Schulthess

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henene4

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Feb 6, 2013
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Well, I guess most of us remember V-Zug. That incredibly expensive, probably most TOL washer avaible in the EU, Swiss-made, with touchscreen and heatpump heating in their TOL washer (and DW by now)?

Well, another big swizz washer producer is Schulthess. Originating from the professional market, they have a home lineup as well.

And as I found out today, they redesigned their line-up.
Notice this funky drum, with paddles kind of like the Dyson cotrarotator, and them following up the 1 hour wash cycle trend.
Oh, and their 2nd from the top model being avaible as top-control model.

 
Schulthess

Have always like these machines after seeing a few in commercial installations. the new styling looks V-Zug like and looks easy to use with it touch interface!!
Of course it is the Ultimate in High Efficiency washing, but thats not a new fangled spec, its been used as a methodology since the first models where introduced.


chestermikeuk++11-3-2015-06-02-4.jpg.png
 
More paddles, increased mechanical action, so the machine can decrease on time / temperatur or chemicals (detergent/water mixture)? The maytag neptune had a simular design.

Btw a small side note, with the VW dieselgate, and the energylabelgate..., some of the brands let us to believe that heating 10 l of water with a 1200 watt heater was more efficient than heating that 10 l with a 3300 watt heater, it was only slower. Schultess adds more power ending up with quicker cycles! Me kinda like ^^
 
@askomiele

As far as I understand, the idea behind low wattage heaters is to reduce the actual temperature of the heating element it self and thus reduce energy wastage by energy being stored in the element and thus continuing to release energy even after voltage supply has stopped. And in todays machines, where they fight for 10 or maybe 20 watts saveing, this - as stupid as it sounds - is an easy, costefficient and working way.

On the other hand, any washer that is specificly designed for the Swiss market (V-Zug, Schulthess, Wyss-Mirella) I came across had several options in terms of heating power, all including 400V set up.
 
Miele also makes 400V machines for Switzerland. 400V, 10A, total power draw 4.4 kW. However, the cycle length and power consumption is identical to, for example, the German units.
 

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