I wonder why they switched from a warm rinse, used in the programmed special cycle in machines starting in the late 50s to a cold rinse.
I remember reading in the owner's manual for our 58 Lady that woolens got a warm rinse so that the fibers would not experience a thermal shock and shrink like other delicate proteins do when subjected to cold water, or air, for that matter. The explanation of why the "G" Woolens cycle was in the Orange Normal Cycle was because Woolens held a lot of water and needed the normal spin to remove that water. We washed a lot of blankets in that machine; never sent them to the dry cleaners.
I remember reading in the owner's manual for our 58 Lady that woolens got a warm rinse so that the fibers would not experience a thermal shock and shrink like other delicate proteins do when subjected to cold water, or air, for that matter. The explanation of why the "G" Woolens cycle was in the Orange Normal Cycle was because Woolens held a lot of water and needed the normal spin to remove that water. We washed a lot of blankets in that machine; never sent them to the dry cleaners.