Seeing as this Thread Popped Up
Typically Heavy or Heavy Eco. 1 wash, three rinses. Main-Wash at 158ºF (70ºC) {So "NSF Sani"} or 150ºF (65ºC), with rinsing at either 150ºF or 140ºF (60ºC).
Have found these cycles, whilst excessive for only "day old" soils, guarantees washing and drying performance* AND keeps the filters much cleaner for much longer.
Previously, I was using the Delicates cycle, due to the added rinse (for a total of 3).
Having sat and watched the machine through the cycle**, I discovered that while the Normal-Wash is
supposed to have about a 40min washing phase (Per F&P service material for the DD60DCX6), it only lasts 26mins,
the same as the Delicates cycle. Given that the target temperatures are the same, I saw no use in "Normal" anymore.
I also noted that "Normal" needed careful pandering to ensure the final rinse target temp (140ºF) was reached, water too cold (i.e. tub temperature below about 104ºF/40ºC per onboard diagnostic) at start of final rinse would result in the heating "timing out," and not reaching the target temperature, by a significant margin.
The Heavy cycles are the same, although the higher washing temperatures mean the final rinse temperature is perfectly adequate, should there be no-one to run the tap hot for the rinses.
Footnotes:
* This is NOT an admission of "poor washing/drying" performance. Merely, I am using it to suggest that some questionable, heavily soiled items won't come clean without one of these cycles. Besides, there is LOTS of steam
These temperatures guarantee drying of plastics, in particular
** I think what Bob said above fits perfectly here. I too am guilty of sitting and listening to the action on a number of occasions!
Photo: Example of what usually gets put into the DD, from 2yrs ago, washed on Delicates. Sat for 4 days, Apple pie residue.
Photo 2: An extreme example (Christmas or New Years load from a while back. Don't have the "Before" examples)
