ronhic
Well-known member
You may think it more appropriate....
....but then this is half the problem - most people NEVER load a machine to capacity....
...and this is where so much of the disconnect between the way Europeans and users of European-style front load machines here and in other parts of the world have never been able to 'get their head around it' compared to the USA and your industrial sized front load machines.
By removing weight as a capacity measure and giving capacity in cu ft, the USA has effectively made their machines incapable of being compared with those made elsewhere. This is evidenced by the conversion chart above and the actual loads used to test these machines and both mine and DJ-Gabriel's comments about machine loading...it also echo's a comment made by an American in a laundrette in London in 1997 when confronted by a front-load machine....
- This lady walked into the laundrette at Russell Square with 2 huge garbage bags of washing to do....she proceeded to load a few items into a machine and went to close the door...
- I stopped her (it was not even up to the glass) and said she could put more in...
- 'Really?' was the response
- Yep, was mine....so she did. By now about 1/4 up the door and she went to shut it again...
- So again I said, 'keep going'
- Her reply ' Are you sure it'll wash?'
- My reply 'Millions of Europeans can't be wrong'
- She filled to about half way up the glass....and then SAT THERE INTENTLY WATCHING IT....
Now, she may have never used a front load machine before, but the 'half full' or 'lightly loaded' mentality seems to be very prevalent in the USA and the use of huge machines with effectively small (given their size) actual usable capacities seems to exaggerate it....
....but then this is half the problem - most people NEVER load a machine to capacity....
...and this is where so much of the disconnect between the way Europeans and users of European-style front load machines here and in other parts of the world have never been able to 'get their head around it' compared to the USA and your industrial sized front load machines.
By removing weight as a capacity measure and giving capacity in cu ft, the USA has effectively made their machines incapable of being compared with those made elsewhere. This is evidenced by the conversion chart above and the actual loads used to test these machines and both mine and DJ-Gabriel's comments about machine loading...it also echo's a comment made by an American in a laundrette in London in 1997 when confronted by a front-load machine....
- This lady walked into the laundrette at Russell Square with 2 huge garbage bags of washing to do....she proceeded to load a few items into a machine and went to close the door...
- I stopped her (it was not even up to the glass) and said she could put more in...
- 'Really?' was the response
- Yep, was mine....so she did. By now about 1/4 up the door and she went to shut it again...
- So again I said, 'keep going'
- Her reply ' Are you sure it'll wash?'
- My reply 'Millions of Europeans can't be wrong'
- She filled to about half way up the glass....and then SAT THERE INTENTLY WATCHING IT....
Now, she may have never used a front load machine before, but the 'half full' or 'lightly loaded' mentality seems to be very prevalent in the USA and the use of huge machines with effectively small (given their size) actual usable capacities seems to exaggerate it....