Thursday night Maytag Porta-washing!

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Oh boy, Greg ... a set!! Do you have photos of it yet? I bet those Porta-Dryers worked well because of the amount of water removed from the high rpm spin of the Porta-Washer.

I used my little washer again this morning and had fun! I had to do errands at Target today and picked up a box of TideHE to use specifically in that machine.

Launderess ... I still think that "binding" oneself can't be good; would you agree? LOL :-)
 
Way cool, Geoff. I'd get one of those for a backup machine; plain white, green, or yellow for me.

The purpose of the spin-mat (rubber cover) is to prevent socks etc. escaping at high speed from the spin tub into the outer tub and/or mechanism, which could cause damage to the machine as well as to whatever tried to escape.

You don't want to "press down" too hard on the load in the spinner, because that would interfere with the free passage of the water out of the load.

Petek, I have one of the Danby units, it cleans great, it's fast, quiet, and very cleverly designed. Lighter construction than the classic Hoovermatic and Geoff's Maytag twinnie, and won't handle water over 140 F. Standard North American style agitator; interesting duty cycle (Gentle: one sec clockwise, one sec pause, one sec counterclockwise, one sec pause, repeat for however-many minutes you set on the timer. Normal: same but 1-1/2 seconds counterclockwise, and yes that does make a difference!). The gentle cycle is good for everything, but I use the normal cycle for larger loads of underwear. Uses half the water & electricity per pound of laundry as the large Hotpoint TL that came with this place, though I still use the Hotpoint for big stuff that won't fit in the Danby. Cost me $250 (US) or so plus shipping. I'd say it's well worth it.

BTW, I've been experimenting with an ad-hoc "spin/rinse" procedure and discovered that it doesn't make a huge difference compared to the standard "overflow rinse" procedure. The latter is: wash, spin, refill washtub with clean water, put load back in washtub, turn on agitator and let water flow through at about 1-2 gallons/minute for 6-9 minutes. Doing a few spin/rinses before the overflow rinse doesn't appear to reduce the amount of water or time needed for the latter. This is interesting & counter-intuitive, but in any case the Danby machine isn't designed for spin/rinse, and the overflow rinse works great -no detectable detergent left in the clothes, no scent, they just smell like clean water after the final spin.

On the Maytag the impellers rotate in the same direction, i.e. both clockwise, then both counterclockwise. Imagine if they rotated in opposite directions; when the left one was going counterclockwise and the right one clockwise, the water would tend to shoot up in the middle between them!:-)

It would be very interesting to see a machine of this type with two impellers but have 'em on opposite sides of the washtub, i.e. front side and back side. This I think would also produce a no-tangle action since the water would all be moving at the same speed across the horizontal axis. Though it would reduce capacity slightly, which is probably why it hasn't been done yet.
 
"My peepers ain't all that good, but it don't look like there's
much scuffed upidness to me! I thought things look quite tidy and sensible"

That's what I thought, too. Also, weren't wringers at their most versatile when one had twin tubs? And if what if you get a Suds Saver automatic down the line?
 
I've wondered about the Danby Twin-Tub and its effectiveness. Thanks for the info!! It seems like it uses a lot of water; or maybe its just me.

Wringer washers were definitely most effective with double rinse tubs. The way I do things, I could get by with one. I sometimes like using the automatic for the final deep rinse. I enjoy using and watching the action of the wringer washer, so its not too bad for me. I don't have a lot of laundry every week; just a few loads. A lot of my dress clothing goes to the cleaners every couple of weeks along with any white shirts I use. So, my weekend laundry is basically towels, sheets, underclothing, and casual/jeans. My mom is with me now and does her laundry and mine a couple of times a week, so when I wash on the weekend, it's mainly for fun!! :-)

Having just a single tub would work for me, even if I find my "dream" suds-saver (Maytag, of course!). I would need just an additional stand-pipe and could use the single tub for the suds return. When I was growing up, our basement did not have rinse tubs; my mom used a galvanized, sealed garbage can (new, of course) for her suds return water!! It was really easy to handle, believe it or not. I don't know where my dad found one that was "sealed" with no seam like that one; had to have been the hardware store but I've never found another one.
 
Geoff, the Danby unit uses about half the amount of water per pound of laundry compared to a conventional top loader. The procedure I use is: wash, drain washtub, spin, refill washtub with clean water, rinse in washtub in overflow-rinse mode, then save that rinse water, final spin, done. (Total time: about 30 minutes.) Next load gets washed in the rinse water from the previous load, which is perfectly clean water (plus or minus a tiny bit of tint from the dyes in the fabrics in the previous load). (I also add a couple of tablespoons of bleach to the saved rinsewater to keep it sanitary, so it can sit for a couple of days before the next washday.)

You can get even more efficient by using the procedure that's popular in Australia and the UK: wash two or more loads in the same wash water. This isn't "icky," since basically the concentrations of water, detergent, and removed dirt are the same as you get in a front loader with the same amount of laundry in a smaller amount of water.

Modern FLs are still the most efficient machines around, but the Danby TT-420 is pretty close, at a fraction of the cost and with the benefits of being more compact and portable. Ideal case is I'd have both, and use each for what it was best at.
 
garbage cans

"I don't know where my dad found one that was "sealed" with no seam like that one; had to have been the hardware store but I've never found another one."

In my experience, even the garbage cans with a seam are watertight, and certainly the plastic cans are.
 
my friend washes whites, followed by sheets, colors, towels and then the dirtiest stuff last. She can often put about 7 loads through one tub of water (but she doesn't rinse (eew))
 
Doesn't rinse?! Eeyow!, I can feel the detergent-itch all over me just thinking about it! Or does she have some miracle detergent that's non-itchy?:-)

I've occasionally broken my own water-conservation rules to do a longer rinse or two rinses if needed to get all the detergent out.

Even a difference of +5 ml. of detergent can make the difference between needing more rinse time or not. Any detergent beyond that needed for effective cleaning seems to increase rinse requirements: For a normally-dirty load, 20 ml. is fine, 25 is too much. for a Really Dirty Load, as in, after working in the garage, 25 ml. is fine but 30 is too much. I think what happens is, detergent molecules that don't have any dirt to grab just end up hanging out in the fabric waiting for something to do.
 

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