michaelz08
Well-known member
This really has annoyed me more than it should. In some of Whirlpool's revised models, they are advertising a drastically shorter normal cycle that's only 1:30 long. When you factor in that includes a heated dry, that's a very short wash.
This is antithetical to everything I understand about how modern dishwashers and detergents work. The alternating of active zones increase wash time, and modern detergents need more time and heat... and American style exposed elements are comparatively slow to heat versus the flow-through heaters of others. So less main wash time would seemingly mean less of a chance of hitting an acceptable wash temp, meaning less heat to both break down food and less activation of the detergent's enzymes.
The only other clues: A) Water usage is up from 2 to 3 gallons, and B) The other variants of this model (Maytag, KitchenAid) have longer normal cycles with lower standard water usage (more comparable to pre-revision models, but still up to 30 minutes shorter time) and C) the Sensor wash cycle has decreased as well, but not as severely (and this always seemed to be their "non-EPA normal" type program).
Higher wash pressure was my first thought, except the motors part numbers are the same between pre and post revision models and they're single speed motors. Higher temps is out of the question since I don't believe the heater has changed.
This seems like a recipe for a bad wash? They don't publish the cycle breakdowns anymore so it's like grasping at the air trying to understand this given how little has changed mechanically. While Whirlpool has pretty decent reliability swings, I've always thought they made good performers and seem to have thought things well out as far as dishwashing principles go, so I find it hard to believe they'd just neuter performance completely for the sake of advertising.
This is antithetical to everything I understand about how modern dishwashers and detergents work. The alternating of active zones increase wash time, and modern detergents need more time and heat... and American style exposed elements are comparatively slow to heat versus the flow-through heaters of others. So less main wash time would seemingly mean less of a chance of hitting an acceptable wash temp, meaning less heat to both break down food and less activation of the detergent's enzymes.
The only other clues: A) Water usage is up from 2 to 3 gallons, and B) The other variants of this model (Maytag, KitchenAid) have longer normal cycles with lower standard water usage (more comparable to pre-revision models, but still up to 30 minutes shorter time) and C) the Sensor wash cycle has decreased as well, but not as severely (and this always seemed to be their "non-EPA normal" type program).
Higher wash pressure was my first thought, except the motors part numbers are the same between pre and post revision models and they're single speed motors. Higher temps is out of the question since I don't believe the heater has changed.
This seems like a recipe for a bad wash? They don't publish the cycle breakdowns anymore so it's like grasping at the air trying to understand this given how little has changed mechanically. While Whirlpool has pretty decent reliability swings, I've always thought they made good performers and seem to have thought things well out as far as dishwashing principles go, so I find it hard to believe they'd just neuter performance completely for the sake of advertising.

