Playing with the hoses and the water
A large part of my becoming a washer man involved draining water and hoses. For the life of me, I can not understand how my fellow and beloved washer brothers hide all or most of their hoses in drainpipes behind the machine and out of view and out of use. I would go crazy. It is just as much that I'm against wasting a natural resource as it is wanting to play with the water and the hoses and pushing the machine into complex, creative maneuvers--although the older I get the more uncomfortable I am wasting water.
As a kid, I would let the 57 Uni drain into the large enamel tub, skipping the overflow so as not to dilute the washing liquors, then I would weave the hose under the faucet and cold water tap to the small tub of our double sink, pretending I had the L-shaped WP/KM drain hose of the suds-return models. For the next load, I'd hold the hose down in the big tub by sliding the lid over till it locked against the submerged hose, and create a siphon by starting then stopping the agitation. The suds would then return to the outer tub. Finally, I 'd hold the hose over the washer and pump the suds from outer to inner. Piece of cake. Geraldine did not approve, but she let me do it.
Today, I re-route the expelled water to another machine, or with the wringers, there's no end to the high jinx. Here is an example : The 56, washing three white bathrobes, had just entered the overflow, which I aborted, allowing the steaming wash water to drain into the 62. Distracted by another chore, when I returned to the garage the rinse was under way. As the spin was about to begin, I stuck the hose into the outer tub of the 62 in the gap between the tub and top. This was new, never having done this one before. All of this water is clear and clean, perfect for use with a dark load.
Later on when I load the 62 with a dark load of biking gear, I will drain the water from the outer tub back into the 56, and rinse the dark load there, after having washed it in the 62. For members unfamiliar: Once the agitation starts, the pump will expel any water in the outer tub. This might sound complicated, but once you start down this road, it becomes very natural, easy and creative.
I'm going to show the 56 that I bought from big Ted in a moment; it's got the gray agitator Jon & John were talking about in the 57 Charcoal thread. Have to switch servers.
One moment please ;-D .........
[this post was last edited: 1/8/2012-19:09]
