pturo
New member
Washer Dryer Combos
In the US, it has two meanings: 1.) a seprate washer and a spearate dryer unit stacked but united in one cabinet with two controls and two drums, used in condos and apartments where space in limited. The washers work ok, small capacity and the dryers if the are only 110 volt, take a long time to dry clothes in their seperate drum. 2.) single washer and dryer drum, not common in the US, but some were offered in the 50's to the 70's, but now making an emergence due to foriegn brands coming in, energy costs and second homes. General complaint is that drums are small, and can only dry half the capacity of what is washed. Also, most are only 110 volts, and dry really slowly as opposed to a seperate 220v or gas dryer. None of the big US manufactures who do front load offer them, they are mainly imports here. Pretty much, to dry a load, you need almost 50% more the drum that you washed them in to avoid creases, wrinkles,energy time to dry, and hot and wet spots, so the clothes can move around. I have a front load Haier washer that I just stuff full of clothes, and a huge vintage Kenmore dryer that gets them dry in less than 30 minutes. I cant imagine what the clothes would look like if spun in that tiny Chinese drum to dry.
In the US, it has two meanings: 1.) a seprate washer and a spearate dryer unit stacked but united in one cabinet with two controls and two drums, used in condos and apartments where space in limited. The washers work ok, small capacity and the dryers if the are only 110 volt, take a long time to dry clothes in their seperate drum. 2.) single washer and dryer drum, not common in the US, but some were offered in the 50's to the 70's, but now making an emergence due to foriegn brands coming in, energy costs and second homes. General complaint is that drums are small, and can only dry half the capacity of what is washed. Also, most are only 110 volts, and dry really slowly as opposed to a seperate 220v or gas dryer. None of the big US manufactures who do front load offer them, they are mainly imports here. Pretty much, to dry a load, you need almost 50% more the drum that you washed them in to avoid creases, wrinkles,energy time to dry, and hot and wet spots, so the clothes can move around. I have a front load Haier washer that I just stuff full of clothes, and a huge vintage Kenmore dryer that gets them dry in less than 30 minutes. I cant imagine what the clothes would look like if spun in that tiny Chinese drum to dry.