal' does the following:
-drain for a minute or so
-fill
-heats the water for about 5-10 minutes
-Prewash for 1.5 minutes no detergent
-drain (bye bye heated water)
-fill
-Prewash for 1.5 minutes with detergent
-drain (bye bye detergent)
-fill
-rinse (I think)
-fill
-Wash for 1.5 minutes
-drain / fill
-Wash for 5-10 minutes with detergent (stopped paying as close attention at this point
-drain/Fill/Rinse
-drain/Fill/Rinse
-Non Heated dry
If I were to redesign this (as if I know more than KA engineers)... I would do the following:
-Drain
-Fill with enough water to pressurize the sprayer arms plus a residual on dishes plus a margin of error now plus a margin of error when the lines get caked from hard water (or better yet use a float valve as the fill level)
-Heat to a set temp of 155F (sensor)
-Run this water for 3 minutes without detergent
-Drain / Fill
-Heat to 155F
-Run this water for 3 minutes without detergent
-Dump detergent
-Continue pumping with this water for 20 minutes
-Reheat (probably too much for a 15 or 20A circuit to run pump and heat simultaneously)
-Pump this water for 20 minutes
-Drain / Fill / Rinse
-Drain / Fill
-Heat to 155F
-Rinse
-Drain
-Air Dry
This would be easy to program into a microcontroller. It wouldn't be as easy to wire it all up and fit into the space in the machine. Actual sensors would also add much more complexity than just timers. It would be an interesting project if time ever allows. I'm sure it's been done. The result would be a very nice dishwasher no doubt. Maybe even an energy efficient one.