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Well, I got to see the Oasis tonight finally. Our Sears had a blue, white & black model. Huge, to say the least. It's like an added room in the house. Just install TV & recliner in it- youre all set! It holds 23 bath towels. (everything is measured in bath towels, not lbs anymore). The wash motion is a twisting pulsator. They made it taller than the average tl. Looks like alot of fun for $1150! Impressed with the 1000 rpm spin. Uses about 20 gal. as compared with the typical top loader. Now, the other agitator Oasis model also has a huge tub, but uses the 45 gal of water. No window in the lid, which looks strange, but... Anyway the salesman said the display models came in this past week & they'll be available for sale next week. Built by Whirlpool, wonder if they'll come out with their own as wellas a Maytag model eventually. Again, very impressive
Jerry
 
If disk is good, why make agitator?

"(the disk version) Uses about 20 gal. .....
the other agitator Oasis model also has a huge tub, but uses the 45 gal of water"

If the disk version is cleaning so well with 20 gal of water, why make the agitator version which uses more than twice the amount of water (45 gal).
 
"If the disk version is cleaning so well with 20 gal of water, why make the agitator version which uses more than twice the amount of water (45 gal)".


Because it's what multitudes in the USA know and want. Old habits die hard i guess.
 
Oasis Max-spin?

From OASIS' Ad:
"The Oasis HE washer spins at over 1,000 RPM which makes it the fastest spinning washer drum in the top-load class."

From a reader of a laundry forum:
"The washer has a spin speed of 1050 RPM"
 
Oasis in EnergyStar DOE?

The disk version of Oasis appears in EnergyStar list of DOE, but not their agitator version.
 
The Oasis with the "Flex Care Agitator" is a rebadged Fisher & Paykel top load washer. The agitator has the corkscrew top and rubber vanes at the bottom. The cabinet matches the washer; rounded corners reminiscent of 50's Kenmores. The impeller model also looks like a F&P without the agitator.
 
Agitator vs Impeller

What it is about the agitator model that it doesn't have a window? Is it just shameful to see an agitator? Perhaps too masculine or too phallic vs. the short, stubby impeller? Hmmm... Freudian psychology at work here.
 
That Oasis is AWESOME; would love to play with one! Why isn't the agitator machine on the Sears site yet? I'm very curious about that particular model.

And is the top spin speed 1050 or 1150 RPM? I highly doubt that it spins faster than a Unimatic...
 
The agitator version is also a very impressive looking machine. With a window it would look so much better, as the window version is so stylish. It's a BIG agitator! The sales guy said the regular Oasis spins at 1000 rpm. The price of the agitator model was $850. He said built by Whirpool, not F & P.
Jerry
 
oasis/cabrio

F&P makes the kitchen Aid dish drawers and is also making the guts to the Whirlpool/Kenmore Oasis/Cabrio machines.They may also begin making a few of the high end wall ovens and cooktops.The blue speckled porcelain interiors will give the ovens away.
 
Agitator w/ no window: Nothing quite so Freudian; probably a way of differentiating the product and attracting more attention to the disc model. And dealing with the user's curiosity about how this new contraption actually works.

Now if the disc model uses half the water of the agitator, clearly the entire cleaning principle has to be different: My guess is it would have to depend on the disc turning the load over by direct contact rather than by moving the water in a rollover motion; or it would move the water more than the clothes (either way the relative motion is what counts). But I'm still not sure I understand this one. Any chance of a video other than the slow-motion one on the opening page of the Sears site (which I also can't make sense of)?

And how does this differ from the standard Asian pulsator system? Or to put it differently, could one use a pulsator washer in a similar manner, with a lower water level for a given size load?

Quick speculation about agitators. Seems to me there is a change in the velocity of the water as it gets pulled down and moved outward by the lower fins. In that case, cloth would be stretched slightly as it turned from heading downward to heading outward, and this would help free up dirt that was lodged in the weave of the cloth. Is there anything to this or am I imaginging things?
 
"And how does this differ from the standard Asian pulsator system?"
IMO, a pulsator system will certainly damage laundry with a lower water.

That's why I am skeptical about Oasis disk machine and its rollover claims.

Perhaps a video could relief my skeptism.
 
So if that's true, I'm guessing the Oasis will sound and operate something like an F&P machine.

That's ok because I had my sights on F&P set anyway.

I bet the corkscrew agitator can roll the clothes like crazy with the F&P stroke.
 
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