Which Magazine January 1979

Automatic Washer - The world's coolest Washing Machines, Dryers and Dishwashers

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robm

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Hi all

I thought I would share with you all this little gem I came across. It gives a quick guide to the washers of 1979, with spin speeds etc..

The one I'm very interested in is the 800 spin Hirundo/Indesit. Never knew they did a faster spin. Does anyone know if it span drained?

Rob

robm++2-10-2010-13-17-44.jpg
 
Great machines there.

Which magazine is *hit now and *hit in 1979.

How can you judge on the quality of a brand new machine?
 
Which ? Verdict ???

I do wonder how the Which magazine get to their verdicts on machines !
I subscribe to Which every month their reports are incredible,
They always rate Hoover as "below" average for reliability but Candy as average and same for Hotpoint/indesit ???????????????????????????????????????
 
thanks !

Candy - Actually that serie from Candy was the worst POS they have ever made. I had the C134 (the washer-without-baffles)

BeeKay - I see Bauknecht had a more tongue friendly badge in UK . If I'm not wrong a canadian AW member (Eddie ?) has one of these models without the dropdown door (dial with yellow-orange-red stripes)
We were about to buy that very model in the pic. Wisely my father was more impressed by the miele.
Louis were these models already flimsy as current ones ?

[OT] Paul, is all ok now with the miele ?
 
that Eastham Burco

was made by the old SILTAL company in Abbiategrasso (Milan).
Guessed they sold only in our internal market only, cause they were smurfs if compared with Zanussi, Candy, Indesit and Merloni
 
Those Bauknecht models were better built than the newer ones, that's for sure, but I don't think they were as some of the other German brands. Indeed interesting that they became the name Beekay in the UK.

I love the Bosch washer/dryer, I was always fascinated by it. One dial was the cycle selector IIRC there were 20 programmes. The timer was behind a small window I think. The other dial is for the drying programmes. Probably only time controlled.

The Bendix was sold in the Netherlands mostly by the department store V&D (fully: Vroom & Dreesmann, by friends of mine always referred to as Vulgar and Disgusting LOL). Those were reliable AND affordable machines. I still remember how the timer felt. If you turned it you felt a heavy resistance.

Creda started selling washers in the Netherlands in the eighties I suppose. It was then when I saw a Creda washing machine for the first time while the smaller Creda dryers were on the market here long before that.

I had never heard of the Hirundo brand, but it shouts indeed Indesit.

I really love that Miele toploader washer/dryer. I have always had a weak spot for H-axis toploaders. The built in dryer makes it even better I guess. There were more German brands that had a topload washer/dryer combo sooner or later. I remember specific models from AEG and Siemens. The Miele toploader was a rare specimen, I think that it was only made for a short while.

The Philips 707 is a beauty! I love those older Philips models with the timer on the left. There was indeed no separate spin on those models because the spin started with a drum full of water. When you stopped the machine in the middle of a spin and wanted to restart it would refuse that, it would only pump. If you wanted a spin you had to set the timer on the last rinse and do a full rinse before it would do a spin again.

BTW, I love the label "worth thinking about"!
 

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