Basic Geometry; percentage full varies with the size of cont
The typical non USA machine is smaller in volume, thus for a given load of clothes the smaller machine is fuller.
The is basic geometry. If one places 4 folks in an old VW Bug, the car appears fuller than a 4 folks in a 1970 Cadillac.
The spin basket drum in a 1963,1976 or 1992 FL 27" frame Westinghouse is 22" in diameter. My new 27" frame LG WM2501HVA has the exact diameter spin basket, but it is 1.5 times deeper. ie 18" deep versus 12" deep.
A small 24" machine does NOT have a 22" diameter basket,it is several inches smaller in diameter.
The tub in a 24" machine is roughly the same size as a 27" machine's spin basket.
If one places the same clothes in a 24, 27 and 30" FL washer, each larger machine will appear less full, since it is really a less percentage filled.
If one places 12 oz of Coke Cola in a Tokyo McDonalds cup, it is a Large McDonalds Tokyo cup. In Dallas Texas it fills up a small size McDonalds cup, since a large cup there is often 24 to 32 oz.
When I was at a McDonalds in Munich about 20 years ago, the small cup was about just 6 or 8 oz, sort of like McDonalds used 40 years ago here in the USA.
If somebody in Europe places their weeks groceries in their European refrigerator, it too will be "more full" than if a typical Texas homeowners refrigerator was used, since the USA fridge is typically 1.5 to 3 times larger. Small dorm and small office fridges in the USA are often full sized items in other areas.
If the OZ/European/Japan/USA housewife each buys 2 cubic feet of goods for their fridge, each fills their own fridge a different percentage, since their fridges are all different sizes.
Many of us Americans just fill our washers, trucks, and fridges on what is required to do the job. ie these devices are filled less, because we tend to have bigger devices. Thus I purposely washed a weeks load of dark/colored items for 1 week, instead of waiting one month to "fill the machine up". If I would have custom ordered a smaller 24" machine last November it would do the job too, but the machine would be fuller, thus non USA folks would "feel better". In cars and trucks, my small car has just a 1.5 L motor. It gets better gas mileage than my bigger truck with 2.3L motor, but the insurance costs more. The small car has a high repair cost with a minor bump.
Try placing 6 folks with luggage in a 1971 VW Bug versus a 1971 Cadallac. The bug is fuller and has folks and luggage hanging out of the windows.
When one goes to a USA commercial coin laundromat, there are some giant machines that will take the equalvalent of many home USA washers of clothes. Normally folks use these for giant things like rugs.
Since most 27" USA machines are larger than non usa 24" FRAME machinces, for a given load of items the smaller machines are filled more in percentage. Many of us Americans are nor really bothered by others concerns of "not filling" or trucks,washers, fridges to please others. Buying extra food and clothes to fill our devices seems rather wastefull. Maybe the USA is more advanced in this issue of concerns about waste? Tripling my inventory to fill washers and fridges seems rather odd, so does many other non usa things too.
In clothes, here even if I bought 10 times the number of clothes I would still wash stuff weekly to prevent stains from setting. There are several other practical matters to, one remembers were one spilled stuff within a week, and lessor so after a month or two. We traveling all the time in California 2 decades ago, I had enough clothes to go 4 months, and wash loads could be always "FULL".
