Why can’t modern washing machines rinse properly?
Modern washing machines use far less water than older models — which is good for energy efficiency, but bad for rinsing. Less water means detergent is harder to flush out of fabrics. This affects a large proportion of machines across all brands and price points. If your laundry smells of detergent, feels stiff, or causes skin irritation, poor rinsing is likely the cause.
Poor rinsing is one of the most widespread — and least talked about — issues with modern washing machines. Independent testing has consistently found that a significant proportion of machines on sale in the UK rinse clothes poorly, leaving detergent residue in the fabric. Here is why it happens and what you can do about it.
How Widespread Is the Problem?
Independent testing by consumer organisations has consistently shown that poor rinsing is not an isolated fault with individual machines — it is a systemic issue affecting the majority of washing machines sold in the UK.
When a large sample of washing machines and washer-dryers were assessed for rinsing performance, the results were striking:
A significant proportion of machines tested across all price ranges were rated as “poor” or “very poor” at rinsing — including models that received high scores for washing performance.
Even machines awarded “Best Buy” status by consumer testers have received poor rinsing ratings. Washing performance and rinsing performance are tested — and scored — separately.
EU and UK energy labels assess wash efficiency, spin efficiency, and energy use — but not rinse efficiency. Manufacturers have no regulatory incentive to prioritise rinsing.
Good rinsing requires plenty of water. Modern machines are designed to use as little water as possible — creating a fundamental tension between efficiency and rinsing ability.
If rinsing performance is important to you — particularly if you or someone in your household has sensitive skin or allergies — it is worth checking the latest independent test results before buying. Rinsing ratings can vary significantly even between otherwise similar machines.
Why Do Modern Washing Machines Rinse Poorly?
There are two main reasons why rinsing has become a widespread problem, and they are closely connected.
Over the past two decades, washing machine water consumption has been dramatically reduced in the pursuit of energy efficiency and lower running costs. This is largely positive — but effective rinsing requires a generous amount of water to dilute and flush detergent out of fabrics.
Modern detergents have been reformulated to work effectively at lower temperatures and with less water during the wash cycle. However, no equivalent innovation has made effective rinsing possible with very little water. The physics of rinsing — diluting and removing detergent from fabric fibres — still requires a meaningful volume of water.
The energy efficiency rating system assesses wash performance, spin performance, and energy consumption. Rinse efficiency is not a rated category. This means manufacturers are not incentivised — or penalised — based on how well their machines rinse.
A machine can achieve an excellent energy rating and top wash scores while rinsing poorly — and this is reflected in the independent test data. Until rinse efficiency becomes part of the rating system, there is limited pressure on manufacturers to improve it.
Detergent residue in fabric is invisible and, for most people without skin sensitivities, does not cause obvious problems. This means poor rinsing does not generate the level of consumer complaints that other faults do — which reduces commercial pressure on manufacturers to address it.
For people with allergies, eczema, or sensitive skin, however, this residue can cause significant discomfort. It can also make fabrics feel stiff or scratchy over time.
How Does Poor Rinsing Affect You?
Skin irritation and allergies
Detergent residue left in fabrics can cause or aggravate skin conditions including eczema, dermatitis, and general skin sensitivity — particularly in children.
Stiff or scratchy fabrics
Built-up detergent residue makes fabrics feel harder and less comfortable over time, particularly towels and clothing worn against the skin.
Detergent smell on laundry
If washed laundry smells strongly of detergent even after drying, this is a sign that it has not been rinsed effectively — residue remains in the fabric.
White streaks or powder residue
Visible white marks or powdery deposits on dark clothing after washing are a direct sign of poor rinsing. See our guide to white streaks on laundry after washing for causes and solutions.
What Can You Do About Poor Rinsing?
While the root cause is often the machine’s design, there are several practical steps that can improve rinsing results significantly.
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Use less detergent. This is the single most effective step. Most people use significantly more detergent than necessary. Modern concentrated detergents require far smaller doses than packaging often suggests. Using less means there is less to rinse out.
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Switch to liquid detergent. Liquid detergents dissolve more completely than powders and are generally easier for machines to rinse out. Powder residue, particularly from poor-quality detergents, is more prone to remaining in fabric.
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Add an extra rinse cycle. Most washing machines offer an additional rinse option. Using this regularly adds water and time to the rinsing phase, and can make a meaningful difference — particularly for those with sensitive skin or allergies.
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Avoid overloading the drum. An overloaded machine cannot rinse effectively because clothes cannot move freely through the water. Leave adequate space — typically no more than three-quarters full for most loads.
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Clean the machine regularly. Detergent residue builds up inside the drum, drawer, and door seal over time. Running a hot maintenance wash monthly helps keep the machine clean and rinsing effectively. See our guide on washing machine smells for cleaning advice.
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Check the pump filter. A partially blocked pump filter can affect water drainage and rinsing performance. Clean it regularly — see our pump filter cleaning guide.
Does Using Less Detergent Really Help?
Less detergent = better rinsing
Using the minimum effective dose means there is simply less to rinse out. With a machine that uses relatively little water, a smaller detergent load gives the rinse cycle a realistic chance of clearing it.
More detergent does not mean cleaner clothes
Beyond a certain dose, adding more detergent does not improve cleaning — it simply creates more residue that the machine cannot fully rinse away. Overdosing is one of the most common laundry mistakes.
For guidance on detergent types and dosing, read our guide on which washing machine detergent is best.
Should Rinsing Performance Be a Buying Factor?
For most buyers, washing performance, energy rating, reliability, and noise are the primary considerations — and rinsing is rarely mentioned in manufacturer marketing. However, rinsing performance deserves more attention than it currently receives, particularly for:
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Anyone with eczema, sensitive skin, or detergent allergies -
Families washing baby clothes and children’s garments -
Sportswear that needs to be fully free of detergent residue to perform correctly -
Anyone trying to reduce chemical exposure in their home
If rinsing performance is a priority, check the latest independent test results before buying — ratings can change as new models are introduced. For general buying advice, see our washing machine buying guide and our guide to which washing machine to buy.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why does my laundry still smell of detergent after washing?
This is the most common sign of poor rinsing. It usually means the machine has not used enough water in the rinse cycle to fully flush detergent out of the fabric. Try using less detergent, selecting an additional rinse cycle, and ensuring you are not overloading the drum. See our guide on washing machine smells for more help.
Can I make my washing machine rinse better?
Yes — the most effective steps are using less detergent, adding an extra rinse cycle, and not overloading the drum. Switching from powder to liquid detergent can also help, as liquids dissolve more easily and are simpler to rinse out. These steps will not transform a machine with genuinely poor rinsing performance, but they will make a noticeable improvement for most users.
Is poor rinsing causing my skin problems?
It is possible. Detergent residue left in fabric after inadequate rinsing is a known irritant, particularly for people with eczema, dermatitis, or sensitive skin. If skin symptoms improve when switching to hand-washed garments or clothes washed with an extra rinse cycle, detergent residue is likely a contributing factor. Switching to a non-biological or sensitive-skin detergent and reducing the dose may also help.
Do more expensive washing machines rinse better?
Not necessarily. Independent testing has found poor rinsing performance at all price points, including premium models. Price and brand reputation are not reliable guides to rinsing ability. If this is important to you, check the specific rinsing rating for the model you are considering in the latest independent test results.
Why do I get white streaks on dark clothes after washing?
White streaks or powdery deposits on dark clothing after washing are a direct result of poor rinsing — detergent has not been fully removed from the fabric. Using less detergent, switching to liquid, and adding an extra rinse should reduce this. Read our full guide on white streaks on laundry after washing for a complete breakdown of causes and solutions.
Is this issue likely to improve in the future?
Potentially — if rinsing efficiency is incorporated into energy labelling and testing standards, manufacturers will have a clear commercial incentive to improve it. There is also growing consumer awareness of the issue, driven by the increasing prevalence of skin sensitivities and allergies. Until then, the practical steps above remain the most effective way to manage the problem.
Join the discussion
This is one of the most widely discussed topics in our community. Hundreds of readers have shared their experiences, solutions, and machine recommendations on our forum.
The single most effective improvement you can make right now: use less detergent. Most people use far more than necessary.
542 Comments
Grouped into 324 comment threads.
25 replies Top loading washing machines do use a lot more water than front loaders although Which? don't rate them very highly saying none of the ones they tested were good enough to be best buys. They do tend to be more reliable too but they cost more to run. The extra water usage probably does make them rinse better. Each time a "problem" is addressed it causes another as in this case where the "problem" of using too much water is solved at the expense of reducing rinsing efficiency significantly.
10 replies Perhaps someone could tell me why Dreft that is marketed for wool and silk contains enzymes? I thought it was supposed to be a gentle detergent but how can it be if it contains enzymes? Simon
Perhaps someone could tell me why Dreft that is marketed for wool and silk contains enzymes? I thought it was supposed to be a gentle detergent but how can it be if it contains enzymes? Simon
Likely replying to simon smith
Hi Simon,
This is only a guess but perhaps it is only one type of enzyme that attacks wool and silk. There are 4 types of “normal” enzyme, Lipase, Amylase, Protease and Cellulase.
However you will notice that modern detergents only contain 2 types of enzyme, Protease and Glycosidease, the latter not being the normal as it were, this could be the culprit in destroying wool and silk as it is a fairly new type. Whereas if Dreft only contains the 4 “normal” types of enzyme these may not affect the said articles.
I happily wash my woollen items with biological Persil and have not ruined anything nor has anything become holed. This could be the over cautious public or simply the manufacturers trying to make you buy different types of detergent you don’t really need. We all know about the scams manufacturers pull these days to try to get you to buy their products, its truly laughable.
Oliver.
Likely replying to Oliver Shaw
Oliver,
I think i may have already asked you about Optical Brighteners and you stated that they did nothing useful except create the illusion that clothes are brighter. Some makers of clothes say they cause colour fade and create a ‘dulling’ effect and that you should use colour care products. If you go in a supermarket you will see all the various liquids like Persil bio, non bio, and colour care. The Colour care leaves the OB out but the bio and non bio adds them so if your a consumer who knows little about detergents one would be inclined to think that the OB detergents were for white clothes only?
As someone with very sensitive skin would it be best to avoid OB? They are also allegedly nonbiodegradeable in the environement and toxic to aquatic life though that could depend on the type of brightener used?
I no Ecover doesn’t use them but its only good for things that need freshening up. Just bought a small powder of Ariel and to be honest not that impressed with the quality of cleaning and it foams too much and doesn’t rinse well. The rinse water on the third rinse is still very soapy, how bad is that! I think Persil seems to like my Hotpoint better and its not over scented. Any one else think Persil cleans better than Ariel?
I trust your oppinions and advice Oliver more so than the big named brand manufacturers.
Thanks
Simon
Likely replying to simon smith
Hi Simon,
Yes I think Persil cleans a million times better than Ariel, Ariel is as you say too soapy, it makes my Mums machine overflow whilst sudslocking, as does Daz and Bold. Persil and Surf are by far the least soapy, both made by Unilever. Ariels cleaning has massivley decreased ever since they introduced the new formula, all it does is foam. From what I can tell all Proctor and Gamble detergents are far too soapy, do not clean that well and do not rinse out so easily. Unilevers Rinse out easier, however the cleaning performance of Surf is questionable too.
Yes I think it COULD ( I admit I’m not sure) be wise to avoid optical brighteners, as the form a permanent bond between the fabrics fibres, once there even if only washed once with a detergent containing them, cannot be removed.
My feeling is with the liquid they are left out of colourcare is beacause if they wasn’t the bio and colourcare would have exactly the same ingredients. Although with the powder there is abscence of bleach and optical brighteners, but no liquid can contain bleach due to chemical mixing reasons, it would all sink to the bottom, and manuactureres do not trust people to shake the bottle before each wash! Optical brighteners are suppost to have an effect on white and coloured clothing, they certainly don’t fade anything, if they left them out of the detergents all together, or never introduced them you would notice no difference!
As far as I know they are not biodegradeable as you say.
All the best,
Oliver.
Likely replying to Oliver Shaw
Oliver,
Thanks for your help on brightening agents. The only way i can avoid optical brighteners is to use ‘Colour care’ detergent as i am sure i react to them. Seeing as they absorb ultraviolet light are they a good idea to be used what with the dangers of them letting the suns rays through the clothes? You are basically attracting the suns rays wearing clothes dosed in these unnessary chemicals?
I have checked Unilever ingredients for Small and Mighty and they are exactly the same ingredients except the OB is left out of the colour one.
Simon
Likely replying to simon smith
Hi Simon,
Optical brighteners don’t attract the suns rays, they just reflect them, they could help stop the suns rays from reaching you by reflecting however whether this is true or not I would like to say. I find wearing white helps protect me from the sun as that too reflects the UV back, but black and dark garments fry me!
All the best,
Oliver.
Likely replying to Oliver Shaw
Hi Oliver,
Regarding ‘Builders’ and ‘Water softners’ in detergents do the cheaper brands contain them? I know for a fact Mcbride make Aldi’s detergents so would assume they include all the necessary components to help keep a washing machine healthy etc. But what about Ecover, Sainsburys, Tesco’s, CO-OP etc? I always have had the motto you do get what you pay for but sometimes unbranded is just as good. But last thing i want to do is damage a washing machine.
Has anyone tried Simply detergents? And what about Method laundry? How you find they compare to the established brands?
On a slightly different note, a retail assistant told me personally that own brand dishwasher salts are full of impurities and that you should use Finish salt. And the difference it makes!
Simon
Likely replying to simon smith
Hi Simon,
The cheaper detergents do contain builders to soften the water, however the quality is somewhat lacking and can cause scale damage. Just like the other ingredients, bleach, enzymes and surfactants etc. they are much lower grade than those on Unilever and Proctor & Gamble, so performance is sacrificed. When it comes to laundry detergent your saying applies very well, you certainly do get what you pay for! If you look on the package and it says Zeolites and Polycarboxilates then it contains water softening builders. As far as I know there is no such thing as a laundry detergent without the builders contained in the formulation, only difference is the quality.
I have not tried Simply, however it is recommended by ISE, they claim it is as good as Ariel, now I don’t rate the cleaning efficiency of Ariel anymore and it is too soapy, so have never tried Simply on these grounds. Never heard of Method either. The only detergent I find useful these days is Persil Bio, Non-Bio and Colourcare powders all wash very well and are not too soapy. All the rest are left miles behind in cleaning performance, in particular Surf, it will not remove chip fat from a cotton jumper even on a boil wash with a biological pre-wash beforehand, so its pretty dismal stuff.
Yep, the advice you were given about disherwasher salt is correct, own brand salts do not soften the water completely and do clog the machines with limescale.
All the best,
Oliver.
Likely replying to Oliver Shaw
Hi Oliver,
Thanks for the information on brightening agents. I have been using the new concentrated version of Ecover liquid that is biological. It performs better than own brands and has removed grass stains though i do directly rub the liquid onto the stain. You mention somewhere on here about Ecover causing bad smells etc? But it won’t damage my machine if i do my monthly maintenance wash with bio persil powder? I wash mainly at 40 degrees, sometimes 50 degrees but underwear and bedding on 60 degrees.
Simon
Likely replying to simon smith
Hi Simon,
No, you won’t have any trouble if you boil the machine out with Persil every 4 weeks. To get maximum benefit you need to use the amount recommended for your area, 95ml for soft water, 130ml for medium and 175ml for hard. This will keep the innards clean and bacteria free. Washing at 60oC with bedding also helps keep things clean too, so you should have no problems.
If Ecover works better than own brand it looks like they have improved the formulation, removing grass staing is no mean feat!
All the best,
Oliver.
Likely replying to simon smith
Hi Simon: I can only presume they are different enzymes to the ones used in biological detergent although I haven’t looked at the ingredients on their packet which I presume you have.
I have an article warning about using biological detergents with silk or woollens Biological washing machine detergents can damage woollens & silks (cause holes) where I mention Dreft as being one of the most gentle and as you say they do say it is good for washing silks and woollens.
8 replies Can anyone tell me if Optical brighteners fade coloured clothes? Also does anyone know of a detergent without colourants but include enzymes? I have found when using coloured liquids it takes many rinses to get the clothes clear but if i used ecover 2 rinses would be sufficient.
Can anyone tell me if Optical brighteners fade coloured clothes? Also does anyone know of a detergent without colourants but include enzymes? I have found when using coloured liquids it takes many rinses to get the clothes clear but if i used ecover 2 rinses would be sufficient.
Likely replying to simon smith
Hi Simon,
Optical brighteners do not fade anything. Optical brighteners react with UV light ie. from the sun and reflect it thus making your laundry look cleaner and brighter. In the real world they do nothing, they make no noticable difference. They make a permanent bond with fabrics and once there cannot be removed. Ecover does not contain any sort of optical brightener.
When you say coloured liquid do you mean liquid for coloured washing or the dye in it to turn it a horrible shade of green or blue etc.?
There is no such thing as coloured liquid or white liquid, manufacteres may say there is but in reality there is not, the only difference is lack of optical brightener, no liquid be it biological or other wise can possibly fade colours due to the lack of bleach, no liquid ever has or ever will contain bleach due to the chemistry involved. It would all settle to the bottom of the bottle giving you half a bottle of neat bleach, and manufactureres do not trust customers to shake the bottle so hence the reason it doesn’t get added.
Ecover do a biological laundry liquid with no colourant, but the performance ain’t that good and will be no use for whites anyway. By the nature of the manufacture of Ecover it rinses out easier anyway, the problem is it causes bad smells and it is not uncommon to rot away the internal parts of your washing machine with it if constantly used with low temperatures.
The best way of washing will always be powders, like Persil bio and bleach for whites and if you want a colour variant aswell thats fine. I’ll never know why they invented liquids before they were invented everyone was happy with powder, liquids cause more problems than they solve, the same for those tablets and daft capsules, the latter two are pandering to peoples bone-idleness!!
HTH,
Oliver.
Likely replying to Oliver Shaw
Hi Oliver,
I meant the dyes in liquid laundry detergent. Some are crystal clear like Ecover and Surcare but Persil liquid for colours is purple and bio green. I wondered if the colourants made rinsing more difficult. I always thought Optical brighteners were bad for sensitive skin and the environment too?? The colourants come out completely if i rinse by hand but always a little left on the clothes when been in the machine. Am currently using SA8 laundry liquid but to be honest its absolute rubbish at stain removal and have started washing at 60C but even then it won’t remove stains. Persil concentrated liquid will remove stains and my Hotpoint seems to like that one the most so will have go back to the that.
Does anyone know if I can alter the water level on the Hotpoint WMA30? Uses so little water on wash and on final rinse. If i press ‘Super rinse’ it helps but i think they made the mistake of only doing 3 rinses instead of 4 on the cotton cycle. This machine was made about 1997 so one of the stupid energy efficiency rubbish lol.
If I can not find a second hand model i think i will have to buy an American top loader as its quicker wash times, uses more water, won’t have to wash so much and uses my hot water.
Simon
Likely replying to simon smith
Hi Simon,
The chances are Ecover may be lingering in your laundry too as is Persil, but probably not as much due to its formulation. Dye will make rinsing neither harder or easier, it will just highlight to you how much detergent is left in your laundry at the final rinse stage. As you have a water efficient Hotpoint that may be quite a lot!
Your Hotpoint will have an adjustable pressure switch, however altering the settings can cause a lot more trouble than its worth if you are the least bit unsure how to do it. It is quite easy to make any machine fill half way up the door, but for many machines this is too high, as the drum suspension has decreased in quality since machines used to do this and cannot take the strain of all this extra water. If memory serves me the WMA range had a 1 level pressure switch, the rinses will be similar to my Mums Siltal, whereby it fills to the 1 level on the switch and then kicks back in to to fill to level 2 (or whatever, some machines have in excess of 10 water levels) using a timed fill session. So to increase the rinse level you will have to drastically increase the wash level (or level 1).
The Siltal fills to the bottom of the door glass on wash now its being adjusted, and fill and 2″ up the glass on rinses. Adding extra water to the wash phase will not make it wash any better, unless you massively overload it.
My recommendations are if you are unsure in the least, do not change it at all. I can tell you no washing machine engineer will change it either, there can be come backs if it cocked-up. It could result in serious flooding (which your home insurance will not cover). Or if it done the either way accidentally could burn out the heating element and cause a fire. So if you decide to proceed please be careful as cock-ups are very easy.
All the best,
Oliver.
Likely replying to Oliver Shaw
Hi Oliver,
Thanks for your helpful information. I think I will leave it as its not worth it. But i think i am going to buy the Whirlpool American top loader as had enough of manually filling my machine with extra water. Mine takes 2 hours and 50 minutes to a 60 degree celsius wash. Daft isn’t it lol
All the be best
Simon
Likely replying to simonsmith
Hi Simon,
Some of the fillers in washing powders are “builders” or water softeners. There are not many useless ingredients in the formulations, it costs money to add fillers so manufactruerers are loath to do it. I do not know any chemical names of filling agents, sorry.
And yes 2 hours 50 minutes is outragious for a 5.5 kg load of washing to be done! Some modern machines can take even longer than that!
Be careful if you get an American top loader, many do not have heaters and just rely on your own hot water supply. Also many only do 2 rinses, some do 1 deep rinse and 1 spray rinse (wets the laundry whist spinning it at the same time). These do not rinse as effectivley as the ones that do 2 deep rinses. Something else is many are now energy efficient and suffer the bad rinsing as current front load machines.
All the best,
Oliver.
Likely replying to Oliver Shaw
Hi Oliver
To be fair to the Bosch, I’m now fairly confident that it does NOT impart any smell of its own onto the washing, which I’m very pleased about, and I’m feeling a lot more positive towards it as a result.
I think my hand washing tests have shown that the powder is capable of making odd smells all on its own, without the help of any washing machine! It seems that the powder can behave differently, depending on the temperature, amount of water, and amount of agitation, which all influence how well the powder dissolves, how much foam is created, and possibly there are other chemicals that are created along the way – I’m not familiar with all the intricacies of washing powders’ mode of action. So I have lots more tests that I want to do to get to the bottom of this, including the suggestions you made – thanks for those. I think that the ‘icky’ smell may be the detergent component of the powder – it smells slightly chemically, so I don’t think it is a perfume. If it is perfume, it’s not one I care for! Fortunately, it seems to disappear after a couple of days of airing. So far, I think the smell arises from the creation of foam – if not due to the foam itself, then due to another chemical process that has taken place as a result of the same action that created the foam. Once the foam (or other chemical) has been created, it does seem to be very difficult to rinse out again.
Of course, the icky smell could be because it’s a supermarket own brand washing powder, so you could be right about them not being as good as brand names. I will keep trying new washing powders – hopefully I can find one whose perfume I don’t object to, and which rinses out better. I have yet to come across a powder for coloured clothes that is un-perfumed however – if anyone knows of one, please let me know. There are several un-perfumed powders for whites, but I worry that they will fade coloured clothes. OTOH I read something lately about how powder for coloured clothes is just a gimmick, so now I don’t know what to think.
Regards the future health of the Bosch, I do almost all our washing on 60 degrees, and I never use fabric conditioner, so I think I should be safe from ‘gunk’ buildup. I use about half the recommended dose of powder, in an effort to avoid the bitty smell which really gets up my nose. However the ratio of powder to water is likely to be much the same as my old machine, which used approximately twice as much water per cycle, so I don’t expect much limescale to build up. Just to make sure, is it OK to do a maintenance wash with say half a cup of vinegar, or would this corrode any aluminium present?
The under-dosing is a real nuisance though. I’ve realised that it’s not just the powder:water ratio that matters, it’s the powder:dirt in the fabric ratio that really matters, if you want to get things clean. But after months of using this machine, I’m not convinced that a window of opportunity exists where the dose of powder is high enough to get things clean, and low enough that it gets properly rinsed out. Consequently it’s always a dilemma, every time I put a load on – do I use enough powder to get the stuff properly clean, then put up with the smell or have to rinse by hand, or do I use a lower dose so I don’t have to re-rinse, but then the stuff may not be properly clean?
Ceejay: I have a few tips for you which might help, since we have the same washing machine… under-dose with powder, experiment to see how little you can get away with, personally I’ve found that half the recommended dose is often sufficient. Run pre-wash with no powder in before every wash, this will help to remove water soluble dirt and give the powder less work to do. Use the highest spin your washing can take – this will remove more detergent – I can tell the difference even between 1000 and 1200 rpm. If the stuff needs re-rinsing, it’s better to do it by hand – I’ve found that 10 minutes spent hand rinsing a few pillow cases, for example, is more effective than running another whole cycle. I only re-rinse stuff that’s going to be near my face, to stop the bitty smell getting up my nose – other stuff I just leave, it’s too much work. If you can’t get that annoying smell out no matter how much you rinse, try soaking the stuff (in a lot of water) overnight, or hanging up to air for several days. I live in a very hard water area, though, with soft water, your problem is probably worse than mine. I know that if I ran a load of washing 3 times, it wouldn’t have any trace of detergent left in it. If you read my flannel experiment post, you will see that adding lots of water to the wash phase (while hand washing) reduced creation of foam, so perhaps you could try this – you can pour water in through the dispensing tray. I wish you good luck…
Michelle
Likely replying to Michelle
Hi Michelle,
Using vinegar to clean a washing machine doesn’t work, I doubt very much it would damage anything, it is not strong enough, is not powerful enough in the anti bacterial department to kill germs properly. If I remember correctly it was the “How clean is your house” duo Kim and Aggie that suggested this solution, I have tried it when I first got the Bosch (it was a mess from the previous owner) and it did nothing. I have their book (bought as a present) and 99% of what they recommend either doesn’t work or can seriously do damage to things.
A maintainence wash should be done using a good biological powder Ariel or Persil, even if you only use it for cleaning the machine it is worth it. The builders in the formulation will remove hard water deposits from the machine on their own. Also there is a product called “Maytag affresh” (available from the 4Waherhelp spares shop) washing machine cleaner and I have tried that and it works very well probably slightly better than the detergent method. Either way your machine will be clean and muck free.
It was me who said coloured powder could be a gimmick, I could be wrong its only my personal view, however I have never had a problem with normal detergent fading my clothing. This is one for the individual to make their own mind up on!
Also underdosing of detergent as you say does decrease the efficiency of the wash. A method you could try on any modern machine is when its in the last 5 minutes of the wash phase, just add cold water to the wash water to about 1/4 up the door, this will help release the detergent from the fabric and dilute it before rinsing begins. Old Hoovers used to do this, they called it a “Dilution Rinse”, and it does help. My Grandma had an Electra (Creda) that used to do this (they called it a “Cold Top-Up”), but it filled half way up the door, as it filled nearly 1/4 to wash in the first place.
If you want a colour detergent the only one is Ecover biological liquid, which is not advertised as colour but as no liquid contains bleach you will be fine. Ecover is not the best performer though.
All the best,
Oliver.
Likely replying to Michelle
Michelle, using only half the recommended dosage with 40 degree washes (which is what most people use) could result in a nasty build up of slime and gunge and black mould. You probably get away with it because you wash at 60 degrees.
Also, in hard water areas anyone using only half the recommended dose of detergent could end up with limescale problems shortening the life of their washing machine because detergent contains ingredients to protect against limescale.
Not using enough detergent can also cause a white staining on laundry in hard water areas. Generally I think it’s better to use the recommended amount.
6 replies Oliver : I'm with you all the way on the Miele - I have one with the rinse plus option, and have experienced the same results as yourself. However, as I have said before, I do find that just using Vanish powder, no other detergent, or Ecover Biological does substantially solve the rinsing problem. I still have to rinse everything in hot water by hand in the sink, but only once or twice. To me, this is bliss!
Oliver : I’m with you all the way on the Miele – I have one with the rinse plus option, and have experienced the same results as yourself. However, as I have said before, I do find that just using Vanish powder, no other detergent, or Ecover Biological does substantially solve the rinsing problem. I still have to rinse everything in hot water by hand in the sink, but only once or twice. To me, this is bliss!
Likely replying to Nikki Jenkins
Hi Nikki,
Like I said in a comment above the Miele belongs to a friend, they love it but the soap left in the final rinse is amazing. This is with “Water Plus” activated and also “Rinse Plus” too. I certainly wouldn’t be happy scratching myself raw, it may be a good quality machine but its rinse performance certainly isn’t.
When my Bosch is in the final (4th) rinse the water is crystal clear (I do not use softener), whereas the Mieles was cloudy, there was alot of evedence of alot of detergent residue present.
As far as I know no modern machine rinse properly except some American top loaders and certain industrial/commercial machines.
All the best,
Oliver.
Likely replying to Nikki Jenkins
@Nikki Jenkins comment #399.
You say you still rinse things by hand in hot water in the sink. I think you could save yourself that laborious task by re-rinsing in your Miele and just adding a few jugs of hot water to raise the water level slightly, so it’s touching the bottom of the door glass and repeat this for another 1 or more rinses during the re-rinsing cycle. I’m sure a lower level of water will not strain the bearings, especially on a Miele, which is well built compared to other makes washing machines – except ISE. Maybe you’re happy to rinse clothes by hand in hot water?
Oliver, about the “suds locking” problem. I remember mentioning that washing machines don’t flush the foam away properly anymore – see my comment #289. Not only do we have a pathetically small amount of water to rinse, we also have foam that never gets flushed out.
I’m concerned about the bearings wearing out much faster in my washing machine, so I should add hot water to just 1/3 up the door on the first re-rinse cycle then add another load of hot water 1/3 up the door on the next rinse. That would give me 2 rinses with 1/3 up the door = 2/3 of a drum of water in total! The washing should be very thoroughly rinsed :) – hopefully without straining the washing machine compared to using 1/2 a drum during one rinse??
Likely replying to WMUser
Hi WMUser,
If the machine has sudslocked the space between the inner and outer drum will be full of thick foam. This will be VERY apparent when the machine is filling for the next rinse, there will be no water visible just a huge quantity of foam coming up from the sump area. This inturn can also reduce the water level as the foam goes up the pressure vessel alot faster than water, so the pressure switch thinks the water level is correct and the machine rinses with a massivley reduced water level. It can also activate the drain pump for extended periods as the foam locks the pressure switch to maximum level and it will not spin until the foam has broken down and then the machine thinks its empty and can progress with the cycle. Or if it does not break down quick enough the machine can abort the programme and flash some sort of error code leaving sodden soapy clothes.
However if the machine has spun the load correctly and drained all the water away the space between the drums will be clear as the water flying out of the laundry sprays over the whole outer drum whilst spinning, thus flushing out any foam down the sides of the tank to the sump hose and it all gets pumped away. If the machine has not sudslocked there will be no issue of soap and foam lurking between the drums to pollute the next rinse.
The strain on your machine is as broad as long, if you do 2 rinses 1/3 up the door there is extra weight for twice as long. But if you do 1 rinse at 1/2 up the door it is only there for half as long. How much of an effect will be seen on the machine I don’t know, only time will tell. If it is a recent model it may well have a sealled drum meaning no bearing changes, so the whole lot has to be replaced, this usually writes the machine off as being beyond economical repair.
All the best,
Oliver.
Likely replying to Boris
Hi Boris,
I was under the impression that top loaders rinsed properly. We used to have Hoptpoint top loaders over here in the 70’s and 80’s althougth they only did 2 rinses they completley immersed the load for each rinse and if memory serves me they only used to spin after the first rinse and after the second was the final spin. These Hotpoint machines rinsed anything properly.
However I am aware some modern top loaders (still seem to rinse twice) only do 1 deep fully immersed rinse, and the first rinse being a srpay rinse which really is not very effective at all. Were the 5 rinses you did with your Whirlpool spray rinses or deep rinses with a spin inbetween each rinse?
Comment 42 mentions a Maytag Centennial top loader which uses about 40 gallons per load and is supposed to be good at rinsing. However my knowledge on US machines is a little thin on the ground to say the least! So I have no idea if they still make this machine or indeed anything about it.
I don’t really know what else to recommend as we have very few top loaders over here anymore. However as far as I know no modern front loader will rinse properly. I know US front loaders are all energy efficient as well so my thinking is only the high water use top loaders will rinse properly. Some top loaders are energy efficient and do not rinse well, I do not know how common these machines are though.
All the best,
Oliver.
Likely replying to Oliver Shaw
Hi Oliver.
I think my washing machine is under much less strain now. On the quickwash cycle, which I run after the main cycle (and its 3 rinses), the quickwash performs its main ‘wash’ for about 15 minutes, followed by its 2 rinses. With just 1/3 of warm water for 15 minutes compared to 1/2 a drum, the strain is obviously much less. Rinse 1 of 2 on quickwash has just 1/3 of warm water and it finishes quickly, so I have to pause the washing machine to add several jugs of hot water before I let it continue. I paused the machine again on the final rinse with conditioner and left it a few minutes – the water was not cloudy. :)
Having read Nikki Jenkins comments #377, I’m more wary about adding too much water in case the bearings can’t handle it. I’m sure 1/3 of a drum of warm water or just a few inches up the door glass won’t harm the bearings?
@Boris I think you would be best replacing it with an older model that uses LOTS of water. I don’t know about American top loaders. I do remember reading the early comments (such as comment #36) about newer models having to comply with the American “energy star” nonsense i.e. they have to use too little water. Towels are notoriously hard to rinse and will only get rinsed properly in warm or hot water and plenty of it.
6 replies washer help, Do you know if chloramine is used in uk tap water ,this may be one reason why some people are itchy etc. check out www.chloramine.org could explain some peoples problems and may have nothing to do with washing products but a problem with the water , the use of chloramine gives same reaction as what people are getting in the uk ? by the look of the pictures of skin rash and other related problems which may not be because of poor rinsing by washing machines !. ADY.
washer help,
Do you know if chloramine is used in uk tap water ,this
may be one reason why some people are itchy etc.
check out http://www.chloramine.org could explain some peoples
problems and may have nothing to do with washing products
but a problem with the water , the use of chloramine gives
same reaction as what people are getting in the uk ? by
the look of the pictures of skin rash and other related
problems which may not be because of poor rinsing by
washing machines !.
ADY.
Likely replying to ady quartermain
Hi ady: Thanks for the link, it looks potentially interesting to anyone with skin reactions. I don’t know if it could in some form be used in detergent but the chloramine is in the water as a replacement for chloride and they are using it in parts of the UK as well as USA it seems. Both are highly controversial chemicals to be putting in people’s water.
My point about the lime issue you raised is that all detergent contains water softening agents to combat limescale, which is only produced when water is heated, so there shouldn’t be any limescal problems unless underdosing. Otherwise the product is clearly unfit for its purpose. I haven’t heard of the problem you described to be honest.
Likely replying to Washerhelp
Washerhelp,
I do think that after all the tests i have done with my washing
i have found that if you wash at 40c or above the you are going to have problems with your washing ;eg with having to rerinse etc
because the new types of powder / liquids have been made to
work at lower temps.
What i think has happened is that the powder and liquid does
not have so much softener in it ,so if you do washing at 40c
and above the washing water no longer holds the lime in it
and it sticks to the clothes! and say only 1/3 of the water
when washing ,no wonder the lime stops in the clothes
which is what i believe makes you itch etc.
So now you have to add softener , but the only problem
with that, the powder/liquid has only had tests as it is,
and the makers say it has softener in it which is fine
at 30c and below but not above and is not made to have more
softener added ,so if you do add more softener you get other
problems ? as i have found out.
ady.
I DO THINK THERE ARE GOING TO BE MORE PEOPLE WITH
WASHING PROBLEMS NOW.
Likely replying to ady quartermain
@ady quartermain I’m not having any of these problems and I live in a “hard water” area and I’ve not heard anyone in my town say their clothes have lime in them.
I do agree that the constant changes to washing machines, detergents and so on is causing a huge problem. They don’t seem to know the saying “if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it”. The 2 main problems I notice are 1) detergents foam more now and 2) they seem to smell stronger. The latter is not so much a “problem” as it’s an indication on how well the washing is rinsed upon emptying the drum, i.e. no smell = well rinsed washing (provided the softener used contains no perfumes).
Maybe your washing machine needs descaling? You could use a propriety washing machine descaler at least 2 times, without laundry, on the hottest wash.
I don’t have any problems with lime or bad rinsing. I re-rinse everything in nearly 1/2 drum of warm water added manually, I wash my clothes no cooler than 40C, I use soda crystals in every wash so I can use the amount of detergent recommended for “soft” water and I use Surcare softener. I can get away with using less detergent for small loads and towels to avoid the problems I’ve had with foaming.
Since detergents and add-ons such as Calgon or soda crystals soften the water, there is no limescale in the wash and because the rinses don’t get heated by the washing machine, there is no new limescale being created. Limescale does you no harm and it won’t make you itch, it’s the chemicals in laundry detergents and add-on products that make people itch because they need a hell of a lot of water to rinse them away properly, I mean a LOT of water and water that is at least 40C!!
Have you read the page White streaks or residual washing powder after washing?
It may be helpful.
Likely replying to ady quartermain
Hi Ady,
I have sat on the side lines of this issue for a while now.
If the marking on your clothing definatley is lime then a water softener or detergent dosed correctly will not remove it as it will be entering throught the rinse cycles as well as the main wash. However lime has nothing to do with the washing machine either, it has to be a problem with your water supply. Has there been any ground works near your house since the issue started, or has your water supplier changed where your water comes from and finally have you fitted a magnetic/elecro-magnetic type water softener? If the latter it will break up the scale and a heavy build up of lime and flush through in insoluble particles thus marking your washing.
Other than that, I do agree with Andy, the detergent or water softener has been underdosed and the lime marks are not lime marks at all, they are limescale.
HTH,
Oliver.
Likely replying to Oliver Shaw
Thanks Oliver: My understanding is that limescale is only created in washing machines when they heat up water. All references to limescale problems I’ve seen talk about limescale in kettles, washing machines, dishwashers, hot water pipes, hot water cylinders and hot plumbing pipework or shower heads. All caused by hot water. I’m not aware of cold water causing any limescale problems although I’m careful to choose my words and use phrases like “I’m not aware” and “as far as I know” etc. I don’t claim to be an expert on limesale though I did research into it for my article on limescale in washing machines & Calgon – Hard water & limescale in washing machines (part 1)
This is an interesting read too Limescale (Wikipedia)
Likely replying to ady quartermain
@ady quartermain
I did read your comment carefully and I replied with the possible causes, so we can eliminate things until possibly finding the problem and what could be done to resolve it.
Re: “DOSE IS RIGHT, PRODUCT NO GOOD AND YOU SHOULD NOT HAVE TO ADD EXTRA SOFTENER .”
I still use water softener (soda crystals) in all my washes to eliminate all limescale. As I’m not there to actually see what you’re doing, I can only guess by reading your comments. Is the drum overloaded? That can leave marks on clothes and seriously impair rinsing. Before I start washing a full load, I make sure there is a gap between the top of the clothes and the drum – enough to fit your hand in with the fingers spread apart.
I’ve never heard of “lime” – I’ve always associated that as being limescale when talking about this subject. As for throwing away your clothes, it will take a few months of proper rinsing before skin complaints heal up and every single item of clothing at home and the towels etc have been properly rinsed too. All new clothing should be washed – I hear they add chemicals to them at the factory, not sure if that’s completely true?? I can understand you’re frustrated, but I can’t (and will not) suggest anything more to you. Proper rinsing with any modern washing machine requires a bit of manual intervention and time – sorry, but it does.
@Washerhelp – thank you for contacting “Which?”. I hope you post the response from “Which?” in here. I think they could help us all by refusing to award a “Best Buy” to any washing machine that can’t rinse properly, regardless of how well it performs in all their other tests. Good rinsing should be one of the prerequisites for a “Best Buy”. That would force the manufacturers to change!!
5 replies Thanks for the information Oliver - REALLY appreciated. The ZFL1023 sounds like the perfect option and I've checked to see if spares are available and there's an abundant supply online. :) It proves that the quality of washing machines have gone downhill over the past 20 years and their rinsing abilities have also become pitiful due to the "eco friendly" brigade. I agree you've done the right thing Oliver, buying your Bosch WFF2000 and who cares about it being "old" - you say in this blog - and others - how happy you are to own it. This is definitely the way to go I think - buy an old washing machine with plenty of spare parts available for it. If I can get the Zanussi ZFL1023 I look forward to decent rinsing and the "spin wash". Provided repairs for it aren't too expensive, I could keep it going for as long as possible. I don't care if the spin speed is 1000rpm or 800rpm and the capacity is 4.5 - 5 kg, meaning I have to do the washing more often and wait a bit longer for the clothes to dry, it's not that much of a compromise if my washing is rinsed properly and I don't need to stand there adding jugs of water to the rinses as I do with my current "new" Zanussi-Electrolux. What do other readers think about older washing machines compared to new ones, especially with regards to rinsing? Do you think the subject of "new" versus "old" washing machines deserves its own blog page on the White Goods help website?
Thanks for the information Oliver – REALLY appreciated.
The ZFL1023 sounds like the perfect option and I’ve checked to see if spares are available and there’s an abundant supply online. :)
It proves that the quality of washing machines have gone downhill over the past 20 years and their rinsing abilities have also become pitiful due to the “eco friendly” brigade.
I agree you’ve done the right thing Oliver, buying your Bosch WFF2000 and who cares about it being “old” – you say in this blog – and others – how happy you are to own it. This is definitely the way to go I think – buy an old washing machine with plenty of spare parts available for it. If I can get the Zanussi ZFL1023 I look forward to decent rinsing and the “spin wash”. Provided repairs for it aren’t too expensive, I could keep it going for as long as possible. I don’t care if the spin speed is 1000rpm or 800rpm and the capacity is 4.5 – 5 kg, meaning I have to do the washing more often and wait a bit longer for the clothes to dry, it’s not that much of a compromise if my washing is rinsed properly and I don’t need to stand there adding jugs of water to the rinses as I do with my current “new” Zanussi-Electrolux.
What do other readers think about older washing machines compared to new ones, especially with regards to rinsing? Do you think the subject of “new” versus “old” washing machines deserves its own blog page on the White Goods help website?
Likely replying to WMUser
Hi WMUser,
I have just found out some of the very early Jetsystems did have hot and cold fill. The later ones were cold, so this is worth a look before you carry out any work on your plumbing, I have no idea when it was changed though as I was not born until 1988.
Another point I should make before you buy an old machine is alot of engineers will not work on them as they are considered a liability, aven though it is a safer bet than working on a current Indesh!t or Haier. So if it breaks down it may be down to you to repair it. My Bosch is very simple to work on even a bearing change is easy, 45 minutes tops! However I have just done my modern Hotpoint WF530T (I keep this for duvets etc.) and it was an absolute swine of a job, it took me 4 hours as the bl@@dy bearings and water seal would not budge out of the plastic tank, but its done now and works perfectly, no leaks either.
As for repairs and costs etc. it depends on where you are in the country.
Oliver.
Likely replying to Oliver Shaw
Hi Oliver.
Unfortunately I can’t repair washing machines, never tried and don’t want to mess up a washing machine with a bad repair!!
I know of at least 2 shops which sell second-hand appliances, so I may be in luck if I ever get an old Zanussi. I will definitely check to see if it’s hot and cold fill, or cold fill only. Preferably cold fill only, so I can connect it to a TMV and have the warm rinses.
I have also discovered that despite seeing a small amount of foam on the last 2 rinses when re-rinsing, I can see the water below the bubbles is not cloudy. I would know if the washing was not rinsed properly! So for anyone who’s reading because you are having trouble with rinsing, don’t worry if – when re-rinsing – you see a few bubbles floating on the water. Provided the water below the floating bubbles is clear, you’re fine. The washing should not come out smelling strongly of detergent either.
Likely replying to Oliver Shaw
Oliver,
Have you tried Aldi Almat colour liquid? I know you buy Persil but do you think i could use a cheaper detergent i.e. Almat by aldi, sainsburys? Would these have lime scale protectors in or do own brand detergents leave them out? I like daz as found that least perfumed. The only thing on my machine is when it is on the wash cycle the drain pump makes ‘clicking’ noises as if it wants to empty. It drains ok but tries to empty when the programmer has not reached that sequence. Hard to explain but you need to witness it to understand lol. This is my WMA30 Hotpoint that is 11 years old. I do have an older model 9506 which i am waiting to use once this one packs up.
Simon
Likely replying to Anonymous
Hi Simon,
I can honestly say I have never tried Almat, I have heard of it though and have also heard it gunks machines up very badly.
I have tried supermarket own brands before and found them useless compared to the likes of Persil etc. They all have limescale prevention, however the quality of the supermarkets own to the big names are miles apart so my guess being they will not look after the machine properly, personally I would leave well alone.
With regard to your WMA30, where is the “clicking” coming from? It could be a relay on the PCB. If the pump itself is clicking when the macine is supposed to empty then the pump is more than likley tired and needs to be replaced. If it is clicking when it is not supposed to be draining my money is on a fault on the PCB itself, running things in the wrong sequence.
All the best,
Oliver.
Likely replying to Oliver Shaw
Hi Oliver,
The ‘clicking’ sound is coming directly from the bottom of the machine. The drum on this machine has always also been a problem when it goes into spin it shakes so much it pulls it out of its space. I am thinking the concrete is not as heavy as the older models. I have the older model on standby and would not bother replacing any parts on the wma30 as i prefer the ‘proper’ Hotpoint 9506 which is how i remember how Hotpoints were. Sounds like it could be PCB but won’t worry about replacing it.
I guess your right about own brands, i don’t fill my car up with supermarket fuel so perhaps i shouldn’t use own brand detergent. I will still use liquids as i prefer them but i will buy a brand which ever is on offer as long as its branded and not Bold 2in1. I also keep a box of powder for maintenance washes which i do once a month maybe more if i am washing heavily soiled items.
Do you find Optical brighteners affect your ezcema? I did have a reaction to a detergent once i think it was Bold and reacted to Tesco own brand 2in1 and wondered if it was these brighteners? I do think buying the colour liquids a pain as they are same as the ordinary liquids. The manufacturers treating the customer as stupid again it sometimes feels with all these gimmicks and rubbish they keep launching.
All the Best
Simon
5 replies Oh Dear: I've just checked on about 12 different Which? reviews ranging from Candy, Hoover, Hotpoint, LG, Miele to Bosh and every washing machine I tried has got 4 out of 5 stars for rinsing efficiency - even one that said in the cons "disappointing cottons rinse". So it seems that 3 years after writing this article Which? no longer rates most washing machines as poor at rinsing. However, checking the actual reviews shows they still criticise many for poor rinsing or say they are only average, they just don't seem to reflect this so well on their 5 star rating system. On the basis of this I'll withdraw my recommendation of the Indesit WIXE127 being one of a rare breed that rinses well although Which? do comment that they think it rinses above average, it's just that they've given it 4 stars, the same as most of the other washing machines where they haven't highlighted their excellent rinse results. It's all completely confusing and inconsistent.
Oh Dear: I’ve just checked on about 12 different Which? reviews ranging from Candy, Hoover, Hotpoint, LG, Miele to Bosh and every washing machine I tried has got 4 out of 5 stars for rinsing efficiency – even one that said in the cons “disappointing cottons rinse”.
So it seems that 3 years after writing this article Which? no longer rates most washing machines as poor at rinsing. However, checking the actual reviews shows they still criticise many for poor rinsing or say they are only average, they just don’t seem to reflect this so well on their 5 star rating system.
On the basis of this I’ll withdraw my recommendation of the Indesit WIXE127 being one of a rare breed that rinses well although Which? do comment that they think it rinses above average, it’s just that they’ve given it 4 stars, the same as most of the other washing machines where they haven’t highlighted their excellent rinse results. It’s all completely confusing and inconsistent.
Likely replying to Washerhelp
@Washerhelp I strongly recommend you contact Which? and ask them what’s going on. Do Which? know about this blog topic (that’s still going strong after nearly 3 years)?
Did I mention that when I rinse clothes in lots of warm water – I live in a “hard water” area? Perhaps also cold water rinses a little better in the summer, compared to cold water in the middle of winter due to the temperature difference?
As for Which? – they are advising people to do the same as me, that is re-rinsing. On one “Best Buy” Hotpoint, I quote from the Which? website:
“Unfortunately the cotton rinse isn’t nearly as impressive – it’s poor and leaves too much detergent behind on your clothes. You can’t add an extra rinse to the programs, either, so if you suffer from sensitive skin you may need to run a separate rinse after your washing has finished.”
I will always believe that warm water rinsing works better in some way as I’ve seen the results from the amount of foam in my washing machine on the 40C quickwash without detergent, despite the 3rd ‘normal’ rinse before that showing no foam (fabric conditioner is not used until second time round i.e. after warm rinsing). I’ve also noticed warm rinsing helped when I was soaking a mug with bleach, I was able to rinse it out much quicker with water from the hot tap and the smell of bleach disappeared fast. If I was using cold water, I would have to use more water and rinse the mug for a bit longer.
Likely replying to WMUser
Hi WMUser,
It looks like the warm rinse is removing detergent from the washing machine opposed to your laundry. This will also apply if you add water, which you say you add between 7-10 jugs fulls of hot water, so the water is going where it previously hasn’t and so shows up soapy. The load my be rinsed just fine using only cold water.
Oliver.
Likely replying to Oliver Shaw
@Oliver Shaw next time I do the washing, I will go to the trouble of adding jugfuls of cold water to the 3rd rinse of the normal cotton cycle to get a high water level. When I re-rinse using the quickwash at 40C, I will add the same amount of warm water to match the level of cold water added previously.
If I notice lots of suds during the warm rinse, then it proves that warm water must be doing something different to the cold water. Here’s an interesting link to a physics forum about warm water rinsing, not too much to read:
https://www.physicsforums.com/threads/warm-water-rinse-superior.83943/
Hope that helps.
Likely replying to Oliver Shaw
Hello Oliver,
After all the issues with rinsing i have found a final solution to my rinsing problems- Ecover biological liquid! Leaves no residue at all and i do not have to set the ‘Super Rinse’ button! I find even Persil Small and Mighty very very difficult to rinse out which i find odd as i thought liquids were supposed to be easier. It doesn’t foam too bad but it takes about 6 hand rinses to sufficiently to get rid of the soap. I never remember detergents so difficult to get rid of, they must have changed them as the cleaning performance is not as good and takes so much water to neutralise the solution. They were much better at cleaning back in the 90’s imo. The only stain remover i would ever consider buying for impossible stains is Shout or SA8 by Amway. The rest don’t work! How do they get away with selling things that don’t work?
Anyone see the new Ariel range of stain removers and additives lately in supermarkets? More rubbish aimed at a gullable public lol.
All the best
Simon
Likely replying to simon smith
Hi Simon,
I’m glad you have found a solution. Ecover seem to have improved their products massivley recently, so if it rinse out easily that is the icing on the cake!
I too feel detergents have become more of a challenge to rinse out, they just keep trying to make them better, by doing so they seem to easily over foam and as you say do not rinse out easily at all.
I agree on Shout, the only spray stain remover I buy, which I rarley use and is as you point out the only one that works. Not seen the Ariel stain removers, but won’t be buying any either!
All the best,
Oliver.
4 replies From what i have found is liquids and liqui-tabs are the worst for rinsing out. I now stick to powders because like Oliver says they clean the best plus they have all the technology to look after your machine. I can think of better ways of saving water like having a shower instead of a bath. It is fact you need lots of water to get clothes cleaned in both the wash and rinse processes. Plus you can always save the water from your washing machine. By law detergents have to be biodegradeable and there is a lot of misinformation out there. Ecover for example still contains some dubious chemicals. It is more eco-friendly to wash at a lower temperature and use Ariel, Persil or Daz than wash at high temperatures using Ecover etc. I use Ariel at the moment as it was on special offer and the rinsing is excellent but only if i top up the water level in the final rinse. I think my Hotpoint WMA30 is about 15 years old now but is still a lot better than the modern rubbish. I was actually told it was a Bosch (hotpoint engineer told me) which might explain why its lasted 15 years! Stear clear from own brand and 'eco friendly' detergents you will end up ruining your machine as they do not contain the additives that keep a machine clean and limescale free. Quick wash programmes are not wash programmes and are designed for things that have not been worn next to the skin. Hope you find that useful Nina. All the best Simon
From what i have found is liquids and liqui-tabs are the worst for rinsing out. I now stick to powders because like Oliver says they clean the best plus they have all the technology to look after your machine. I can think of better ways of saving water like having a shower instead of a bath. It is fact you need lots of water to get clothes cleaned in both the wash and rinse processes. Plus you can always save the water from your washing machine. By law detergents have to be biodegradeable and there is a lot of misinformation out there. Ecover for example still contains some dubious chemicals. It is more eco-friendly to wash at a lower temperature and use Ariel, Persil or Daz than wash at high temperatures using Ecover etc. I use Ariel at the moment as it was on special offer and the rinsing is excellent but only if i top up the water level in the final rinse. I think my Hotpoint WMA30 is about 15 years old now but is still a lot better than the modern rubbish. I was actually told it was a Bosch (hotpoint engineer told me) which might explain why its lasted 15 years!
Stear clear from own brand and ‘eco friendly’ detergents you will end up ruining your machine as they do not contain the additives that keep a machine clean and limescale free.
Quick wash programmes are not wash programmes and are designed for things that have not been worn next to the skin. Hope you find that useful Nina.
All the best
Simon
Likely replying to Oliver Shaw
Thank you Oliver for your great input albeit it’s made me regret buying the Miele W5740 even more now and wishing I had bought the ISE10!! The biggest trouble with ISE10 is the lack of info bar forums generally (I’ve yet to find one friend, family member, etc that has ever heard of them let alone used them) and also the lack of cover. 3 engineers in 25 mile proximity refused to cover my area as a general rule although one said he might be able to complete the purchase/sale. The last one that could have done both which was County dometic Supplies was so masiively busy it took me nbearly a week to get any response from him at all. As you can imagine this didn’t instill much confidence in my wife at all. Sad that what seems to be a bombproof machine is not marketed or backed up particularly well imho.
Oliver I would ask what you regard as rinse properly? What test is there to say it’s been rinsed properly. I am assuming you suffer from extremely sensitive skin which fortunately the majority of us don’t therefore the not 100% rinse capability of a machine might not be as much of an issue.
However my hope insanely was to get the backing of buying the Miele and not further regretting not buying an ISE10 sadly this is not the case.
Likely replying to Damian
Damian,
Don’t worry about your new Miele, it will most probably be perfectly fine for you. I have the water plus option on my model set for water plus and extra rinse, but have to say I only use this for maybe 25% of loads – mainly towels or heavier loads of clothes with hoodies jeans etc, the standard rinsing is just fine for me, and my skin is sensitive… my hands will react badly to washing up liquid, I will break out if I don’t use a sensitive shower gel, deoderant, shaving foam etc – and I use run of the mill Ariel or Persil bio/colour. Just to point out, mine is also one of the less water thirsty models that were sold about 6 years ago, only does 2 rinses as standard though the level will vary with the type of load, the newer ones such as my mum’s will do 3 deeper rinses if you select a temperature below 60*C. Remember your Miele will also adapt the rinse cycle to the load, if it’s a smaller load it won’t rinse for as long, and the larger a load is the longer the time it will spend in the rinses as well as more water – and unlike a lot of washers sold today pressing Short will only shorten the length of the mainwash cycle, it won’t affect the rinse cycles.
Both of the latest formulas of Ariel and Persil rinse out fine for me, providing the right amount is dosed i.e. not 2 tonnes of powder per wash… I’d be the first to complain if it didn’t wash/rinse to satisfaction.
Jon
Likely replying to Damian
Hi Damian,
The machine you have chosen is a super machine and you have no need to regret buying it.
My Mum has a domestic Miele condenser dryer and the build is superb, it drys quicker than any other condenser and the results are perfect everytime. I cannot compare her washer with yours, as Mums is a fully commercial model.
The rinse properly bit is not being able to remove detergent residue in a sink full of hot water and the final rinse in the machine been free from detergent and the water be crystal clear. As I say above both the ISE10 (which I have set to 7 rinses) and the Miele (set to 5 rinses) achieve perfectly everytime. Also my skin tells me what rinses well and what doesn’t!
In my opinion Miele make better products than Asko, Asko are not far short, but I do not think they are a direct comparison.
All the best,
Oliver.
4 replies I recently started using the Persil non bio small and mighty liquid after using the Persil non bio tablets for years. It was on offer so I bought loads of it thinking it would be the same as the tablets. After a couple of weeks of using it (I only actually use half the recommended dose) we have all started itching, mainly in the areas that the clothing is in constant contact to the skin. I also noticed that the clothes smell really strong of the wash liquid when they come out the washer, even though I use comfort pure fabric softener. I sometimes noticed white residue with the tablets but not this itching. Surely this non bio liquid could cause this reaction? I even use intense wash programme and never wash in a temperature less than 40. Can someone give me some advice please as I have bought bottles of the stuff!
I recently started using the Persil non bio small and mighty liquid after using the Persil non bio tablets for years. It was on offer so I bought loads of it thinking it would be the same as the tablets. After a couple of weeks of using it (I only actually use half the recommended dose) we have all started itching, mainly in the areas that the clothing is in constant contact to the skin. I also noticed that the clothes smell really strong of the wash liquid when they come out the washer, even though I use comfort pure fabric softener. I sometimes noticed white residue with the tablets but not this itching. Surely this non bio liquid could cause this reaction? I even use intense wash programme and never wash in a temperature less than 40. Can someone give me some advice please as I have bought bottles of the stuff!
Likely replying to Gina Clarke
@Gina Clarke
Liquid, tablet and powder detergents will stay in the fabrics unless extra rinsing is performed manually.
The comfort pure fabric softener will only hide the soap bubbles – it will NOT help to remove detergent.
I suggest you follow the rinsing advice in comment #460 above – it’s mentioned in there after the first paragraph. Please post again if your situation improves.
Likely replying to WMUser
Hi WMUser,
In this case it is different.
If before the powdered tablet would leave a little residue and not irritate Gina and her family, it is not the detergent. It is the perfume, all liquids make laundry much more perfumed than their tablet/powdered equivilent.
It will take many many rinses to clear the perfume from any liquid as it is so tennacious!
Oliver.
Likely replying to Oliver Shaw
@Oliver Shaw, comment #479, that sounds brilliant!
If or when I own an ISE in future, I would have it plumbed into the warm water supply via a TMV ~35C, which would be easy to accomplish if the Zanussi was moved out of the way, so all the rinses are in warm water and soap perfumes get removed completely, even from towels. If you have to use half the recommended detergent with the ISE, I would definitely advise people in “hard water” areas to use a heaped tablespoon of soda crystals to soften the water – limescale will damage washing machines!! I always use less detergent than recommended and I don’t have problems with cleaning performance. The only time I would use the recommended amount is for washing very dirty items.
Thanks for posting the review Oliver. :)
Likely replying to Gina Clarke
Hi Gina,
The only option is additional rinse cycles. Liquids by nature smell stronger and retain the smell much better than powder or the hard pressed tablets. Can you not take it back to the shop or at least swap it for tablets?
It will be the perfume causing the itching opposed to anything else.
HTH,
Oliver.
4 replies Reactions to detergents and their ingredients are caused by it not being completed rinsed off, regardless of the brand and whatever it contains. If your washing has any scent of detergent when you unload the drum, it needs more rinsing. I don't think people realise just how much soap gets left behind unrinsed! Rinsing in warm water preferably and not putting detergent in the soap drawer will help with any extra rinsing performed manually. If the detergent and its chemicals are completely rinsed away, there won't be any allergic reaction. Fabric conditioners with added perfumes can also cause skin reactions. The only softener I'm aware of that does not have any added perfumes is Surcare. It's definitely worth making sure old detergent is cleared out of the washing machine - including the soap drawer and its surrounding - by performing a maintenance wash using something other than more detergent e.g. Affresh. As for PCB's - they seem to go wrong more often than the old mechanical timers! If washing machine manufacturers knew that electrical surges can damage electronics, I'm sure they would incorporate internal surge protectors. They sell surge protector multi-plugs for computers and expensive electronic equipment for precisely that reason. Hope that helps.
Reactions to detergents and their ingredients are caused by it not being completed rinsed off, regardless of the brand and whatever it contains.
If your washing has any scent of detergent when you unload the drum, it needs more rinsing. I don’t think people realise just how much soap gets left behind unrinsed! Rinsing in warm water preferably and not putting detergent in the soap drawer will help with any extra rinsing performed manually.
If the detergent and its chemicals are completely rinsed away, there won’t be any allergic reaction. Fabric conditioners with added perfumes can also cause skin reactions. The only softener I’m aware of that does not have any added perfumes is Surcare.
It’s definitely worth making sure old detergent is cleared out of the washing machine – including the soap drawer and its surrounding – by performing a maintenance wash using something other than more detergent e.g. Affresh.
As for PCB’s – they seem to go wrong more often than the old mechanical timers! If washing machine manufacturers knew that electrical surges can damage electronics, I’m sure they would incorporate internal surge protectors. They sell surge protector multi-plugs for computers and expensive electronic equipment for precisely that reason.
Hope that helps.
Likely replying to simon smith
@Simon Smith
I don’t have problems with optical brighteners or anything fancy they add to detergents as I take extra care to make sure every trace of it is rinsed away. This is where plenty of water is needed on every rinse, preferably warm water. As you are using Persil tablets, I would suggest you take extra care to make sure they dissolve quickly and to leave a good hands-width between the top of the washing and the top of the drum when loading the laundry, otherwise the tablets can leave white marks on the clothes.
Reading your earlier comment #447 about the washing machine shaking so much. Is it completely level and have you adjusted the screw-legs on the washing machine and checked it is completely level diagonally with a spirit level?
Likely replying to WMUser
Hi WMUser,
You CANNOT rinse out optical brighteners at all, hence Simon’s concern.
Once your clothing has come into contact with them only once no matter how hard you try they cannot be removed with any quantity/temperature of water. There is also no chemical that can remove them either. They form a permanant bond with the fabric and are there for the life of the garment.
Oliver.
Likely replying to simon smith
Hi Simon,
First of all I am not entirley sure if optical brighteners affect my eczema as my skin is never quite perfect especially at this time of year outside in the cold etc. But last summer I didn’t have too much trouble so at a guess I would say no.
There are several things that can cause a washing machine to shake, but before I suggest any I would have to be sure where the clicking is coming from, the best bet is to drag your machine out and do a wash as normal then when you hear it clicking trace the noise from outside the cabinet. The pump on a WMA is at the rear left in the bottom of the cabinet as you look from the front. When I know that it should point to the trouble.
All the best,
Oliver.
4 replies I am over the moon that i found this website. The problem in all this is that people wash more these days and the eco washing mashines had to be invented to help reducing pollution. I think that the problem is not only in rinsing cycles but also in washing cycle. i have a washing maschine in my rented appartment in which you cannot see the water durring the washing cycle and at the beginning of each rinsing cycle. i end up pouring a bucket and half of water in my washing maching each time and i rinse it several time after the cycle is finished which means that the automatic washing mashine becomes half automatic really. I add water for the wash cycle mainly so my clothes does not rub against each other but against the soapy water which prevents the clothes being ruined after few washes. the saddest thing is that manufacturers are promoting their water reducing technologies as their selling point because most consumers will want to know how much they can save and not how good it will wash and rinse. the manual for the washing machine in my appartment says that the reason why i cannot see any water durring the washing cycle is because they have managed to reduce the water usage by half using new technologies. very proud, well done, haha! are people really that thick? Please moderate the comment if neccesary, English is not my first language.
I am over the moon that i found this website. The problem in all this is that people wash more these days and the eco washing mashines had to be invented to help reducing pollution. I think that the problem is not only in rinsing cycles but also in washing cycle. i have a washing maschine in my rented appartment in which you cannot see the water durring the washing cycle and at the beginning of each rinsing cycle. i end up pouring a bucket and half of water in my washing maching each time and i rinse it several time after the cycle is finished which means that the automatic washing mashine becomes half automatic really. I add water for the wash cycle mainly so my clothes does not rub against each other but against the soapy water which prevents the clothes being ruined after few washes. the saddest thing is that manufacturers are promoting their water reducing technologies as their selling point because most consumers will want to know how much they can save and not how good it will wash and rinse. the manual for the washing machine in my appartment says that the reason why i cannot see any water durring the washing cycle is because they have managed to reduce the water usage by half
using new technologies. very proud, well done, haha! are people really that thick?
Please moderate the comment if neccesary, English is not my first language.
Likely replying to Mira
@Mira, well done for adding the extra water!! All this “water saving” nonsense causes no end of problems; it’s a fictitious reality of “running out” of water by using enough to actually wash and rinse clothes properly.
Oliver, I checked out that link. If only I could have the washing machine pulled out and have work done on the plumbing. Instead, I have a plastic ball with magnets inside which stays in the drum. I don’t know if it’s making any difference to the limescale particles and I’m still adding soda crystals to the main wash to physically soften the water and thus reduce the “wear and tear” on the clothes. On that same page you link to Oliver, I’m surprised to see descaler for dishwashers – dishwashers should never suffer from limescale problems as the built-in water softener combats this (sorry to go off topic here, that’s a question for an engineer of dishwashers to answer).
I don’t know if soft water versus hard water improves or alters rinsing in washing machines. Has anyone noticed a difference in washing and rinsing quality after moving from a “hard water” area to a “soft water” area – or vice-versa?
I’m still more convinced that warm or hot water rinses better. I know the extra weight of 1/2 a drum of water may strain the washing machine, however you can safely add 1/3 of a drum of hot water in two separate rinses and it’s ok for non-delicates.
Likely replying to WMUser
Hi WMUser and Mira,
First of all hard water versus soft water for rinsing, you need more detergent to remove the limescale from the water if it is hard as Mira points out, however hard water also kills detergent alot better than soft, this is why you need a hell of a lot less for soft water. Also soft water is not as good at removing detergent, but as you need less in the first place, this is irrelevant. Its horses for courses really. Same result in the end.
The magnetic balls do not work simply because they are thrown in the drum with the washing. For a magnetic field to correctly soften the water ALL the water has to flow THROUGH the field, the device I linked to does exactly this. Your friend Mira has probably used the correct amount of detergent over the machines life, hence the lack of limescale. I have seen scaled up machines from people using these balls.
To fit the Calblock device to the machine there is no plumbling involved, turn the water off at the tap, unscrew the washing machines fill hose, screw the Calblock device on to the tap, then screw the fill hose on to the Calblock, turn the water back on and if there are no leaks you are back in business, its a 2 minute job tops.
Regarding dishwashers scaling up, if the water softener is not set up correctly (they have multiple positions) then there will not be enough brine in the water to neutralise the scale, hence the machine scaling up, this is a VERY common occourance as people do not read insrtuctions properly or at all. Secondly not filling the salt reservoir often enough, so it is not always using it in every load will scale it up eventually. And lastly those stupid whatever in one tablets do not work, they do not do what they say on the box, so also scale damage can occour. The best way is seperate salt and detergent and set the machine to the water conditions in your area for a trouble free wash. We have never had an ounce of scale build up in the 4 and a 1/2 years we have had our dishwasher as when we got it I set the water softener up correctly, bearing in mind it does about 10 loads a week and it is on the hot water supply thats not bad at all. our water is fairly soft though.
All the best,
Oliver.
Likely replying to Oliver Shaw
Hi Oliver,
You made some interesting points there and they make sense too. I will let my friend know about the ball.
Does anyone know of any better brand washing machine that uses more water than the new eco friendly ones? My brother is looking for a new wasching machine to buy. I used to have a washing machine that was eco friendly but had a special program that used twice as much water compared to the rest of the programs. With variable temperatures it may be the best bet these days. I can’t remember the name of it.
Oh, and does anyone know whether those “diamond” drums are any good? Mielle machines have them but I am not convinced wether they make any difference.
Likely replying to Mira
Hi Mira,
Miele have a-Water Plus option that increases the water level to 1/3 up the door for rinsing and just lapping at the bottom of the glass on wash. However most Miele machines only do 2 rinses, which is not sufficient at all. Some have the option to add a third rinse but they still do not rinse properly. This is the highest available water use currently on the domestic market.
The Diamond drums are off the Samsung range of washing machines and are just a blatant copy of Miele’s Honeycomb drum, and as far as I can tell they make absolutely NO difference, just another selling point!
My parents have a Miele tumble drier in stainless steel, they have only had it a few weeks and that to has a-Honey-Comb drum and frankly the laundry coming out feels exactly the same as the laundry coming out of my White-Knight. We have all agreed it makes no difference and Miele are just trying to get people sucked in to buying their products. Don’t get me wrong though it is an excellent machine well worth the £1399.99 asking price!
All the best,
Oliver.
3 replies Nikki: I would have thought shortening the pressure tubing hose would decrease the amount of water getting into the washing machine. The longer it is, the more pressure (and therefore more water) would be needed to switch over the pressure switch, and the shorter the hose the less pressure needed.
Nikki: I would have thought shortening the pressure tubing hose would decrease the amount of water getting into the washing machine. The longer it is, the more pressure (and therefore more water) would be needed to switch over the pressure switch, and the shorter the hose the less pressure needed.
Likely replying to Washerhelp
Hello Washerhelp
The shortening of the pressure tubing was the idea of a Miele engineer in response to our complaints. I guess the way it works is that the water level needs to be much higher before the tube even makes contact with the water? It seems to work because the water can be nearly half way up the window.
Thanks to WMUser for the suggestion of trying his home made recipe. The only disadvantage of Ecover powder is that it is OK for routine washing but not so good for more persistent stains so I have to resort to using Vanish sometimes. I do not however need to do any extra rinses. How much does it cost per Kg to make your home made recipe?
Likely replying to NIKKI JENKINS
Hello Nikki: If the Miele engineer suggested it I’m surprised because they can adjust the levels of water that go into a Miele washing machine by plugging in their laptop.
The way the pressure system works is that as water rises in the drum it also fills a pressure chamber, which is essentially a plastic bottle. As water rises inside this bottle it forces air up the thin pressure tubing attached to the top. The air pressure is eventually strong enough to switch the pressure switch.
If the pressure tubing was twice as long it should need a lot more water in to force enough air up the tube to switch the pressure switch. If the pressure tubing was half as long I would expect it should need less water to switch the switch over. It’s just the same principle as if you were to blow up a tube to create enough air pressure to switch a pressure switch on. I would have thought the longer the tube, the harder you’d need to blow.
Likely replying to NIKKI JENKINS
@NIKKI JENKINS
The price per kg varies, depending on where you buy these 4 ingredients and I’m looking into buying them in bulk, if that works out cheaper. I got the idea to make this mixture from reading about it on the page about soda crystals on the whitegoodshelp site:
https://www.whitegoodshelp.co.uk/wordpress/soda-crystals-and-washing-machines/
According to the comments on that page by “Darryl”, if you can buy these items bulk, it can work out at about 6 or 7p per wash, although that was over a year ago now.
When making this mixture, you will use a whole bag of soda crystals and a whole bag of borax substitute, so these 2 items will need buying in bulk more often than the liquid soap flakes and oxygen bleach – the latter two need just 2 tablespoons each time the mixture is made.
I’m sure in the long run that making this mixture is much cheaper than using ordinary detergents like Ariel, Persil etc. and not to mention that this home made mixture rinses off easier, so you will save on water costs if you have a water meter and your washing machine will not be working harder with extra programmes used just for rinsing, so it should mean less chance of it breaking down. The cost savings take all of this into account. In my previous comment I say I no longer run the cycles which reduce the time for smaller loads – I used to run these shorter cycles because later I would have to run entire programmes just for rinsing, but now that’s no longer necessary. Adding up to 6 jugfuls of warm water in the final rinse, which takes up about four minutes of my time, is much quicker than waiting for an entire extra programme to finish. I can definitely say that ordinary laundry detergents do not rinse off easily and they foam too much! The foam just never seems to rinse away unless it settles after about an hour of being left idle and then the water drained out.
3 replies WMUSER Thanks for your comments they were a big help to me and reassured me on the home made detergent . Can you tell me what recipe you used for your home made laundry detergent ,I have been on "you tube" were they grate a bar of soap and mix it with borax and soda crystals, another adds baking soda, and the DP site here uses flakes and how much did you use as they say 1 table spoon is enough . Gemma
WMUSER
Thanks for your comments they were a big help to me and reassured me on the home made detergent .
Can you tell me what recipe you used for your home made laundry detergent ,I have been on “you tube” were they grate a bar of soap and mix it with borax and soda crystals, another adds baking soda, and the DP site here uses flakes and how much did you use as they say 1 table spoon is enough .
Gemma
Likely replying to Gemma johnson
@Gemma and @Judy
I’ve not had any skin reactions so far from the “home made” mixture. Below is the video link which shows you how quick and easy it is to make, but substitute the box of soap flakes for LIQUID soap flakes, because the liquid soap flakes will not foam, whereas the ordinary soap flakes will generate too much foam! I have 2 plastic cereal containers with this mixture, one is labelled “whites” and has the oxygen bleach and the other is labelled “colours” and does not have the oxygen bleach, to avoid fading dark colours like black.
Use about half a mugful for a full load of roughly 6 – 7KG, more if the load is larger or dirtier. I pour this stuff on top of the clothes, spreading it from the back to the front. I don’t pour it into the soap drawer as it will get very mucky. Don’t be surprised if you see little or no foam – lack of foam is a good thing when it comes to rinsing!
This mixture will also soften hard water. It works best at 40C and above, but if you used liquid soap flakes you can still wash cooler than 40C for delicates which need a lower temperature, but use the mixture WITHOUT the oxygen bleach for delicates. If others in the household will use the washing machine, you may want to label the “whites” mixture with extra wording like “not for wool or silk” to avoid accidents.
I will look into buying this stuff in bulk online to save money in the long run, especially the soda crystals and borax substitute – as you will use more of these than the liquid soap flakes and oxygen bleach.
Before I forget… I suggest cleaning the washing machine inside to remove old detergent residue. First clean the soap drawer and its inner surrounding, clean the filter (if your machine has one) and re-fit the filter tight, then run the washing machine EMPTY on a 90C or 95C programme, without pre-wash, using about 1/3 of a mugful of the mixture with oxygen bleach.
Hope that helps.
Likely replying to WMUser
@WMUser
Thank you for your web-link re home-made washing powder. As for buying the ingredients bulk it may work out cheaper, so you could Google for Janitorial Supplies to see if any of them stock all the ingredients? Remember to check the postal fees before you buy.
As for cleaning my automatic: I always use a little diluted white vinegar in a spray and a toothbrush (NOT the same one as I use on teeth, grin) to clean all round the washing powder drawer. Plus I run a 90c program with just half a mug of white vinegar, then leave the drawer and door open to air the machine.
Basically, mildew thrives in any damp and warm environment, so the more you wash at low temperatures the more mildew will junk up the machine, the damp spoils then rub off on to the clean laundry. Damp spoils in laundry will effect people suffering from Asthma. So the combination of low water consumption machines, with low temperature washes and biological laundry powder will create an absolute haven for mildew. BBC watchdog had no end of bad reports about the automatic Indesit Moon, being a smelly machine due to constant mildew. It turned out that machine did not have any high temperature wash programs, not even 60 C, hence all customers were complaining of mildew. Even more troubling, is the fact all manufactures science and research departments are aware of what causes mildew, and that it is detrimental to human health. So why are they pushing machines and methods that produce it?
Who would have thought that trying to do a simple wash, could involve so much science? Lol It makes you wonder how our ancestors managed, without all the modern science and technology..perhaps a lot better.
kind regards
Judy
Likely replying to Judy
Hi Judy,
Thanks for the information regarding twin tubs. I haven’t bought one yet but have decided to buy a spin dryer like White Knight (Made in UK!) as i do think that will remove more residue than my machine does even on 1200 spin. I found my old machine got things drier at 800rpm.
Ben
3 replies I've just ordered a Miele W5740 but had considered the ISE10 1607W. I am now concerned I've made the wrong choice and infact I should have gone down the ISE route. There just does not seem to be enough people that have gone that way so despite some great marketing and some great reviews I'm still a little circumspect about it but I have a feeling the Miele is going to cause issues after the 10yr warranty is up with their overly expensive repairs and parts! :-( Can anyone put my mind at rest or I have I just bought a longer term more expensive machine :-(
I’ve just ordered a Miele W5740 but had considered the ISE10 1607W. I am now concerned I’ve made the wrong choice and infact I should have gone down the ISE route. There just does not seem to be enough people that have gone that way so despite some great marketing and some great reviews I’m still a little circumspect about it but I have a feeling the Miele is going to cause issues after the 10yr warranty is up with their overly expensive repairs and parts! :-(
Can anyone put my mind at rest or I have I just bought a longer term more expensive machine :-(
Likely replying to Damian
@Damian
I hear that all Miele washing machines have a “Water Plus” system, which can be configured (the “how to” will be in the instruction booklet) to add extra water and possibly add more water to the main wash too? Please check you configure the “Water Plus” to ensure maximum water intake, so your clothes get rinsed better – or I should say “properly” lol. If water plus is not configured, the Miele will behave as all modern washing machines have to by default i.e. use very little water to be “eco friendly”, which we know is not ideal.
Likely replying to WMUser
Cheers WMuser: My Miele W3740 has three programmable options regarding the Water Plus setting you mention.
Water + is set by default, where “the water level is increased in the wash and rinse stages”.
This can be altered to “Extra Rinse”, where an extra rinse is introduced on cottons and minimum iron – but presumable this option would result in reduced water being used in wash and rinses.
The third option is to have both – “Water + & Extra Rinse”. Personally we have not needed to experiment with these options as the rinsing (as stated previously) is perfectly adequate for us but it’s great to have such options if rinsing is a critical issue as it is for some as clearly defined in these comments ;-)
Likely replying to WMUser
Hi WMUser,
All Miele domestic have Water Plus, however even selected with an extra rinse the machine will only perform 3 rinses. I can inform everybody that a domestic Miele will not rinse properly even with all the options selected.
The statement I made above about my Mums new Miele doesn’t apply. You must remember Mums machine is Commercial, so has water plus, but has variable rinses between 2 and 5. Also it has options in re-programme mode to add water to the wash in 10mm increments. Water use on a Commercial machine is not regulated by stupid A ratings, so by nature it rinses properly.
All the best,
Oliver.
3 replies Thanks for the info about the bearings Oliver. It's so very sad that by adding extra water to a modern washing machine to get your clothes rinsed properly, it could be putting a bit more strain on the suspension and springs. I don't care, I'd rather not itch and not have my clothing smell very strongly of detergent. As for the 1600rpm spin, the quickwash re-rinse only spins at this speed for about 1 minute and the clothes are just as well spun as they would be if I run the standard cotton programme with the 1600rpm speed - which spins for ages! For that reason, I lower the spin speed to 900 for the main cotton programme, then have it set to 1600 for the final spin of the re-rinse "quick wash". You and Simon Smith both say you can smell a faint smell of the detergent after rinsing in lots of cold water. I wonder why I'm having difficulty smelling *any* detergent fragrance after rinsing in plenty of warm water? Unless my sense of smell isn't very good?? That said, before I discovered this page, my washing used to smell strongly of the detergent's perfume and you couldn't help but to notice the fragrances! Obviously my re-rinsing and warm water method must be working and my skin is better now than it's ever been. My clothes feel much softer now too, that's using the same amount of fabric softener.
Thanks for the info about the bearings Oliver. It’s so very sad that by adding extra water to a modern washing machine to get your clothes rinsed properly, it could be putting a bit more strain on the suspension and springs. I don’t care, I’d rather not itch and not have my clothing smell very strongly of detergent. As for the 1600rpm spin, the quickwash re-rinse only spins at this speed for about 1 minute and the clothes are just as well spun as they would be if I run the standard cotton programme with the 1600rpm speed – which spins for ages! For that reason, I lower the spin speed to 900 for the main cotton programme, then have it set to 1600 for the final spin of the re-rinse “quick wash”.
You and Simon Smith both say you can smell a faint smell of the detergent after rinsing in lots of cold water. I wonder why I’m having difficulty smelling *any* detergent fragrance after rinsing in plenty of warm water? Unless my sense of smell isn’t very good?? That said, before I discovered this page, my washing used to smell strongly of the detergent’s perfume and you couldn’t help but to notice the fragrances! Obviously my re-rinsing and warm water method must be working and my skin is better now than it’s ever been. My clothes feel much softer now too, that’s using the same amount of fabric softener.
Likely replying to WMUser
Hi WMUser,
The first thing I can tell you is I have a VERY keen sense of smell, which is a pain, I hate the smell of all laundry products and shower gels and bath products etc. I also smell some horrors in my job and believe me it ain’t pleasant! I often report smells nobody else can smell and people think I’m imaging it!
The second thing is I do not use any kind of fabric conditioner, and as far as I know neither does Simon, Surcare may not have a perfume but it still coats the fibres in oil, so could hide a faint smell of detergent. Also you have never told us what kind and format of detergent you actually use, knowing that may provide the answer you are looking for.
My excema and dermatitis are not affected at all by the washing anymore, if there was any detergent residue left my skin would tell me, the perfume is suppost to heave when you take your laundry out of the machine, so the faint smell does tell you how well things are rinsed considering how strong Persil smells when its in the box.
I certainly don’t doubt for a second that your re-rinsing and warm water rinsing are working, in fact quite the opposite, like you say your skin tells you, its like having a sixth sense!
All the best,
Oliver.
Likely replying to Oliver Shaw
Hi Oliver, I now use Ariel powder, one for colours and the other one for whites (the latter being in a green box which has the oxygen bleach in its ingredients). I’ve used Persil in the past, but I’ve heard Ariel may be a bit better – I don’t think anyone can go wrong with either Ariel or Persil as any laundry detergent needs plenty of water to rinse it off properly. But I’ve noticed they foam more now than they used to on small loads, so have to use less, which I find works.
I like soft clothes and never had any problems with Surcare softener. I like my washing feeling very soft, I can’t stand even the slightest feeling of roughness on fabrics. I don’t care about the oily film the softener may leave in the laundry and washing machine as it should get washed away in the next wash and regular maintenance washes will keep the inside of the washing machine clear of everything.
As you will know from reading my earlier comments, I use soda crystals (aka washing soda) in every wash as I live in a “hard water” area and sometimes if I have to wash small loads, therefore I can safely use less powder to avoid foaming and not worry about limescale – which is a CONSTANT nuisance!
The smell of perfumes are no longer there now that I re-rinse my washing and make sure I’m using plenty of WARM water. Before I discovered how much detergent gets left behind in the clothes, I was using fabric conditioner and the perfume smell was strong, then as I tried various methods of adding more cold water, running water-guzzling programmes without detergent etc and the smell became much less. Since using LOTS of WARM water, the washing comes out not smelling of anything.
I don’t care about the bit of extra strain on the washing machine and around 5 – 10 minutes of time needed to add all this extra hot water – my skin needs clothes that are free from all these irritant chemicals in laundry detergent.
Likely replying to WMUser
Hi WMUser,
I used to use Ariel (and did for a long time)and found it did not make the laundry as perfumed as Persil, so combined with your re rinsing with a lot of warm water that explains the lack of perfume on the wash at the end of the cycle, also the use of the Surcare will help too I believe. I wonder if there would be a lingering smell from Persil if you tried that, the perfume is so strong in the box it nearly puts your lights out!!
I switched to Persil as I heard that Unilever detergents rinse out easier than proctor & Gambles offerings, whether that is true or not I wouldn’t like to say, however they do foam alot less. I find Persil cleans better, but I think this is down to my Bosch having very short wash cycles, so it is probably reacting faster than Ariel. But as you say Persil and Ariel are the two top performers. Daz and Bold are mediocore and Surf is just plain rubbish, it cannot even remove chip fat from a cotton jumper on a boil wash with a biological pre-wash. Ariel and Persil would have easily.
With regard to limescale, I have heard of a little magnetic attachment the fits between the cold water tap and the fill hose of the washing machine, I think it is made by Hotpoint. The sound an utter waste of time, however the physics involved does work and they have been proven to work by people in hard water areas and comments have been how much more the detergents etc. foam. So clearly they do soften the water. Its about £20.00 from memory. They work by rounding off the particles of limescale in the water, an normally they have jaggered edges and therefore stick, but once rounded off don’t stick and just get pumped down the drain.
All the best,
Oliver.
3 replies Washerhelp: I speak as I find ... believe me, for me that was mild !! However, I sincerely apologise if I caused offence. I am more than capable of intelligent debate, which is why I am going to ask you to please NOT take my statements out of context! I did indeed agree with you that the vast majority of people may be perfectly happy with their laundry rinsed in cold water ... but I went on to say that this may be due to ignorance, and may be due to the fact that most people use mainly synthetic fabrics. This does not mean that we should have to suffer machines not rinsing properly. As far as I know, towels are always cotton of some sort or another, and these absolutely are not rinsed properly in cold water. But by all means carry on burying your head in the sand, and claiming that cold water can rinse out detergent effectively. This is total nonsense and flies in the face of scientific FACT. But it's a free world, so please continue! I shall continue to state my point of view, and continue to warn everyone I can about this problem. I happen to be a medical secretary, and currently there is an "epidemic" of serious skin and other conditions that could well be related to the recent ridiculous EEC regulations, which all manufacturers have to adhere to apparently. Asthma is dramatically increasing, eczema and other skin problems, and although I believe those that say these can be caused by over-cleanliness in the home, there is also plenty of evidence pointing at detergents being one of the causes.
Washerhelp: I speak as I find … believe me, for me that was mild !! However, I sincerely apologise if I caused offence. I am more than capable of intelligent debate, which is why I am going to ask you to please NOT take my statements out of context! I did indeed agree with you that the vast majority of people may be perfectly happy with their laundry rinsed in cold water … but I went on to say that this may be due to ignorance, and may be due to the fact that most people use mainly synthetic fabrics. This does not mean that we should have to suffer machines not rinsing properly. As far as I know, towels are always cotton of some sort or another, and these absolutely are not rinsed properly in cold water.
But by all means carry on burying your head in the sand, and claiming that cold water can rinse out detergent effectively. This is total nonsense and flies in the face of scientific FACT. But it’s a free world, so please continue!
I shall continue to state my point of view, and continue to warn everyone I can about this problem. I happen to be a medical secretary, and currently there is an “epidemic” of serious skin and other conditions that could well be related to the recent ridiculous EEC regulations, which all manufacturers have to adhere to apparently. Asthma is dramatically increasing, eczema and other skin problems, and although I believe those that say these can be caused by over-cleanliness in the home, there is also plenty of evidence pointing at detergents being one of the causes.
Likely replying to Nikki Jenkins
Hi Nikki: No offence was taken, it was just a bit of a shock :-)
I haven’t taken your words out of context. You acknowledged that you accepted that most people are content with cold water rinsing, which is my premise for arguing there’s probably not a big enough demand for warm water rinsing. The fact that you went on to give reasons why you think they shouldn’t be content was irrelevant. The only thing that matters is that most people are apparently content with rinsing in cold water. And if they are, then there’s not a big enough demand for anything better – if it costs more.
The fact that warm water rinsing may be better, or even may even get rid of every trace of detergent is irrelevant if most people don’t have a problem with the level of rinsing via cold water.
The fact that something is “better” doesn’t automatically allow it to exist in a commercial market. To rinse in warm water, washing machines would have to carefully combine and monitor the temperature of hot and cold water during rinsing. They would need a redesign, extra parts, and they would also use more hot water, which will add to their initial cost, make them less reliable by adding more components and cost more to run. If all this could revolutionise the effectiveness of rinsing laundry all well and good but as I’ve stated before, if it could, why have they always used cold water and why haven’t manufacturers launched warm water models en mass with adverts saying how much better they rinse laundry? Manufacturers never miss a trick to try and persuade us their machine is better yet they all missed this one?
Most people don’t have a problem with rinsing in cold water because since they were invented in around 1800 nearly 200 years ago (with the modern front loader being invented in the 1950s – 60 years ago) they have always rinsed in cold water. To say that you cannot rinse laundry in cold water flies in the face of hundreds of years of history and experience. I’m sat right now in clothes rinsed in cold water and they are perfectly fine, all my clothes, and all the laundry of my family have always been rinsed in cold water and never given us a problem – so it’s just not plausible to say they aren’t adequately rinsed because clearly they are. By adequate I mean to satisfaction – not the exclusion of all traces of detergent.
I’ve never known any customer in 30 years of repairing them that complained their laundry wasn’t rinsing properly unless there was an actual fault on the machine accounting for it.
I can accept that warm water may be better, but that’s not what you are saying, you are saying only warm water can rinse laundry even though we’ve been rinsing in cold water for ever and even now, when washing machines are being slated by Which? tests as being poor at rinsing the majority of people seem content with results.
If modern washing machines are poor at rinsing, which is what this topic is about it’s because they are using less water, and not because they are using cold water. If it’s simply because they are using cold water then washing machines can never have rinsed to a standard customers would accept but they clearly have until very recently because they’ve reduced water consumption for rinses.
Likely replying to Nikki Jenkins
Hi Nikki,
You must be able to rinse properly with cold water, I did all your tests and could not remove a bubble from my towels, or other thick heavy items. You even admit this yourself in comment 247.
Reading comment 229, from Andy, the point about hot water exagerating the detergent, whereas cold water could be removing it just as well without causing it to show or soap up to the naked eye.
I don’t see how water temperature makes a difference, over the years when I was a kid we have had a few machines rinse perfectly well with cold water, and so have my Grandparents. If there was the tinyest trace of detergent left in my clothing my dermatitis and excema would immediatley react, so this is clear evedence that the older machines in question have rinsed properly.
Oliver.
Likely replying to Oliver Shaw
Thanks Oliver. I think the argument has developed because (as in most arguments) both parties are arguing about different things but believe they are arguing about the same thing.
No one can argue washing machines cannot possibly rinse adequately in cold water. Only if you are using the word “adequately” to mean perfectly could you argue that.
You might argue they can’t rinse “perfectly” or they can’t remove every last trace of detergent, or they can’t rinse to your particular exacting standards, but you can’t say it’s impossible to rinse in cold water because we’ve been doing so to the satisfaction of most people for centuries.
3 replies Simon: Biological enzymes are killed off at above 40 degrees and designed for cool washing. A maintenance wash needs to be using at least 60 degrees or even 90 so I believe normal powder detergent containing bleaching agents would be best. Normal Persil should be good. Likewise, biological detergent may not work as well on any wash over 40 degrees.
Simon: Biological enzymes are killed off at above 40 degrees and designed for cool washing. A maintenance wash needs to be using at least 60 degrees or even 90 so I believe normal powder detergent containing bleaching agents would be best. Normal Persil should be good. Likewise, biological detergent may not work as well on any wash over 40 degrees.
Likely replying to simon smith
Hi Simon,
Enzymes denature at 53 deg C exactly. So using a biological detergent for a maintenance wash is acceptable. Their wording means the detergent is suitable for all temperatures not the enzymes are active up to 95 deg C, this is one of the reasons why modern machines are cold fill only.
Oliver.
3 replies Oliver. I agree with your everything you say in your comment (#241). My washing machine takes way too long to finish the main wash. As I use a pre-wash to help with the later rinsing, that adds about another 20 minutes to the time. On the other extreme, the "quick" cycles are too short to be effective. Excessive washing and repetitive agitation just shortens the life of clothes. Long wash times are fine for REALLY dirty clothes. If someone has bought a new washing machine because the old one didn't wash things properly, then long wash times are fine for a few months, by which time the clothes should be thoroughly clean. This may be another reason why rinsing is so poor on modern washing machines? The long wash times create more foam - I notice it every time I wash the towels - I'm now considering using just HALF the MINIMUM dose of powder for towels, as slightly more just creates foam which hinders rinsing. During the first hour or so (whenever I get a chance to look), there's the usual small amount of bubbles, but towards the end of the wash, there's always too much foam. Yes, the "Shout" fabric stain remover is excellent. I shake the bottle, spray onto the stains and rub gently. Leave for just 10 minutes and wash. It works better than adding more detergent - which makes rinsing more of a challenge! If wash times were shorter "normal" instead of aeons, then oxygen-bleach powder would probably not cause any noticeable colour fading. Biological detergents always score better in "Which?" tests and people who are sensitive to them wouldn't have a problem using biological detergents if washing machines rinsed PROPERLY.
Oliver. I agree with your everything you say in your comment (#241). My washing machine takes way too long to finish the main wash. As I use a pre-wash to help with the later rinsing, that adds about another 20 minutes to the time. On the other extreme, the “quick” cycles are too short to be effective.
Excessive washing and repetitive agitation just shortens the life of clothes. Long wash times are fine for REALLY dirty clothes. If someone has bought a new washing machine because the old one didn’t wash things properly, then long wash times are fine for a few months, by which time the clothes should be thoroughly clean.
This may be another reason why rinsing is so poor on modern washing machines? The long wash times create more foam – I notice it every time I wash the towels – I’m now considering using just HALF the MINIMUM dose of powder for towels, as slightly more just creates foam which hinders rinsing. During the first hour or so (whenever I get a chance to look), there’s the usual small amount of bubbles, but towards the end of the wash, there’s always too much foam.
Yes, the “Shout” fabric stain remover is excellent. I shake the bottle, spray onto the stains and rub gently. Leave for just 10 minutes and wash. It works better than adding more detergent – which makes rinsing more of a challenge!
If wash times were shorter “normal” instead of aeons, then oxygen-bleach powder would probably not cause any noticeable colour fading. Biological detergents always score better in “Which?” tests and people who are sensitive to them wouldn’t have a problem using biological detergents if washing machines rinsed PROPERLY.
Likely replying to WMUser
Hi WMUser,
You are right about the agitation, it would seem now that water has been so drastically reduced not only is washing taking forever but the agitation is near constant. A Miele tumbles for 13 seconds with only a 2 second gap between tumbles, doing that for an hour should do some damage to clothing! I have justed watched the Bosch, 10 seconds clockwise, 10 seconds off, 5 seconds anti-clockwise and 5 seconds off then it repeats, it does this for the wash and rinses on cotton and synthetic cycles. No idea what it does on delicate and wool washes as I have never tried any of them!
I have just washed my work clothes on “Whites Economy” it washed for 45 minutes before rinsing (the whole programme takes about 90-95 minutes) and they are spotless. Bearing in mind that is has both fill hoses connected to the cold supply that is not bad at all. So even very dirty washing dosen’t seem to need the stupid wash times of todays machines. This is with no prewash either. I have never tried the prewash, but will be doing shortly as I have one of those Hi-Vis jackets to wash and they are a real bugger to get clean and they tell you to use non-bio, nothing like a challenge, says 40oC on the label just to add insult to injury, it will be getting a 60oC and I will have to buy a box of Non-bio especially, what a pain.
On the quick wash front, yesterday we changed the bearings on my Mums Siltal (9 years old), that all went well, it turns out it has a sealled metal tank, the bearings are held in a rear cross piece and through the hole where the shaft of the drum spider leaves the tank you could see about an inch of the spider its self. My Mum has being using quick wash a little too often as the spider is half an inch thick in soap powder and badly corroded, which now as I have discovered the sealled tank the machine will be written off as and when it breaks, looking at the state of it probably will not take too long! I have been telling her the perils of the quick wash for years but she couldn’t be told and as the powder has not being disolving properly it is now rotting the machine away. I have done 4 maintainence washes but how much it has helped nobody will ever know. It may have given the machine a little more life.
I have noticed Persil powder foams a lot less than Ariel powder, don’t know if thats just in my machine though. Another option is (if you have hard water) to use calgon and then you can use a soft water dose of soap powder. Still means the Calgon has to be rinsed out too I suppose, I don’t know if it will make any difference just a guess. Our water is not hard enough to try it.
Oliver.
Likely replying to Oliver Shaw
@Oliver Shaw
Softer water versus hard water for rinsing, I don’t know if there’s any difference. I live in a hard water area.
Calgon would soften the water, but doing so would create more foam. I know soda crystals (washing soda) also softens water, about 1 tablespoon. Soda crystals are also well known for removing grease. I don’t know how much less detergent you could get away with using, when you try water softening products. Perhaps just the minimum recommended dose stated for “soft” water? If that still makes too much foam, maybe 2/3 of the minimum dose? It would help if you could use less detergent in the first place, to help rinsing later, without harming the inside of the washing machine by doing so.
I know too well that even using the minimum dose of detergent when washing towels-only, causes a lot of foam during the last 20 – 30 minutes of the main wash. Next time I will be using half the minimum recommended dose for towels. If that means the towels don’t get cleaned properly, maybe soda crystals or calgon might help with this lower dosage?
I wonder if people living in “soft” water areas have better or worse rinsing?
Reading through these comments, I feel that in 20 years of changes to washing machines and detergents, it isn’t just less water that’s responsible for useless rinsing with modern washing machines. Rather than sticking with tried and trusted methods, manufacturers of washing machines and detergents are constantly pushing new ideas and gimmicks in place of “old” technology.
Likely replying to WMUser
Hi WMUser,
I just mean’t you could use less detergent if using Calgon without limescale damaging your washing machine in anyway, water hardness has very little to do with rinsing, in hard water detergent struggles to work as well, thats why you need more, as well as to protect the machine from limescale formation, hard water kills detergent residue better. This is why you need less for soft water. Our water is classed as “soft” by Yorkshire water so I cannot try my theory, using less should make rinsing results improve whist the Calgon looks after the washing machine.
If you use a water softener such as Calgon you use a “soft” water detergent dose or you get over foaming. As far as I know hard water doesn’t exist in West Yorkshire, we just get the crap from being the end of the line!
Oliver.
3 replies I agree with you Oliver, these fancy fragrances in detergents, softeners etc. It seems that everything must have perfumes/fragrances, whatever it's called. Laundry detergent, fabric conditioner, spray perfumes and aftershaves. Let's not forget bottles of ironing water which claim to make the ironing smell nice. I'm sure all these things don't do the skin much good and adding these perfumes to detergents and other things also increases the price. I notice that even dishwasher tablets have perfumes, bizarre really when the stuff gets rinsed off thoroughly (if only modern washing machines rinsed that well!!). I know that proper rinsing should rinse away the smell of detergent from the clothing. @Francis Thyresson. As the Nordic countries demand better rinsing, I hope other countries like Britain will follow suit and only buy washing machines that rinse better. Then manufacturers will be forced to make washing machines that customers demand. @Nikki Jenkins. I'm also doing the pre-wash and omitting the detergent for the main wash. If things are stained, I give these items a good coat of "Shout" fabric stain remover spray, rub it slightly and leave to soak into the stains for about 10 minutes before washing. I agree with your sentence about the formulation of detergents changing and affecting rinsing. If I use the recommended amount I still see lots of suds towards the end of the main wash. Would rinsing improve if detergent is added directly to the drum and not the soap drawer? I'm wondering because bits of detergent often get left behind in the soap drawer and maybe end up being flushed down during the rinses? What's the point in using the soap drawer when it ends up in the drum anyway?
I agree with you Oliver, these fancy fragrances in detergents, softeners etc. It seems that everything must have perfumes/fragrances, whatever it’s called. Laundry detergent, fabric conditioner, spray perfumes and aftershaves. Let’s not forget bottles of ironing water which claim to make the ironing smell nice. I’m sure all these things don’t do the skin much good and adding these perfumes to detergents and other things also increases the price. I notice that even dishwasher tablets have perfumes, bizarre really when the stuff gets rinsed off thoroughly (if only modern washing machines rinsed that well!!). I know that proper rinsing should rinse away the smell of detergent from the clothing.
@Francis Thyresson. As the Nordic countries demand better rinsing, I hope other countries like Britain will follow suit and only buy washing machines that rinse better. Then manufacturers will be forced to make washing machines that customers demand.
@Nikki Jenkins. I’m also doing the pre-wash and omitting the detergent for the main wash. If things are stained, I give these items a good coat of “Shout” fabric stain remover spray, rub it slightly and leave to soak into the stains for about 10 minutes before washing. I agree with your sentence about the formulation of detergents changing and affecting rinsing. If I use the recommended amount I still see lots of suds towards the end of the main wash.
Would rinsing improve if detergent is added directly to the drum and not the soap drawer? I’m wondering because bits of detergent often get left behind in the soap drawer and maybe end up being flushed down during the rinses? What’s the point in using the soap drawer when it ends up in the drum anyway?
Likely replying to WMUser
Hi WMUser,
Its funny you should mention dishwasher detergent, we use Finish powder, and that to has a perfume additive. We were having this conversation the other night about why dishwasher powder has any fragrance, as like you say it all gets rinsed away, ours does 3 rinses, 2 at incoming water temperature (about 50oC)and the last heated to 70oC. I will not use rinse aid of any kind as it goes in the last rinse and I feel it taints the pots so you are eating and drinking it. It doesn’t work anyway, its as useful as fabric conditioner. If machines worked proprerly in the first place there would be no need for the likes of rinse aid and fabric conditioner.
I too add the powder to the drum, as like yourself I feel it should get flushed in with the rinses, plus if it doesn’t all go in the wash things won’t be proplerly clean. It also makes a mess of the machines dispenser, I do not use the drawer on my machine at all. The theory on soap drawers is, if powder gets damp on your clothing and stays there it can remove the colour, never had it happen, sound like the usual level of bo11ocks from the manufacturers as usual!
Ironing water is just pure snake oil, its only distilled water with a smell, utterly pointless!
Shout stain removing spray is good too, works very well, been using it for years.
Oliver.
Likely replying to Oliver Shaw
Hi Oliver,
You say you use Bleach containing powder on all your clothes as opposed to using coloured powder too? Do you not find it fades any of your coloured items? I used to used Persil Colour care powder as it had no bleach but whether I fell for a marketing gimmick I don’t know lol. Surely the bleach in powders is oxygen based and not chlorine so that would surely mean that is a colour safe bleach? I do not bother with stain removers as they are a waste of money in my oppinion. I find a half a tsp of washing up liquid on difficult stains works! I wouldn’t use enzymes on wool anymore but used to though they never fell to bits.
Likely replying to simon smith
Hi Simon,
Firstly the main reason I use bleach containing powder for everything is it cleans and kills bacteria effectivley. To me no bleach equals substandard results. Also permanent use of liquid/colour detergent damages the machine, if it is not keeping the machine clean it is not keeping your clothes clean either.
The oxygen based bleaching agents are colour safe. It is just recommended people use 2 or 3 different types of detergent for different fabrics. Whether colour powder is a scam I really don’t know, the only difference is the lack of bleach and brightening agents (which do not effect colour anyway). None of my clothing and household linen is that badly faded, considering I wash EVERYTHING on 60oC with biological bleach powder. Clothing must fade whist being worn, hung on the line in bright sunlight and just generally being stored. Most washing machine engineers recommend you use colour powder for coloureds and bleach powder for whites.
No bleachless detergent will remove sweat properly, this is why I will not use them, putting on a clean T-shirt covered in secondhand sweat is a disgusting thought. Liquids and colour powder offer very limited stain removal in general, I am far from happy with the results they provide.
Non-biological detergents fair about the same although the powdered varieties contain bleach their stain removal is very bad also. To remove biological staining (sweat, skin grease and skin flakes etc.) you need enzymes to break them up and to remove the bacteria from sweat etc. you need bleach to neutralise it. Enzymes and bleach work in tandem to produce excellent results, remove one and you are left with second rate cleaning performance. Brightening agents are just pure rubbish they make virtually no difference at all, they make a permanent bond with the clothing and will not come out even after only one wash with them in!
Going back a good 20 years ago there were just laundry powders there was no such thing as coloured detergents, so they may be a gimmick.
My own theory is why clothes fade so badly today is washing machines wash for far too long, up to an hour and a half in some cases. Such repeated beating even with a colour powder will remove colour anyway. My washing machine washes for about half an hour on a normal 60oC wash and about 45 minutes on whites economy. Thats probably why nothing of mine is so badly faded even very old items (10 years old plus). This could be another reason why we are all being talked into washing at very low temperatures, because modern washing machines are actually ruining our clothing with such excessive wash times.
Tried the washing up liquid trick many years ago, it created alot of foam, there are very few stains my Bosch cannot shift on its own, the ones that won’t shift get “Shouted” at! Its is an excellent product, the best stain removing spray by along way.
Oliver.
3 replies Thanks for the info. Water going into the machine at 30C would help enourmously and could help with rinsing too, if hot or warm rinsing does work better than cold? @Nikki Jenkins, when you say you can immerse something like a towel into hot water after rinsing it in cold water several times, could the residue that you see in the hot water actually be fabric conditioner? Have you tried doing this on towels and other items which have no fabric conditioner? Maybe Oliver's comment #221 proves that having a water guzzling washing machine, with cold rinsing only, is fine? I'm perfectly happy to run a water-guzzling cycle after the first spin that follows the main wash, without detergent, then select the final faster spin manually. I don't care if this makes using the washing machine more expensive - you can't put a price on health!! It's better than wasting money on junk food, cigarrettes, too much alcohol and other things that are known to be bad for you. I'd rather not itch when I wear my clothes, use my towels, sleep in my bedding etc. For anyone wondering: how do you "know" if the washing is properly rinsed when you take it out? If you use an unperfumed fabric conditioner like Surcare or don't use conditioner at all, the washing should NOT smell of *anything*. "Proper" rinsing is good enough to remove the perfumes that are added to detergents (which are marketed as helping to make the clothes smell nice), but these extra perfumes irritate skin! I believe that detergent left behind in the washing machine is causing the bad smells, grease, gunge mould and bacteria that requires monthly maintenance washes at ~95 degrees! I'm sure if a washing machine can rinse properly, it would also stop the machine from becoming filthy inside?
Thanks for the info. Water going into the machine at 30C would help enourmously and could help with rinsing too, if hot or warm rinsing does work better than cold?
@Nikki Jenkins, when you say you can immerse something like a towel into hot water after rinsing it in cold water several times, could the residue that you see in the hot water actually be fabric conditioner? Have you tried doing this on towels and other items which have no fabric conditioner? Maybe Oliver’s comment #221 proves that having a water guzzling washing machine, with cold rinsing only, is fine?
I’m perfectly happy to run a water-guzzling cycle after the first spin that follows the main wash, without detergent, then select the final faster spin manually. I don’t care if this makes using the washing machine more expensive – you can’t put a price on health!! It’s better than wasting money on junk food, cigarrettes, too much alcohol and other things that are known to be bad for you. I’d rather not itch when I wear my clothes, use my towels, sleep in my bedding etc.
For anyone wondering: how do you “know” if the washing is properly rinsed when you take it out? If you use an unperfumed fabric conditioner like Surcare or don’t use conditioner at all, the washing should NOT smell of *anything*. “Proper” rinsing is good enough to remove the perfumes that are added to detergents (which are marketed as helping to make the clothes smell nice), but these extra perfumes irritate skin!
I believe that detergent left behind in the washing machine is causing the bad smells, grease, gunge mould and bacteria that requires monthly maintenance washes at ~95 degrees! I’m sure if a washing machine can rinse properly, it would also stop the machine from becoming filthy inside?
Likely replying to WMUser
Hi WMUser,
I can say when I was a child my Mum had a Servis Quartz 1000 (bought in 1981), which rinsed properly as did all machines of the era. She used liquid detergent on a permanant basis and 40oc washes and alot of quick washes. The machine was DISGUSTING so much so my Dad stripped at down to the last nut and bolt and scraped 3″ of slime and bacteria of the back of the drum. But it came back pretty quickly as she carried on with liquid and low temperature washes. Its only recently I have managed to change her on to bleach containg powder, and funnily enough her washing is properly clean too. I have also managed to get her to wash most things at 60oC or 75oC where applicable.
I only do a maintainence wash once a year or so, because 1-I will only use bleach containg powder Ariel or Persil (as I want clothes clean, to hell with the fading, colour detergent and liquid does not remove sweat properly) and 2- I WILL NOT wash anything below 60oC, having said that none of my clothes, even 10 year old items are that badly faded, but my machine does not wash for eons! My washing machine is spotless and does not hum at all, neither does my Mums and with the new higher water levels the machine is cleaner too, so a yearly maintainence wash for hers too will be fine. The nasty smell from washing machines is not detergent resdue it is one tough biofilm, and once there bloody hard to get rid of, the only way if it is really bad is to strip the machine down, which with some modern machines will be a challenge as they have sealled tanks. Peoples machines are only becoming filthy inside these days because we are being encouraged to wash at low temperatures and even cold water and people use liquids, liquid tabs and the inferior colour powder. Oh and just a note Ariel Excel Gel (tells you to wash at 15oC) contains NO bleach so it won’t take long to rot the washer with that stuff.
If people washed how they used to in the 70’s and 80’s with boil washes for whites and 60oC for just about everything else the maintainence wash would never have been dream’t up. If washing at 40oC does not keep the machine properly clean the it sure as hell ain’t washing you clothing properly either. Who wants to wear second hand sweat and bacteria or have a bath and dry theself on a bacteria infested towel!
Also fabric conditioner makes a strange looking type of foam, sort of thin whispy bubbles.
I can smell detergent faintly on my clothing but to say how srong it smells in the box you would think things would positivley stink of it. Now my Mums machine uses more water things do not smell strongly with detergent like they used to.
All the best,
Oliver.
Likely replying to Oliver Shaw
Hi Oliver. It goes to show that anyone being “environmentally friendly” will actually send their washing machine to its death much sooner and require more and more washing machines to be manufactured. Not to mention the sheer amount of landfill on parts that can’t be recycled. I’m not going off topic here, but using so little water in the first place requires adding more and/or running extra cycles without detergent, the latter defeats the purpose of being environmentally friendly. Not washing hot enough will allow slime to build up – if not removed by stripping down the machine, it will rot the machine to death. The permanent bad smell will probably make people chuck the washing machine prematurely.
The health effects on allergy sufferers are not very nice, but unfortunately it’s becoming more common with “environmentally friendly” washing machines.
So I will continue using water guzzling cycles and/or adding extra rinsing water. I will be washing things at 60C or higher most of the time, unless items are too delicate. Why should my skin suffer and why should my washing machine turn into a breeding ground for bacteria through being environmentally friendly? Would these do-gooders rather see more washing machines scrapped and watch people scratch themselves bleeding, suffer more asthma attacks and so on? I would encourage everyone reading this and other messages to use plenty of water on the rinses and try to wash hot whenever possible. Your health won’t suffer and your washing machine won’t become filthy inside.
Don’t forget to complain like mad to the manufacturers of washing machines and BBC watchdog. Let’s hope Watchdog discusses this rinsing problem and its adverse health effects on television, during the next series. :)
Likely replying to WMUser
Hi WMUser,
You got the environmental bit spot on.
There are environmental issues out there, but washing in cold/cool water will only make things worse as we both know a hell of alot more landfill for a start, washing machines are not small appliances.
But consider the following,
1-If washing is not cleaned properly in cool/cold water the clothing will be rewashed. Unnessarcary waste of water, detergent etc.
2- The clothing you are wearing is not properly clean, wearing second hand sweat ond dirt, not pleasent.
3-More landfill, not just from machines but all the drum spiders and everything else that have to be changed unnessercerily. More waste.
4-Towels smell after one use, some so bad just getting them wet will make them smell, more washing as people believe they are dirty, washed correctly they should do 3-4 days or so without smelling. More unnessercary laundry.
Just a few reasons why washing at low temperatures is only a short term energy saving and does not out weigh the serious consiquesces that will follow after a few months of trying to be “environmentally friendly”.
Washing at high temperatures, the machine will last a lot longer, will not be breeding or smelling, clothing will last longer as it is not being discarded as stains supposably will not come out etc.
If anyone wants to help the environment washing at 30oC or what ever is just a plain con as are alot of environmental issues. Somethings are an excellent idea such as recycling. But what we as a country are doing to supposably help the environment is not out weighing the fact things don’t last very long, nobody repairs anything and we a a throw away society. The amount of landfill these days is absoulutley outragious, quite a big percentage of what goes in still works, people are either bored of it or want the latest in the way of gadgets and gizmos etc.
Oliver.
3 replies Hi everyone I've had my Bosch for over 6 months now, and I still don't like it. It doesn't rinse enough, and I can't bear the whining noise of the motor. I keep looking on ebay at second hand machines, and wanting to buy one, but there are 2 things stopping me which I hope someone can help me with... Firstly, I want to have an induction motor, like my old Zanussi had, but I don't know how to find out if a machine has one or not. I have been checking model numbers on espares to see if they have carbon brushes listed, and was wondering if I can rely on this to indicate what type of motor a machine has? I know that my old Zanussi doesn't have brushes listed, and my new Bosch does. However, Oliver - you said your WFF2000 has a brushed motor, and yet espares doesn't list carbon brushes for it... so that makes me think I can't be sure even if no brushes are listed. Secondly I will need to transport the machine myself in my car, and I don't know the best way to do this. I will need to lay it down on its side to get it to fit in the car. Is it OK to transport a machine like this, and which is the best way to do it? Sorry to hear of everyone else's problems with this rinsing too... hlking I am wishing you good luck... Michelle
Hi everyone
I’ve had my Bosch for over 6 months now, and I still don’t like it. It doesn’t rinse enough, and I can’t bear the whining noise of the motor. I keep looking on ebay at second hand machines, and wanting to buy one, but there are 2 things stopping me which I hope someone can help me with…
Firstly, I want to have an induction motor, like my old Zanussi had, but I don’t know how to find out if a machine has one or not. I have been checking model numbers on espares to see if they have carbon brushes listed, and was wondering if I can rely on this to indicate what type of motor a machine has? I know that my old Zanussi doesn’t have brushes listed, and my new Bosch does. However, Oliver – you said your WFF2000 has a brushed motor, and yet espares doesn’t list carbon brushes for it… so that makes me think I can’t be sure even if no brushes are listed.
Secondly I will need to transport the machine myself in my car, and I don’t know the best way to do this. I will need to lay it down on its side to get it to fit in the car. Is it OK to transport a machine like this, and which is the best way to do it?
Sorry to hear of everyone else’s problems with this rinsing too… hlking I am wishing you good luck…
Michelle
Likely replying to Michelle
Hi Michelle,
I can confirm that a WFF2000 has a brushed motor.
It is not a noisy machine, it is in a third story bedroom and does not disturb the house or anyone in it. My Mum has an IAR Siltal which also has a brushed motor and is quiet as well. A well built brushed motor should be quiet as should an induction one.
HTH,
Oliver.
Likely replying to Oliver Shaw
Hello Oliver Shaw:
Thanks for the info about the Thermostatic Mixing Valve. I will mention it to hubby and see if he can fix one. He has just restored my Miele washing machine to full working order, with a new bearing, and it is working as good as ever … but still rinsing as bad as ever. I have just accepted that this is a fact of life about which I cannot do much until we rig up a Thermostatic Mixing Valve so that we can do hot water rinses.
One thing I have noticed is that actually by running each load for a couple of extra woolens washes on 30 degrees with no soap, this does rinse all the non “thick” items. This works satisfactorily on my egyptian cotton sheets, cotton underwear, nylon tights, anything that is not too thick. But my egyptian towels are thick with soap, as are denim jeans. These need to be rinsed by hand in the bath, and then run on a couple of 30 degree washes without soap to at least get rid of some of the soap. All extra expense and time, neither of which I have a surfeit of.
Now all I have to do is to nag hubby sufficiently to fit that valve !!
3 replies Forgot to mention - I'd be interested to know how many people who have rinsing issues use pre-measured tablets and liquitabs. In my experience, as novel as they are, and we do sometimes buy them on special offer, the one-size-fits-all approach is best left to selling some types of clothes rather than washing them! Have gone back to powder after a while of using tablets (yes - I know, slap me on the wrist), and it is much more economical to use. We live in a hard water area, and I don't use much at all (I use 60-80ml for average soil, 80-100 for heavy soil) and still get a brilliantly clean wash. Using Bold at the moment, but have found Ariel and store brands to be just as good. I used to love Persil, but they've changed the smell and simply the smell coming from the box is enough to make me want to choke! Although, to be honest, I have to say that it is rather pointless using 2in1 detergents in our machine as we can barely smell it - you get a faint waft as the clothes are on the horse, but smell nothing once they're dry. When I used commercial machines when I was at uni, on the other hand, using the same amount of detergent my clothes would long smell of Bold or Ariel! Jon
Forgot to mention – I’d be interested to know how many people who have rinsing issues use pre-measured tablets and liquitabs. In my experience, as novel as they are, and we do sometimes buy them on special offer, the one-size-fits-all approach is best left to selling some types of clothes rather than washing them! Have gone back to powder after a while of using tablets (yes – I know, slap me on the wrist), and it is much more economical to use. We live in a hard water area, and I don’t use much at all (I use 60-80ml for average soil, 80-100 for heavy soil) and still get a brilliantly clean wash. Using Bold at the moment, but have found Ariel and store brands to be just as good. I used to love Persil, but they’ve changed the smell and simply the smell coming from the box is enough to make me want to choke!
Although, to be honest, I have to say that it is rather pointless using 2in1 detergents in our machine as we can barely smell it – you get a faint waft as the clothes are on the horse, but smell nothing once they’re dry. When I used commercial machines when I was at uni, on the other hand, using the same amount of detergent my clothes would long smell of Bold or Ariel!
Jon
Likely replying to Jon
Hi Jon,
Yes the WFF2000 is built to last!
I have always used powder, like you I hate the “one size fits all” approach, particullally if you are not washing a full load. I find both Bio and Non-bio upset my skin, all brands. I am using Persil Biological powder and getting excellent results, It stinks in the box but my laundry hardly smells of it thanks to the Bosch.
Laundry coming out of my Mums machine (IAR Siltal) bites your nose off with the smell of Ariel powder! It is very strong and when things dry they are very hard and towels like sandpaper. Excellent machine though.
The WFF2000 has an intermediate spin speed of 400rpm and spins for only a minute after the wash and between all the rinses. This fills up while it is slowing down and has an inlet at the top of the door to wet the laundry as the water comes in. It fills to 1/3 up the door and tumbles normally, the same speed as wash.
Oh, the Hotpoint WF530T I used to have bought in 2005 was cream, nice colour!
All the best,
Oliver.
Likely replying to Oliver Shaw
Hi Oliver,
Sounds like your Bosch had the same rinse spin patterns as ours, just ours never had water rise above the door seal – which probably explains why yours rinses and ours didn’t! Ours was so bad that it left pet hair over everything, and if we wanted properly rinsed laundry we had to use the Easy Care cycle which had a higher water level but only spun at 800 at the end, so things would take ages in the tumble dryer as the seperate spin programme was only limited to 800 revs. Our Miele has a similar water fill down the door to the one our Bosch had – which I think is why it probably manages to saturate the load well. All the benefits of Zanussi Jetsystem machines, but without the extra sudsing the recirculation pump creates.
I think the fast intermediate spins compared with deepish rinses on our Miele explains why it rinses so well with so little water – I was reluctant to believe at first that 2 rinses would do an excellent job and always used the extra rinse, but now I save 20 minutes and 15 litres of water and still have perfect results that our Bosch couldn’t deliver with 4 low water rinses. I certainly wouldn’t discount Miele for rinse performance.
My nana had a Hotpoint WF340 I think it was… 1400 spin Aquarius. Bear in mind that she washes three times a week, it didn’t last until it’s 2nd birthday until the bearings were shot. That had pretty decent rinse levels though, it filled a few inches up the door similar to Gary’s Hotpoint.
I’ve used a detergent called Ecos before, it’s a super concentrated washing powder which costs about 7 quid for 54 loads – you can order it online from the guardian eco store (at least that’s where I get it from), which rinses perfectly, but also cleans superbly. It’s just such a hassle to order it online once it’s run out, so the majority of the time we just go for what’s on offer in Asda or Sainsbury’s, but my preference is for Ariel or Bold. It’s very lightly fragranced too, it’s worth a try if you’re allergic to detergents and better (and significantly cheaper) than Ecover in my opinion.
Take care,
Jon
Likely replying to Jon
Hi Jon,
I have noticed alot of simalarities between the WFF2000 and Miele machines, I wonder which company stole the ideas!!!!
The Hotpoint I had lasted 2.5 years at 4 loads a week, the timer and computer packed up. It only just touched the bottom of the door on rinses though and did 3 with extra rinse selected. It was a useless machine not only was the rinsing bad but the wash performance was pathetic. It did not remove easy stains, such as tea, coffee etc. And it washed for 1 hour before rinsing. The only good thing was it looked nice.
I have also tried Ecover and am allergic to it, it washed as well as plain water too. Never heard of Ecos either, sounds good though.
The Zanussi Jetsystem machines were daft wern’t they, I bet there would be no difference in wash performance whether the recirculation pump worked or not. Plus have heard of alot of pump failures as it is in so much use, and pump fires. It seemed like a selling point to me rather than a useful idea, in my eyes it was just another point of failure. I like the Bosch, if it packs up I will be repairing it!
All the best,
Oliver.
3 replies New discovery I made today (24th October 2009) that will horrify owners of modern washing machines... I washed some towels and I did NOT use too much detergent. On the rinse-hold, I could see the water was cloudy and there were still soap bubbles. Remember, this is AFTER the washing machine had rinsed the towels. I know I didn't press "extra rinse" but the DEFAULT setting is NO "extra rinse". It makes no difference if you press "extra rinse" anyway. Knowing that re-running the rinses was unlikely to work, I switched off the machine and found the instruction book, had a look at the wash cycles and saw that the "Duvet" cycle uses the most water (75 litres). (It's a 7kg machine but can only just fit a single duvet!! The marketing rubbish didn't mention the words "single duvet", it just makes out it can wash "a" duvet.) Anyway, after running the "Duvet" cycle (without detergent), followed by a separate "Spin" cycle at 1600 rpm (the duvet cycle won't spin faster than 700 rpm), I did manage to get the towels rinsed properly and it took over 3 hours in total!!!! My discovery... towels are very difficult to rinse. If you are trying to force your washing machine to rinse everything properly, washing a drum full of towels is a TRUE test. Don't worry about overloading - a full drum of towels quickly becomes half full as the towels get wetter. So my comment #110 is probably the only "universal" solution. If you follow that idea, it takes a long time to get through a wash load, so you probably won't want to watch the clock. It's total madness just to get your laundry rinsed properly, a luxury we had until about 15 years ago. Don't forget that if your own laundry is being rinsed fine doesn't mean that when you stay at a friends, bed and breakfast, a hotel etc. that the bed sheets there will be rinsed properly. That alone clearly illustrates the magnitude of this problem!
New discovery I made today (24th October 2009) that will horrify owners of modern washing machines…
I washed some towels and I did NOT use too much detergent. On the rinse-hold, I could see the water was cloudy and there were still soap bubbles. Remember, this is AFTER the washing machine had rinsed the towels. I know I didn’t press “extra rinse” but the DEFAULT setting is NO “extra rinse”. It makes no difference if you press “extra rinse” anyway.
Knowing that re-running the rinses was unlikely to work, I switched off the machine and found the instruction book, had a look at the wash cycles and saw that the “Duvet” cycle uses the most water (75 litres). (It’s a 7kg machine but can only just fit a single duvet!! The marketing rubbish didn’t mention the words “single duvet”, it just makes out it can wash “a” duvet.)
Anyway, after running the “Duvet” cycle (without detergent), followed by a separate “Spin” cycle at 1600 rpm (the duvet cycle won’t spin faster than 700 rpm), I did manage to get the towels rinsed properly and it took over 3 hours in total!!!!
My discovery… towels are very difficult to rinse. If you are trying to force your washing machine to rinse everything properly, washing a drum full of towels is a TRUE test. Don’t worry about overloading – a full drum of towels quickly becomes half full as the towels get wetter.
So my comment #110 is probably the only “universal” solution. If you follow that idea, it takes a long time to get through a wash load, so you probably won’t want to watch the clock. It’s total madness just to get your laundry rinsed properly, a luxury we had until about 15 years ago.
Don’t forget that if your own laundry is being rinsed fine doesn’t mean that when you stay at a friends, bed and breakfast, a hotel etc. that the bed sheets there will be rinsed properly. That alone clearly illustrates the magnitude of this problem!
Likely replying to WhatMatters
Hi WhatMatters,
Towels are a pain to rinse, The Hotpoint would sudslock with a full load of towels, even after 6 rinses it would still sudslock, so it looks like your machine is far better.
The Duvet cycle sounds interesting, never had a machine with that on, I agree it would be a good idea to run that cycle as well, so you get another wash and extra set of rinses. I cannot believe the lengths people have to go to, to get washing properly rinsed these days. Wow 3 hours is a long time!
The Hotpoint would wash a Duvet (6/7KG), and surprisingly rinse it properly, so they must be very easy to rinse. The programme I used for duvets consisited of:
Wash at 70oC, a Dilution rinse, and then 3 rinses (with extra rinse) and a 1300rpm spin. It took over 2 hours to complete.
Yet I tried this programme for everything else (turned down to 60oC) and it would not rinse at all properly it sudslocked even with a half load in, so after all that I still had to do another 2 or 3 rinses. With all the extra rinses it took over 3 hours to complete, and would still not rinse properly.
Hotels and Bed and Breakfast will only have properly rinsed laundry if they use Commercial machines e.g JLA. But if they are using domestic jobs then I agree they will have poorly rinsed linen. If people are affected they won’t stay there again and it will be bad for business!!
Another option (this is stupid and should not have to do) is to got to the laundrette, most have JLA’s now these do rinse properly. But why should you have to do that when you can have a washer at home? By the way A JLA does all stages of the wash and rinse with water 1/3 up the door.
When will manufacturers wake and smell the coffee, people are not robots we each have INDIVIDUAL requirments and there should be the products out the to panda to our needs.
Oliver.
Likely replying to Oliver Shaw
Hi Oliver. I did a full review of it, which you can access from the link on my last comment. They were way too expensive, which was a shame because I liked it.
To be honest I’ve never had any problems with poor rinsing and only wrote this article after noticing Which? were saying most of the washing machines they were testing were poor at rinsing.
Likely replying to WhatMatters
Hi WhatMatters,
There are a few suds in the last rinse of my machine, the water is crystal clear though. The detregent cannot be present though as if it were I would see the effects on my skin. A theory is if you rinse alot, the foam inhibitor is rinsed out and then the minute amounts of detergent left over are free to sud like crazy! I do dose the powder properly for soil, water hardness and load size.
This is all with 4 rinses 1/3 up the door and a spin of 400rpm after each stage of the programme. If I use the synthetic cycles with 4 rinses and water 1/4 up the door there is also a “dilution rinse” which helps drain more off before the first spin. It would appear soap suds are not that good at indecating how well the machine rinses, you can hardly smell the Persil’s perfume on my laundry (Persil is very heavily perfumed), it is not hard and scratchy and it lovely and soft and I do not use softener. And my skin is better than it ever has been.
I have noticed with alot of machines the water all soaks up and does not refill, the pressure switch should kick in and tell it to fill up again, but this is only ever the case on wash, never rinses, God only knows why! No machine rinses away 100% of detergent, never has done either. The old ones did come very close though.
All the best,
Oliver.
3 replies Oliver My washing machine is a Zanussi/Electrolux, not sure of the exact model number. Like all newer washers, it won't rinse properly unless YOU force it to rinse properly. Just pressing the "extra rinse" does NOT make it rinse properly. With extra rinse selected on the cottons cycle, it performs 2 extra rinses - 5 total - don't get excited... there's barely any water in each rinse and the stupid machine only starts spinning very slowly AFTER the 3rd rinse has drained (but no suds-locking occurs). Rinse 4 is followed by a very slow spin, rinse 5 has the softener added, followed by the final spin of 1600 rpm, unless you chose a lower speed. I now follow my method on comment #106 every time. The rinse-hold option uses lots more water and pauses the machine, so that extra water probably helps enormously? Re-rinsing (without the extra-rinse option) gives me a total of SIX rinses with faster spinning between ALL the rinses. It doesn't take that much longer to finish and most of today's washing machines are larger capacity anyway, so you can get more washing done each time. The synthetics cycle sudslocks on the rinses: for some unknown reason, it will spin briefly and the pump will stop before it's had chance to pump away all the soapy water, then it refills and the soapy water gets transferred over to the next rinses!!!!! Another good reason to re-rinse. One very important point I forgot to mention earlier... overloading the drum will prevent proper rinsing and impair cleaning performance. I doubt re-running the rinses will help if you put in too much washing. Bulkier items (e.g. washable coats) need lots more room to move about. I believe the washing machine manufacturers will NEVER make washing machines rinse properly any more. The eco-friendly people would not allow them to use lots of water for rinses. If you require proper rinsing, it's a do-it-yourself job unfortunately. Does anyone like the idea of wearing clothes saturated with left-over detergent chemicals, even if you're not allergic?
Oliver
My washing machine is a Zanussi/Electrolux, not sure of the exact model number. Like all newer washers, it won’t rinse properly unless YOU force it to rinse properly. Just pressing the “extra rinse” does NOT make it rinse properly. With extra rinse selected on the cottons cycle, it performs 2 extra rinses – 5 total – don’t get excited… there’s barely any water in each rinse and the stupid machine only starts spinning very slowly AFTER the 3rd rinse has drained (but no suds-locking occurs). Rinse 4 is followed by a very slow spin, rinse 5 has the softener added, followed by the final spin of 1600 rpm, unless you chose a lower speed.
I now follow my method on comment #106 every time. The rinse-hold option uses lots more water and pauses the machine, so that extra water probably helps enormously? Re-rinsing (without the extra-rinse option) gives me a total of SIX rinses with faster spinning between ALL the rinses. It doesn’t take that much longer to finish and most of today’s washing machines are larger capacity anyway, so you can get more washing done each time.
The synthetics cycle sudslocks on the rinses: for some unknown reason, it will spin briefly and the pump will stop before it’s had chance to pump away all the soapy water, then it refills and the soapy water gets transferred over to the next rinses!!!!! Another good reason to re-rinse.
One very important point I forgot to mention earlier… overloading the drum will prevent proper rinsing and impair cleaning performance. I doubt re-running the rinses will help if you put in too much washing. Bulkier items (e.g. washable coats) need lots more room to move about.
I believe the washing machine manufacturers will NEVER make washing machines rinse properly any more. The eco-friendly people would not allow them to use lots of water for rinses. If you require proper rinsing, it’s a do-it-yourself job unfortunately. Does anyone like the idea of wearing clothes saturated with left-over detergent chemicals, even if you’re not allergic?
Likely replying to WhatMatters
Hi Whatmatters,
I agree about the “Extra Rinse” option making little difference, when I had the modern Hotpoint, it added one rinse so it did 3 in total and as it suslocked and as you say carries all the soapy water through the rinse cycle, it was pointless. I used to manually re-run the rinses as you do, letting it do 3 on the main cycle and then doing another 2 or 3 (depending what was in there) to clear the soap. And the damn thing STILL did not rinse properly. I also did half loads to help rinsing even with all the extra ones it still didn’t rinse properly. My skin was so bad the doctors wanted to put me in Hospital.
Thankfully it packed up and decided to buy the Reconditioned Bosch WFF2000. I guessed buying a new machine would be a daft idea so I took a punt on the Bosch and I have had it a few months and all seems well. It does rinse properly.
I also agree about washing machines never using sufficient amounts of water again. I know they say “what goes around comes around” but I fear this will not be the case with all these environmental do gooders, for which I have NO time for. Thanks to these idiots there is all the people here with SERVERE skin complaints. Its just not fair, there is no choice anymore, we are forced in to these stupid modern machines whether we like it or not. This is by far the biggest amount of sh1te I have come across in almost 21 years on this planet.
All the best,
Oliver.
Likely replying to Oliver Shaw
Oliver, I’m sorry you nearly ended up in hospital because your previous washing machine was so useless at rinsing. I’m horrified that modern washing machines can be so appalling at rinsing the result is havoc for allergy sufferers like yourself. Even re-rinsing made no difference in your case! Maybe you could have sued Hotpoint?
I would have hoped that a rinse-hold followed by re-rinsing would be a “universal” solution to everyone reading these comments, but unfortunately it seems there is no “universal” solution! What else can be done? Legal action maybe? If enough people did go down the legal action route, it could be the turning point for the better?
I can think of one more thing only: wash a load as normal and use rinse-hold (if possible). Then you could run another wash programme (on the same wash load) that you know uses more water (e.g. a wool programme, if it uses more water) – run it WITHOUT detergent and that could work? Its final spin may be slower and the washing would need a faster spin again if you’re using a tumble dryer. Obviously that’s a *lot* of hassle and it would take a long time just to get one wash load done, but if it rinses better, it may be your only option, sadly!
About the “extra rinse” button (or whatever each manufacturer calls it), when they added this option it’s obvious the washing machine manufacturers knew their washing machines weren’t up to par on rinsing using the default options, so they came up with this “extra rinse” option. How long have they known about poor rinsing?
Likely replying to WhatMatters
Hi Whatmatters,
That was the doctors idea not mine, my felling it was a OTT (I refused to go). When they don’t know what they are talking about they will always come out with some bullsh1t!! At the time I also used non-biological powder (Fairy) and they ruled out that would be affecting my skin, luckily I am the suspicious type and did suspect it, that is why I re-ran the rinse cycle, which helped a bit, but still wasn’t curing the problem.
Whether I use bio or non-bio I am just as badly affected, as it happens I use either Ariel bio or Persil bio and am now not adversley affected, as it is rinsed out properly in the Bosch.
Re-rinsing should help most people as in my case there were other factors affecting me, particullaly hand soap etc. I now use special products and have “fairly” normal skin. But as soon as I use something I shouldn’t I will pay the price. It was by far the washing machine that was affecting me most though.
Regarding Hotpoint I did speak to the useless call centre giving them a piece of my mind, they were useless and did not give a damn about me as I am the minority and no-one has ever complained about rinsing before. See post 54 above for more info. I never thought of legal action, but its too late now and I am greatful to be feeling alot better.
Yes you are right about the “Extra Rinse”, “Super Rinse”, “Sensitive Care”, “Pure Rinse”, “Intensive Rinse”, “Deep Rinse”, “Medic Rinse”, “Rinse++” and “Aqua/Water Plus” options being evedence of manufactureres know their machines do not even come close to rinsing properly. They won’t admit it though. These options sound great, and they all deliver the same level of nothing, its amazing how many words can mean the same thing. Not one of those options can make a machine rinse as well as they used to, not even half as well. Pathetic isn’t it.
Like you say the hassle of getting a modern washer to rinse properly is unbelieveable, these are supposed to be labour saving devices. Its harder than getting out the dolly tub, rubbing board and soap (still have a rubbing board and posser knocking around in the loft!). At least you can rinse properly with that method!
Thanks for your concern,
All the Best,
Oliver.
3 replies Our Hotpoint WML540(G) rinses perfectly with any load, I did an overloaded towels wash after being on holiday approx. 7 or 8kg of bath towels, bath sheets, hand towels etc. and I used the Cottons+ 60+ programme (2 hours). and even after a sudslock in the first spin, the final rinse water was almost clear. I think the Hotpoint washer have the best way of rinsing, which is slow tumbles in low water level then very fast tumbles in high water level, which in our machine fills almost half way up the door! Even if the Mini Load option has been selected (which reduces wash & rinse time aswell as rinse water) the rinse is just as good, even without softner (I don't use softner on towels). So yes I do think there is an issue with rinsing in some machines but definitely not in the new Hotpoint WML range.
Our Hotpoint WML540(G) rinses perfectly with any load, I did an overloaded towels wash after being on holiday approx. 7 or 8kg of bath towels, bath sheets, hand towels etc. and I used the Cottons+ 60+ programme (2 hours). and even after a sudslock in the first spin, the final rinse water was almost clear.
I think the Hotpoint washer have the best way of rinsing, which is slow tumbles in low water level then very fast tumbles in high water level, which in our machine fills almost half way up the door!
Even if the Mini Load option has been selected (which reduces wash & rinse time aswell as rinse water) the rinse is just as good, even without softner (I don’t use softner on towels).
So yes I do think there is an issue with rinsing in some machines but definitely not in the new Hotpoint WML range.
Likely replying to Gary Pendlebury
Hi Gary,
That doesn’t sound quite right, a modern Hotpoint is designed to fill to the bottom of the door glass on the rinses not half way up the door. The pressure switch must be slightly out of adjustment, although this is NOT a bad thing. I had a Hotpoint WF530T for 2.5 years and the rinsing was awful even with extra rinse pressed, but the water never went beyond the bottom of the door glass. Also sudslocked on ALL intermediate spins. There again I do not rate any Merloni product, well not now anyway!!!
HTH,
Oliver.
Likely replying to Oliver Shaw
Hi Oliver,
Well it only seems to fill nearly that high in the Fast Wash 60C cycle since I overload it, but in the cottons+ 60C it is only just under that. The 1000rpm interm. spins between the rinses help a lot with the rinsing in the Cotton’s programmes otherwise I think rinsing would be poor. Yeah I was told the pressure switch had gone dodgy by people on YouTube (HooverAC110 is my channel). I just think that the rinsing is much better than in my old Hoover Performa AC110 as you couldn’t even see the water! but still it did 4/5 rinses in cottons!
I’m surprised you have trouble with your Hotpoint rinsing as I know others with Hotpoint’s an they never say the rinses is terrible, but I know how it is with skin problems as I have a slight one too, allergic to some detergents and because our previous washer did so many rinses it makes me use Extra Rinse all the time.
Thanks for commenting back to me :)
Gary
Likely replying to Gary Pendlebury
Hi Gary,
No problem. Thats right it should only fill that high on fast wash 60 and super wash 60, but only on those 2 programmes the rest should just touch the bottom of the door, the synthetic cycles use a touch more, sorry I should have been more explicit! I don’t have the Hotpoint any more, got a reconditioned Bosch. The intermediate spins should be 800rpm on cottons and 500rpm on synthetics and fast wash 60.
Laura Mitchell
Re: tumbles.
If it tumbles too fast the washing will not fall correctly in the drum and will just cling to the outside thus providing poor wash performance. Also tumbling too fast on rinses will whip up a hell of alot of foam, Hotpoint machines do this and then cannot spin it away properly. So the balance has to be right, Bosch from 15 years ago and IAR Siltal from 8 years ago seem to have it perfect, cannot comment on Miele, never owned one (or ever will) or had me hands on one!
HTH,
Oliver.
3 replies Making an effort to be environmentally friendly is a good thing. But now it’s doing the reverse!! In this page you read that people are being forced to fill their washing machines with extra water to rinse properly which defeats the purpose of saving water. If washing machines rinsed properly without using excessive amounts of water you achieve the goal of being environmentally friendly. On the other hand, if you use so little water to be environmentally friendly that people end up filling their washers with too much water for a decent rinse, again you defeat the purpose. I’ve heard of people having problems with their toilets blocking because they don’t use enough water to flush, so they have to flush more than once and end up using more water than they were meant to save! If we want products to work properly and be environmentally friendly at the same time, manufacturers need to thoroughly test them in the real world. Also appliances, cars etc need to be more reliable so you don’t have to dispose of them so often. I don’t see many environmentally friendly manufacturers making their products as reliable as they were 30 years ago.
Making an effort to be environmentally friendly is a good thing. But now it’s doing the reverse!!
In this page you read that people are being forced to fill their washing machines with extra water to rinse properly which defeats the purpose of saving water. If washing machines rinsed properly without using excessive amounts of water you achieve the goal of being environmentally friendly. On the other hand, if you use so little water to be environmentally friendly that people end up filling their washers with too much water for a decent rinse, again you defeat the purpose.
I’ve heard of people having problems with their toilets blocking because they don’t use enough water to flush, so they have to flush more than once and end up using more water than they were meant to save!
If we want products to work properly and be environmentally friendly at the same time, manufacturers need to thoroughly test them in the real world. Also appliances, cars etc need to be more reliable so you don’t have to dispose of them so often. I don’t see many environmentally friendly manufacturers making their products as reliable as they were 30 years ago.
Likely replying to WhatMatters
WhatMatters,
Ah, see what you mean, we have the 6 litre (water efficient) toilets and seem to have no trouble, flush well infact. I remember the Hippo water device, another usless sales tactic trying to get peoples gullable side!
Like you say water will NOT run dry it rains too much!
I’ve heard of people putting white vinegar in the conditioner compartment so it goes in to the last rinse saying it kills the detergent, it must smell bloody awful, bedding humming of vinegar and towels what a pleasent thought!
Simon:
The HE detergents such as Tide HD are just like Ariel, surf etc. They have a different name because in America there is two types of washer, Top-loading high water use that uses a high sudsing detergent and front and top loading HE machines that us low sudsing detergent eg the Tide HD. All our detergents such as Ariel are low sudsing and designed to work in low suds front loading machines.
All the best,
HTH,
Oliver
Likely replying to Oliver Shaw
Oliver, I’ve been researching using white (clear) vinegar in washing machines. Many websites with information on white vinegar and laundry claim that it really does neutralise the detergent (vinegar is acid and detergent is alkali). On one website, it says the smell of vinegar disappears when the clothes dry.
To the lady who wrote comment #16: filling up the washing machine with extra rinsing water about 1/3 up the door (when your husband is away from home) should do the trick. Maybe try the vinegar idea too? Doing this should hopefully make his eczema clear up after a few months. Good luck. :)
Likely replying to WhatMatters
Hi Whatmatters,
I’m aware of the chemistry, I’m in the right indusry for that!!!
I have heard of it working, but if washing machines were made properly in the first place you should not need to add vineger! Aluminium does not like acidity and thats what the drum spider is made of, plus expensive bit to replace!
To comment 16, High level rinsing and vinegar behind your husbands back, why not come clean (no pun intended), you wern’t to know when you bought the machine, after all you would expect Miele to rinse perfectly, especially at them prices!!
HTH
Oliver.
2 replies hi everyone, great information here, although my mind is pretty boggled with everything to consider when buying a machine. MY LG 7.5 kg 5 yrs old has died and its looking that parts could be around the 100 euro mark. I really need to buy a new onealtogether asap but want value for my money and reliability. however I never considered the rinse effectiveness until today reading this blogand i also have a 10 yr old with sever eczema! Now its all thats motivating my purchase along with the 7.5 kg or bigger drum size. Does anyone have the LG model with the medic rinse programme , it is supposedly meant to ensure no detergent is left after each wash.Also I have been looking at the Beko WMB91242LB, it got a S rating from which? on the rinse efficency, not sure is that good enough? and no I cannot afford to sign up to get more detailed info on all washers on which? . has anyone got this washer or know of its reputation? thanks all.
hi everyone, great information here, although my mind is pretty boggled with everything to consider when buying a machine. MY LG 7.5 kg 5 yrs old has died and its looking that parts could be around the 100 euro mark. I really need to buy a new onealtogether asap but want value for my money and reliability. however I never considered the rinse effectiveness until today reading this blogand i also have a 10 yr old with sever eczema! Now its all thats motivating my purchase along with the 7.5 kg or bigger drum size. Does anyone have the LG model with the medic rinse programme , it is supposedly meant to ensure no detergent is left after each wash.Also I have been looking at the Beko WMB91242LB, it got a S rating from which? on the rinse efficency, not sure is that good enough? and no I cannot afford to sign up to get more detailed info on all washers on which? . has anyone got this washer or know of its reputation?
thanks all.
Likely replying to syl
@syl
I’ve read good reviews about the “ISE” washing machines and they can be set to perform up to 7 rinses! ISE machines are also said to be easily repairable without paying over the odds. I’ve not seen many good reviews about LG washing machines and they are made in China! Maybe a reconditioned Miele would be a good purchase? You can set the “Water Plus” to use more water in the washes and rinses apparently. I’m not so sure about buying a brand new Miele as their repair prices are ridiculously expensive now:
A washing machine’s rinsing performance is an important decision, as any of the chemicals and perfumes in laundry products can cause skin reactions. In any case, my home made stuff has been tried and tested with success (see my earlier comments above) and it has no nasty chemicals or perfumes. It rinses off much easier too.
Hope that helps.
Likely replying to syl
@syl
Hi I have used the “Medic programme and it did rinse better than the normal wash, however i only had a small load to wash. the medic programme only works on certain programmes e.g. cotton, synthetic.cotton quick and babycare. If you scroll to earlier posts you will see comments re. “Which” their best machine was not the best at rinsing, or something like that, I have for the longest while been seriously considering swapping my L.G. for a hot and cold fill reconditioned machine but i keep battling on with it, I am beginn,ing to think i am just unlucky and it is taking on even less than it should.
2 replies I am glad I’m NOT the only person who has experienced ongoing problems re very poor rinse function in modern washing machines. It has driven me to distraction, because not only do I suffer from a severe skin disorder that requires a lot of oily cream, but I suffer from Asthma as well. Most washing powders do not dissolve the cream, even on the hottest wash, unless I add more powder. But then I find the low water consumption machines do not rinse the powder out, not even after three extra rinses, hence the laundry smell hideous which then effects my Asthma. I have tried all brands of washing powder, liquids and echo balls, but to no avail. I tried reducing the washing load, but still no joy. I tried a short wash, followed by a boil main wash, plus two additional rinses at the end, but still my clothes are not as clean as they use to be! When on a rinse cycle the water level does not even reach the lower silver rim inside the door, it can’t even be seen and it certainly never soaks or covers my washing! I called a plumber to check my mains water pressure level and that was OK, so the problem is definitely due to a ridiculously low water allocation feature, built in the washing machine I eventually tried adding Soda Crystals to the main wash and that has helped a little. But the point is, I’m still having to run: a short wash with powder, followed by a main wash at 95 with powder and soda crystals + extra rinse, followed by an addition 2 complete rinse cycles So in order to get one half load of washing done, my Hotpoint Aquarius TW540 is on for nearly 4 hours and I’m sure the number of programs I have to run, uses far more water than the older models (pre 1990). Still with all that palaver the results are very poor compared to the old type washing machines. I have even considered buying a twin tub, but all the old machines are now obsolete and non of the new twin tubs have heaters in them, so that’s no good either as they won’t dissolve my cream By the way, regarding washing powder I have found the most clean smelling (more like traditional powders) is Asda’s Eco-friendly, or Wilkingson’s, the rest smell synthetic and absolutely hideous. I have had my skin disorder all my life, yet I never had laundry problems like this years ago. That tells me, that modern machines do not work as efficiently as the old ones, because they do not use enough water in the rinse cycles. No matter how the manufacturers try to explain or justify their product, the end result is far from satisfactory for the consumers with health problems! It seems as if our health needs are being overlooked by the manufacturers, who even fail to give us choice. And it is NOT good enough! Conclusion: the echo label may be a selling point in theory, but in practice, low water consumption washing machines are not fit for purpose (re cleanliness), they also exasperate our health problems. Because it is unanimously agreed that modern washers do not rinse well enough, due to ridiculously low water allocation. So the Echo call in practice is false economy, and I’m fed-up with the dribble. Solution: going by the number of posts on this message board from people experiencing the same problem, it seems the problem is sufficiently widespread. Thus indicating that there is clear need for manufacturers to reconsider the design of their machines, to start meeting special health criteria. There would be a market for a special health needs type washing machine, one that can wash at high temperature and which uses a lot more water to rinse. In such a health machine, the water level needs to cover all the laundry and it needs to rinse at least three times! I shall send a copy of this posting to Hotpoint, and I advise that other people do likewise to their manufacturer. I’ve certainly had enough of the health hazard dribble machines’ best wishes to you all, From Judy
I am glad I’m NOT the only person who has experienced ongoing problems re very poor rinse function in modern washing machines. It has driven me to distraction, because not only do I suffer from a severe skin disorder that requires a lot of oily cream, but I suffer from Asthma as well.
Most washing powders do not dissolve the cream, even on the hottest wash, unless I add more powder. But then I find the low water consumption machines do not rinse the powder out, not even after three extra rinses, hence the laundry smell hideous which then effects my Asthma. I have tried all brands of washing powder, liquids and echo balls, but to no avail. I tried reducing the washing load, but still no joy. I tried a short wash, followed by a boil main wash, plus two additional rinses at the end, but still my clothes are not as clean as they use to be! When on a rinse cycle the water level does not even reach the lower silver rim inside the door, it can’t even be seen and it certainly never soaks or covers my washing! I called a plumber to check my mains water pressure level and that was OK, so the problem is definitely due to a ridiculously low water allocation feature, built in the washing machine
I eventually tried adding Soda Crystals to the main wash and that has helped a little. But the point is, I’m still having to run:
a short wash with powder, followed by
a main wash at 95 with powder and soda crystals + extra rinse, followed by
an addition 2 complete rinse cycles
So in order to get one half load of washing done, my Hotpoint Aquarius TW540 is on for nearly 4 hours and I’m sure the number of programs I have to run, uses far more water than the older models (pre 1990). Still with all that palaver the results are very poor compared to the old type washing machines.
I have even considered buying a twin tub, but all the old machines are now obsolete and non of the new twin tubs have heaters in them, so that’s no good either as they won’t dissolve my cream
By the way, regarding washing powder I have found the most clean smelling (more like traditional powders) is Asda’s Eco-friendly, or Wilkingson’s, the rest smell synthetic and absolutely hideous.
I have had my skin disorder all my life, yet I never had laundry problems like this years ago. That tells me, that modern machines do not work as efficiently as the old ones, because they do not use enough water in the rinse cycles. No matter how the manufacturers try to explain or justify their product, the end result is far from satisfactory for the consumers with health problems! It seems as if our health needs are being overlooked by the manufacturers, who even fail to give us choice. And it is NOT good enough!
Conclusion: the echo label may be a selling point in theory, but in practice, low water consumption washing machines are not fit for purpose (re cleanliness), they also exasperate our health problems. Because it is unanimously agreed that modern washers do not rinse well enough, due to ridiculously low water allocation. So the Echo call in practice is false economy, and I’m fed-up with the dribble.
Solution: going by the number of posts on this message board from people experiencing the same problem, it seems the problem is sufficiently widespread. Thus indicating that there is clear need for manufacturers to reconsider the design of their machines, to start meeting special health criteria. There would be a market for a special health needs type washing machine, one that can wash at high temperature and which uses a lot more water to rinse. In such a health machine, the water level needs to cover all the laundry and it needs to rinse at least three times!
I shall send a copy of this posting to Hotpoint, and I advise that other people do likewise to their manufacturer. I’ve certainly had enough of the health hazard dribble machines’
best wishes to you all,
From Judy
Likely replying to Judy
@Judy
Have you tried rinsing items in WARM or HOT water? Doing so will dissolve and remove a lot more detergent compared to cold water. The clothes will be more creased and it’s not a good idea to rinse delicate items in a final warm rinse, but what can be ironed will be easier to do with a powerful steam iron. :) Another idea: after the first cycle of washing, rinsing and final spin, use the most “water guzzling” cycle, which may be listed in the instruction book? If not, try ones like “wool” or “duvet”, depending on what programmes your washing machine has. Be sure to pour in jugfuls of hot water if there are no delicate items being washed like silk. You will need to manually spin the non-delicate items faster by selecting the spin-only programme, as those programmes will have a slower and shorter final spin.
I’ve tried the “home made” mixture a few times now, which I mentioned earlier on. To see if it rinsed off easier, I just used the “Extra Rinse” option (which normally would not help much), but seeing the LCD display showing 20 minutes remaining, with just the last rinse taking place before the final spin, the water looked clear! I pressed the “start/pause” button, poured in about 4 jugfuls of warm water and resumed the machine by pressing the “start/pause” button again. I watched with amazement for a few minutes as the water was still clear.
Modern detergents are full of nasty chemicals and other ingredients which are harmful to skin. Due to competition, the detergent manufacturers seem to be making their detergents stronger and adding more perfumes which also cause skin reactions. Also I notice that today’s detergents do not rinse off easily compared to the “home made” mixture which seems to rinse off very easily and it’s free from all the nasty stuff in all other laundry detergents. The cleaning performance is great and the clothes also feel very soft when they’ve dried. Although there’s still detergents I have to use up, I will NEVER buy laundry detergent again after successfully making it myself and it’s so quick and easy to make. It’s too early to tell if my skin will react to these mild substances in my mixture, but I’m certain it would have reacted by now. I’ll give it a few months and see.
Before assuming it takes a long time to make this mixture – it doesn’t: it’s only a matter of adding the ingredients into a tall container, putting the lid on and shaking it thoroughly. The time you save not having to re-rinse the clothes gives you a lot more free time to do other things. I’m only adding a few jugfuls of warm water to the final rinse to be on the safe side and the clothes come out much dryer after the final spin if the last rinsing water is warm or hot.
Hope that helps.
Likely replying to Judy
hi Judy
I read your comment with great interest as my husband like you has to use all the creams too because of his skin condition and the only thing that helps him is the light treatment which they cant do all the time because of the cancer risk.
I developed dermatitis so rinsing is so bloody important and as you say the water that it takes in is so minimal you can only wonder at the brains behind these machines.
I weigh my washing and dose according to that , I use vinegar now for rinsing, am now going to make my own powder just to see how good it is ,I have nothing to lose as I have to stand and add extra water now and as my machine will be next to the sink am going to set up a hose too to add extra water that way .
I too have spent 4 hours with the machine putting it on for extra rinse and getting so stressed out I had to use my angina spray ,which I haven’t used in 2 yrs. I do find that the Miele powder is the best out of a bad lot.
I had the water board check my water and all is clear and had a good chat with the Scientist who also had a look at this site and was surprise at how long it went on for .
I have spoken to zanussi – Miele – contacted watchdog , cancel my subscription to Which because I really don’t think they are interested enough to help with this issue ,I also can’t for the life of me see how you can give a best buy when you know its rinsing is rubbish .
I would also like to be given the choice of a washing machine that will give us a decent water level for health needs .
If this site is any thing to go buy we are not saving money using less water we are using more and I also
Think the soap companies who produces the these powders need looking at too .
when I get my day off I am going to contact a lady in the daily mail who wrote “can you trust your dishwasher” she might be interested in this site and our problem .
As I for one am not giving up ,I also have to make my mind up about buying the ISE!) Washing machine as the Zanussi gets picked up today ,so now am on my third machine and wondering if its better to go back to hand washing my clothes and getting a little spinner .
Sorry for my grammar but have to rush but couldn’t go without a response to Judy’s .
Gemma
2 replies Gemma on the Persil small and mighty capsules it says '15-30% anionic surfactants, soap, non-anionic surfactants'. It works for me and have no foaming issues. There is some soap bubbles but this is how older detergents were. I do also think the spins between the rinses need altering on modern machines as the soap isn't forced out. I think slower spin speeds seem to force more soap out for some strange reason, you used to be able to see the soap being spun out down the door glass on the older 95 series hotpoints and by rinse 4 the water was clear and you just had clear water droplets on the door glass on the final spin. Gemma are you in East Anglia? Because my water is hard as i live in Colchester, Essex and the water round here is very hard. I had a water softner professionaly installed because i was getting through 2 or 3 kettles a year! Lastly do you think Guys second hand shop would sell older 95 series hotpoints? You know the ones i mean? Brown doors, brown fascia panels and had distribution draining? Hope you get your machine sorted.
Gemma on the Persil small and mighty capsules it says ’15-30% anionic surfactants, soap, non-anionic surfactants’. It works for me and have no foaming issues. There is some soap bubbles but this is how older detergents were. I do also think the spins between the rinses need altering on modern machines as the soap isn’t forced out. I think slower spin speeds seem to force more soap out for some strange reason, you used to be able to see the soap being spun out down the door glass on the older 95 series hotpoints and by rinse 4 the water was clear and you just had clear water droplets on the door glass on the final spin.
Gemma are you in East Anglia? Because my water is hard as i live in Colchester, Essex and the water round here is very hard. I had a water softner professionaly installed because i was getting through 2 or 3 kettles a year!
Lastly do you think Guys second hand shop would sell older 95 series hotpoints? You know the ones i mean? Brown doors, brown fascia panels and had distribution draining?
Hope you get your machine sorted.
Likely replying to Ben Monk
hi Ben
Why don’t you ring Guys Domestic ,he really is a lovely man, am on the list for a old WFF2000( i’ll be lucky } and he did say he gets hotpoints ,why not give him a ring 01502 565474 .
I live in milton keynes and water is very hard indeed, Anglian Water did call me today but i missed the call, or there is the Washer shop too , I contacted them too and many more ,still no luck.
I never thought for one moment that a dam washing machine/powder could cause so much stress , am going to buy a spin dryer so that I can wash by hand what I can and use the spinner, you would not believe what these now cost ,Asda does have one for 80.00 pounds that is the cheapest I have found.
Gemma
Likely replying to Gemma
Hi Gemma a word of warning the ones in Asda are probably made in China and won’t last five minutes. I was going to get a Creda out of Currys they are £129.00 or near there but made in the UK and look very bust. Oh and get one with a drain hose so you can hook it over the sink otherwise you have to stick a bucket underneath the drainage spout which is more hassle. I know what you mean i find it even more stressful when sales people or engineers or members of the public think your loosing the plot becuase they don’t believe you.
Ben
2 replies Thanks for that info Ben am so tired of these washing machine and if this site is any thing to go by we are one of many too. i will go buy these two products ,can you tell me the brand of the liquid soap flakes please and how many mL does the capsule hold. I have also been adding Arms & Hammer baking soda to the Towels last rinse . Friday I went down to the Miele centre to look at the w5740 and watched a load of washing go round and when I pointed out the soap left in the last rinse before softener added and you will laugh at this,she said the water is cloudy because it leave a film on the clothes, that is what makes them smell nice. And here is stupid me washing for only the last 30yrs wasting my time trying to rinse it out. Gemma
Thanks for that info Ben am so tired of these washing machine and if this site is any thing to go by we are one of many too. i will go buy these two products ,can you tell me the brand of the liquid soap flakes please and how many mL does the capsule hold.
I have also been adding Arms & Hammer baking soda to the Towels last rinse .
Friday I went down to the Miele centre to look at the w5740 and watched a load of washing go round and when I pointed out the soap left in the last rinse before softener added and you will laugh at this,she said the water is cloudy because it leave a film on the clothes, that is what makes them smell nice.
And here is stupid me washing for only the last 30yrs wasting my time trying to rinse it out.
Gemma
Likely replying to Gemma johnson
Hi Gemma: Someone commented a long time back, right at the beginning of this topic, that the lack of totally clear water isn’t a reliable indicator of the presence of detergent. Modern detergents are designed to leave laundry smelling and most people presumably like it. Therefore washing machines will not completely remove all traces of it in order for a specific fragrance to be left behind so Mile’s explanation may be correct.
Likely replying to Gemma johnson
Hi Gemma,
The liquid soap flakes is made by Dri-Pak and is sold in Waitrose and Tesco’s but you can order it from Dr-pak themselves or through their Ebay outlet.
Regarding the Persil capsules they are pre-measured doses that hold 40ml but they rinse perfectly and there is no need to add soap to these including Ariel, Bold, Daz, Fairy or supermarket own brand liqui-tabs as all contain 15-30% soap. You can check yourself by looking at the product ingredients on Tesco or Sainsbury’s website.
I assume that the detergent companies took the soap content out because the general public like to see loads of foam and soap as i have gladly found ‘kills’ suds.
By the way if you use any other form of detergent i.e. liquid or powder i would suggest just adding 1 capful of liquid soap flakes. This is far easier than making your own and not time consuming.
Hope you find that helps as it does work for me.
Ben
P.S. Gemma i don’t know if your allergic to optical brighteners but no amount of re-rinsing will rid them as they make a permanent bond to the clothes and then constantly touch the skin causing irritation. A lot of people buy non-bio thinking its the enzymes when more often than not its the brighteners and perfumes. I gave up optical brighteners and no longer have ezcema. Hope that helps?
2 replies Ben I sent my new Miele back because it was so bad at rinsing, but what is this "little Giant ??? is it new, as I bought a cheap machine to get me buy, (its still in its wrap as the thought of all that stress fills me with gloom) until I find a good old one .
Ben I sent my new Miele back because it was so bad at rinsing, but what is this “little Giant ??? is it new, as I bought a cheap machine to get me buy, (its still in its wrap as the thought of all that stress fills me with gloom) until I find a good old one .
Likely replying to GEMMA
Hi Gemma,
The Miele ‘little giant’ is a commercial machine that has a ‘gravity drain’ (whatever that is). I don’t know much about it to be honest only that is supposedly better at rinsing and doesn’t take long to wash.
If i had a utility room and a bigger house then i would opt for an american top loader which would be brand new and come with a guarantee. They don’t have heaters so you would need a good supply of hot water. John Lewis did sell them but i can’t see them currently on their website.
In the mean time i am buying a brand new twin tub. Most of the models are made in the UK. I would rather have an automatic but the stress these damn machines have caused me i can’t be bothered with an automatic ever again. Perhaps worth a look.
The ISE is apparently good but beyond my budget.
Can i use automatic powder in a twin tub? I see no benefit of twin tub powder only a gimmick that they produce more suds. I DO NOT want suds as they a pain in the back side to get rid of.
I have been using liquid but won’t bother with it anymore as i see no benefit to using it if i get a machine that rinses properly.
How did you find taking your Miele back Gemma? The people at Bosch are thick as two planks and unhelpful and can’t understand my problems with modern washing machines nor can the retailers like Bennetts etc. I told them to read this site and to test their clothes by putting them in hot water to see how bad rinsing was on these modern pieces of junk.
I bet Bosch knows their machines don’t rinse but won’t admit it!
The best machine i have ever owned was a Hoover Electron and Hotpoint 9506. The latter needed a new drum spider and i could not find one. Was sad to see it go as it did rinse 99% of the detergent away. Shame on modern Hoover and Hotpoint!
Ben
Likely replying to Ben Monk
Hi Ben
I got my Miele from John Lewis and after 4 weeks returned it because of stress I couldn’t take any more. I was getting ready to go to war with john lewis and found I didn’t need too as they just said ok and came and took it back in a week. I was stunned.
They have a new policy( not broadcasting it ) that if you buy a machine etc and for what ever reason it’s not suitable even after a few months they will take it back no questions asked and its on your receipt ( I ordered on line ).
So its worth doing it this way and I double checked this policy ,I still have not unpack the machine in the garage and am dreading it too .
Gemma
2 replies I am on my second washing machine in 4 weeks ,my old Miele broke down so bought another and it will be returned this Wednesday as I will not rinse the clothes and I can't afford to run it, my water bill will be double the amount , I have bought a cheaper model while I try seek a model 12 -15 years old . I have weighed my washing, worked out the detergent per kg to see if this helped ,I have even stood and added more water to the rinse to clear as last resort I add white vinegar i ,so I have had to rinse by hand. I have never been so screwed in all my life , putting one load on means 3hrs standing trying to rinse . I have many questions like getting on to the soap companies and asking them how much do they advise because if I were to use their amounts i might as well thrown the clothes out and the answer well every one is different. With these new water saving washing machine has anyone tested the amount of powder to water and why for the love of god does your washing swish around for 15 minutes in the same water what logic . If you are having the same problem are you willing to send me your problem as if I can get enough people I will approach dispatches etc and see if they will investigates this problem someone has too GEMMA
I am on my second washing machine in 4 weeks ,my old Miele broke down so bought another and it will be returned this Wednesday as I will not rinse the clothes and I can’t afford to run it, my water bill will be double the amount , I have bought a cheaper model while I try seek a model 12 -15 years old .
I have weighed my washing, worked out the detergent per kg to see if this helped ,I have even stood and added more water to the rinse to clear as last resort I add white vinegar i ,so I have had to rinse by hand.
I have never been so screwed in all my life , putting one load on means 3hrs standing trying to rinse .
I have many questions like getting on to the soap companies and asking them how much do they advise because if I were to use their amounts i might as well thrown the clothes out and the answer well every one is different.
With these new water saving washing machine has anyone tested the amount of powder to water and why for the love of god does your washing swish around for 15 minutes in the same water what logic .
If you are having the same problem are you willing to send me your problem as if I can get enough people I will approach dispatches etc and see if they will investigates this problem someone has too
GEMMA
Likely replying to GEMMA
Gemma, I agree 100% about modern washing machines! They are absolutely useless at rinsing and take too long to do a wash. My clothes were far cleaner in the Hoover Electron i used to have. By the way i do think modern detergents do not rinse well compared to the older versions. So with low water use and newer detergents rinsing is extremely difficult.
I have contacted BBC Watchdog and await to hear from them. I have also contacted Bosch which is my current machine and basically they are not interested and i just ended up rowing with them!
Like you i am after more efficient washer that doesn’t take ages to wash. If anyone knows where i can get hold of a Hotpoint 95 series washing machine that will wash and rinse properly please let me know.
Ben
Likely replying to GEMMA
Hi Gemma,
From personal experience i have found Persil and all the other top brands full of inactive ingredients like Sodium Sulphate that are a nightmare to rinse out though the older machines did do an excellent job but then the formulations were different back then.
I am using SA8 by Amway at the moment and that is much better no fillers but there is plenty of builders and anti scale agents all made in the USA. Ecover, Method and Simply all rinse a lot easier. Funnily enough the tablets rinse well but i put this down to anti foaming agents! There are none in Persil Small and Mighty (take a look on the Unilever website). The shop bought detergents are not value for money in my opinion as they are not full of active ingredients.
I did mention this web site to BBC Watchdog and i have moaned at the likes of Currys, Bennetts and Comet. Not one of them was interested and i just got so fed up and annoyed and left it.
I’ll try Guy’s Domestics but ill keep a look out on Ebay too. I am hopefully viewing a Hotpoint First Edition Saturday the one with a mechanical timer and made before the WM51/52 range.
Let me know how you get on. I think judging by the people’s comments on here you won’t have any trouble getting plenty of support.
All the Best
Ben
2 replies As regular readers know, if I discover something that really helps, I post it for every readers benefit. First, after starting the main wash and waiting for the washing machine to stop filling, I pour in a few jugs of hot water to raise the water level so it just covers the bottom of the door seal by roughly a finger's width. Doing this dilutes the highly concentrated detergent solution slightly and the clothes get soaking wet quicker, which reduces the wear and tear of long wash cycles. If you've had your washing machine for a while, you'll have a rough idea of how long the main wash takes before it drains out the soapy water. During the last 10 minutes or so of the main wash, pour in jugfuls of cold water to raise the water level up to just 1/3 of the door glass. Older washing machines used to do this (including my old washing machine) and its purpose is to heavily dilute the detergent. This REALLY helps with rinsing as the detergent gets heavily diluted before the rinses. Now I can press the "Start/Pause" button to pause the rinses and top up the 3 rinses with jugs of hot water to 1/3 up the door. Since performing the dilution on every main wash, the second rinse is so much clearer and not full of thick white suds and nowhere near as cloudy as it used to be. I no longer have to waste nearly an hour running the "quickwash" cycle afterwards to get 3 extra rinses which I had to top-up with hot water. It sounds like a lot of effort, but I never go out and leave the washing machine on. It's much safer to be at home at all times when using the washing machine, if possible. I'm effectively making a modern front-loading washing machine perform as good as a 20-something-year-old front-loading washing machine. The washing is coming out very clean and soft without smelling of detergent. :)
As regular readers know, if I discover something that really helps, I post it for every readers benefit.
First, after starting the main wash and waiting for the washing machine to stop filling, I pour in a few jugs of hot water to raise the water level so it just covers the bottom of the door seal by roughly a finger’s width. Doing this dilutes the highly concentrated detergent solution slightly and the clothes get soaking wet quicker, which reduces the wear and tear of long wash cycles.
If you’ve had your washing machine for a while, you’ll have a rough idea of how long the main wash takes before it drains out the soapy water. During the last 10 minutes or so of the main wash, pour in jugfuls of cold water to raise the water level up to just 1/3 of the door glass. Older washing machines used to do this (including my old washing machine) and its purpose is to heavily dilute the detergent. This REALLY helps with rinsing as the detergent gets heavily diluted before the rinses. Now I can press the “Start/Pause” button to pause the rinses and top up the 3 rinses with jugs of hot water to 1/3 up the door. Since performing the dilution on every main wash, the second rinse is so much clearer and not full of thick white suds and nowhere near as cloudy as it used to be. I no longer have to waste nearly an hour running the “quickwash” cycle afterwards to get 3 extra rinses which I had to top-up with hot water.
It sounds like a lot of effort, but I never go out and leave the washing machine on. It’s much safer to be at home at all times when using the washing machine, if possible.
I’m effectively making a modern front-loading washing machine perform as good as a 20-something-year-old front-loading washing machine. The washing is coming out very clean and soft without smelling of detergent. :)
Likely replying to WMUser
Hi WMUser,
I noticed your comments about my Zanussi ZFL1023 on Youtube. I can confirm the machine is cold fill only. It is a great machine, built like a tank and highly entertaining to watch! They are extremely rare now though. If you have any questions about the machine I’d be happy to help.
Tom.
Likely replying to Tom
Thank you Tom, I appreciate your help. I found your video via Google searching for old Zanussi models and commented about it in here, as older washing machines, such as Oliver’s Bosch and your Zanussi do rinse properly. It sure looks impressive and much better quality than modern Zanussi models! :)
I hope my existing Zanussi-Electrolux lasts a reasonable amount of time before it goes kaput. I must say that I’m very pleased with the cleaning performance of my current Zanussi-Electrolux, the agitation on the cotton programme is much more vigorous than any washing machine I’ve used before, if only it rinsed properly on its own. :(
When I have to replace my washing machine, I’d be very interested in the old Zanussi models and if I can’t get a ZFL1023, I’d be happy with one similar, provided it performs the spinning in the soapsuds mainwash – that is a MUST-HAVE feature. I’m not too worried about an old Zanussi being hot and cold fill, as I can turn the hot water down to 40C and connect the hot and cold the “wrong” way round i.e. hot hose to cold inlet, cold hose to hot inlet. Then all my rinses will be performed in 40C water. If I get a cold-fill only, I will have a TMV valve fitted when I have the space available to the plumbing, with the washing machine removed and somebody to fit the TMV.
2 replies One day I will probably replace my Zanussi-Electrolux with an old Zanussi ZFL1023 - this looks a good machine and it was made at a time when Zanussi were good quality washing machines, about 1989 - 1990? My question is: If it has hot and cold fill inlet valves, is it possible to use a TMV and a "Y" connector so both inlet valves receive warm water from the TMV? I'm getting tired of adding jug after jug of hot water into my my washing machine, but it's the only way to get the soap out of everything. It would be nice to use an "old" washing machine that uses higher water levels and spends longer performing the rinses.
One day I will probably replace my Zanussi-Electrolux with an old Zanussi ZFL1023 – this looks a good machine and it was made at a time when Zanussi were good quality washing machines, about 1989 – 1990?
My question is: If it has hot and cold fill inlet valves, is it possible to use a TMV and a “Y” connector so both inlet valves receive warm water from the TMV?
I’m getting tired of adding jug after jug of hot water into my my washing machine, but it’s the only way to get the soap out of everything. It would be nice to use an “old” washing machine that uses higher water levels and spends longer performing the rinses.
Likely replying to WMUser
Hi WMUser,
Using a TMV valve on such an old machine will compromise wash results, for a start they do not wash half as long as your modern Zanussi-Electrolux as far as I know the only hot fill on the ZFL1023 is the 95oC whites wash, the 60oC will be hot and cold and (pushing my memory to the limit) all the rest are cold fill. There is also a chance it may be cold fill because the Zanussi Jetsystem that was out in 1989 was cold only. Prior to this the “Washcraft” series from around 1986 were hot and cold but only used the hot water as I have decribed above.
To fit a “Y” adaptor to a warm or hot supply is a disaster waiting to happen, we tried it in the kitchen so the Siltal washer and the dishwaher could both use the hot water, we had a small flood because they are NOT mean’t to be used with anything but cold water. To get around it we gave the hot supply to the dishwasher and have the Siltal connected to 2 cold taps under the sink. “Y” adaptors are famous for leaking anyway, I have had messes with them on a cold supply.
Your solution is possible BUT I cannot see a plumber fitting this arrangement for you as if something goes wrong he will not want you claiming off his public liability insurance. It is something you would have to implement yourself.
If what you are meaning is a hot and cold supply going to a TMV valve and then a “Y” adaptor off the TMV with 2 hoses going to the washing machines inlets, this really ain’t a good idea. Too may joints etc.
However there is a better way, install a second hot tap, either a branch, a T-type tap or a self cutter (these are famous for low pressure though), and have that hose to the hot water valve on the machine. Then connect the existing hot supply and cold supply to the TMV valve, then have a short copper pipe run incorporating the correct reducer and then a washing machine tap on the end and then connect the this to the washing machines cold water inlet hose.
None of this is going to be the perfect solution and should not be nessercary. If you do get the old Zanussi make sure it has both hot and cold fill before doing the work and the model you are looking at will rinse very well with cold water, so is worth a try before you start plumbing anything in. It will either do 4 rinses with water 1/3 up the door (and a top up rinse) and 500rpm intemediate spins after the first, second and third rinse. Or it will do just 3 rinses with water 1/2 up the door with intemediate spins after the wash, first and second rinse.
Good luck with the plumbing.
Oliver.
Likely replying to WMUser
Hi WMUser,
Having just done a bit of research I can confirm the ZFL1023 is a Jetsystem and is cold fill only, matching the continental machines of their day.
It rinsed to an excellent standard indeed using cold water, its programme sequence on cottons was:
Fill to level 1(1″ below the door glass)
Wash and heat, every 2 minutes it would spin for 4-5 seconds to assist the cleaning process.
Top up rinse to level 2 (1/3 up the door)
Short 500rpm spin.
Rinse 1 (Level 3 almost halfway up the door fill)
Short spin,
Rinse 2,
Short spin,
Rinse 3,
Final spin.
Excellent machine if you can find one. They were fairly rare in their day.
Oliver.
2 replies Niki: My words that you quoted were nothing about the best way to rinse laundry or the pros and cons of cold water verses hot. I simply said that 5 rinses (in cold water) are likely to be more thorough than 3. I didn't say 5 rinses are thorough - only more thorough. Even if we accepted that cold water could never rinse to your requirements there still has to be degrees of efficiency that cold water rinsing can achieve. If you can't accept that point then it's futile discussing it further.
Niki: My words that you quoted were nothing about the best way to rinse laundry or the pros and cons of cold water verses hot. I simply said that 5 rinses (in cold water) are likely to be more thorough than 3. I didn’t say 5 rinses are thorough – only more thorough.
Even if we accepted that cold water could never rinse to your requirements there still has to be degrees of efficiency that cold water rinsing can achieve. If you can’t accept that point then it’s futile discussing it further.
Likely replying to Washerhelp
@Washerhelp: I agree that it sounds like I’m contradicting myself. An extra rinse option does not make any noticeable difference. It wouldn’t surprise me if the difference is only around 8% better with the extra rinse enabled, given how little water is used, how much less time clothes are rinsed (to compensate for much longer wash times) and the lack of fast interim spins.
An “extra rinse” option is actually misleading because it’s easy for people to assume washing is rinsed properly with the extra rinse always enabled. I’ve used the extra rinse on my own washing machine in the past and the washing still comes out smelling strongly of detergent and feels rough when dried.
@Nikki, comment 420. I let the washing machine do the hard work with 2 of the re-rinses in 1/3 drum of warm water (maybe I would be better doing all 3 of the re-rinses in hot water, as it doesn’t take long?). The first of these 2 warm rinses really shows the soapsuds – especially on towels! I forgot to say, I once pressed the extra rinse before re-rinsing in warm water to see if there would be less soapsuds in the warm rinsing water. The result? The amount of foam was the same, not less.
Nikki, do you find rinsing things in a bath or sink of hot water really helps or do you prefer to rinse items by hand in hot water? Do you then put these hand-rinsed items into the washing machine to be rinsed more?
I think I’ve thoroughly explained why the extra rinse option on a modern washing machine will not rinse the clothes “properly”. :)
Likely replying to WMUser
Hi WMUser: If anything I would assume an extra rinse option implies that the machine will rinse adequately without it, which at least regarding the JLWD1609 I mentioned is definitely the case as far as we are concerned. My wife has been using this washing machine on and off for over 3 months and she’s never once used the extra rinse option because it rinses perfectly adequately for us with the default rinse.
I’m pretty confident it will rinse well enough for the majority of people even without the extra rinse option and using cold water, and that using the extra rinse option that adds 2 more rinses is forced by the laws of physics to improve rinsing efficiency even if not to the very high standards required by yourself :-)
2 replies Afternoon Andy, Bosch - never sudslocks, with any detergent. Hotpoint - always sudslocks. This is down to bad programming and cannot be altered. Siltal - never sudslocks anymore, now it uses a sufficient anount of water to wash and rinse, since I altered the pressure switch. The Bosch and Siltal both have their own stand pipes, so no problem there, the filters are spotless, they have the normal drain hose with no extensions and the stand pipes are with in the guide lines. It is just the fact certain detergents are too soapy for certain machines,so when interim spinning it all foams up between the inner and outer drum and there for fills the lot up with foam and thus cannot be pumped away. The situation is now sorted as Persil works fine and unlike Ariel is not too soapy, it was mainly a detergent issue. It is just more apparent as modern washing machines spin straight after the wash, do not rinse with very much water so the detergent is not diluted as well, so when spinning just turns to foam. Don't use the Hotpoint much these days, only for large items, when I use it I hook the drain hose over the edge of the (don't laugh!) bathroom sink and I have installed a special blanked off washing machine tap in there too for this purpose, saves moving the Bosch out of the way! Oliver.
Afternoon Andy,
Bosch – never sudslocks, with any detergent.
Hotpoint – always sudslocks. This is down to bad programming and cannot be altered.
Siltal – never sudslocks anymore, now it uses a sufficient anount of water to wash and rinse, since I altered the pressure switch.
The Bosch and Siltal both have their own stand pipes, so no problem there, the filters are spotless, they have the normal drain hose with no extensions and the stand pipes are with in the guide lines. It is just the fact certain detergents are too soapy for certain machines,so when interim spinning it all foams up between the inner and outer drum and there for fills the lot up with foam and thus cannot be pumped away. The situation is now sorted as Persil works fine and unlike Ariel is not too soapy, it was mainly a detergent issue.
It is just more apparent as modern washing machines spin straight after the wash, do not rinse with very much water so the detergent is not diluted as well, so when spinning just turns to foam.
Don’t use the Hotpoint much these days, only for large items, when I use it I hook the drain hose over the edge of the (don’t laugh!) bathroom sink and I have installed a special blanked off washing machine tap in there too for this purpose, saves moving the Bosch out of the way!
Oliver.
Likely replying to Oliver Shaw
Oliver,
The model my mum has has a detergent dosage recommendation indicator based on the load, and 9 times out of 10 it will be 75% recommended or less; which is where I have got my conservative measures from. Either way, for years I used to ignore it and used a full measure of powder or 2 tablets regardless, and it still rinsed perfectly. BTW the most challenging loads for rinsing/suds we wash are towels, which I will rarely use softener on – and these are still sufficiently rinsed. Bear in mind over the years mum’s machine has had to cope with football kits, dog walking jeans, your standard food stains on teatowels, to my niece’s clothes (which coincidentally my sister can’t clean with Persil n.bio liquid) – often involving all the baby-related ick.
Either way, I appreciate your input, however nobody I know with a Miele or some (not all) other more modern washers has had a problem in terms of rinsing, several friends & family also have Miele machines and they don’t have the same problem either; one of my friends being a chronic overdoser. So it is unfair to discount them purely on poor rinse performance, when quite the opposite is true – especially when the brand/type of powder and water hardness are also equally important factors in rinse performance.
Cheers,
Jon
Likely replying to Jon
Hi Jon,
The Miele load / Detergent thing is a selling point and can easily be tricked. Say you set it to do a cottons wash and fill the drum full with half cottons and half synthetics it will think it has alot less than a full load, thus would tell you to UNDERDOSE the detergent. Lets face it we all throw cottons and synthetics in the same wash.
I really hope you do not think I am arguing with you but, up here in West Yorkshire we have fairly soft water and with the correct amount of detergent for the water conditions does not rinse out. You have hard water which shifts detergent easier. A washer cannot only rinse well in hard water, thats pointless. Using less than the recommended dose, has been tried and the results are just rubbish, stains not shifted and the other usual problems all follow.
No washing machine will accept its said capacity because in order to do so it would be rammed to the gunnels. Some manufactueres are rating the capacity of their machines these days with the door open, so not allowing for the indentation of the door glass, so this is just one possible reason why your Miele says use less detergent than recommended.
Neither my parents or myself have got a Miele washing machine, it is a drier that my Mum has. A Miele washing machine is not heavy-duty enough for her needs, as she washes up to 20 loads a week. However the near decade old Siltal takes it all in its stride perfectly. For a Miele to last 20 years it has to 4 loads a week.
The Miele washer belongs to a friend.
All the best,
Oliver.
2 replies I am not saying there is a stigma !! The point I am trying to make is that I am not allergic to anything, apart from monosodium glutamate, and it is highly irritating to be told that the problem with modern washing machines not rinsing properly is somehow my fault !! It is not, it is because they do not allow hot water rinses, that is the end of it. If anybody rubbed in dissolved biological washing powder or liquid into their skin they would develop an allergic reaction. When you wear clothes that have not been properly rinsed, when you sweat your sweat "breaks" down the soap residue in your clothes and causes sore, itchy skin. This is NOT an allergy !! WM User : you are preaching to the converted !! A long time ago ... if you wade back to the beginning of this thread ... you will see that I used to pour hot water into my washing machine to rinse my laundry! Unfortunately, doing this damaged my last machine which was a bosch, and my latest washing machine, a Miele, knackered its bearings because of the weight of the extra water. My husband had to strip it right down to a pile of parts to replace the bearings on the drum, very cleverly I thought because Miele told him he wouldn't be able to do it ... but he did. I have been banned now from filling it up too much, although there is in fact a water sensor on it to prevent this happening (we did actually have this removed, but it still will only allow you to fill half way up the window).
I am not saying there is a stigma !! The point I am trying to make is that I am not allergic to anything, apart from monosodium glutamate, and it is highly irritating to be told that the problem with modern washing machines not rinsing properly is somehow my fault !! It is not, it is because they do not allow hot water rinses, that is the end of it. If anybody rubbed in dissolved biological washing powder or liquid into their skin they would develop an allergic reaction. When you wear clothes that have not been properly rinsed, when you sweat your sweat “breaks” down the soap residue in your clothes and causes sore, itchy skin. This is NOT an allergy !!
WM User : you are preaching to the converted !! A long time ago … if you wade back to the beginning of this thread … you will see that I used to pour hot water into my washing machine to rinse my laundry! Unfortunately, doing this damaged my last machine which was a bosch, and my latest washing machine, a Miele, knackered its bearings because of the weight of the extra water. My husband had to strip it right down to a pile of parts to replace the bearings on the drum, very cleverly I thought because Miele told him he wouldn’t be able to do it … but he did. I have been banned now from filling it up too much, although there is in fact a water sensor on it to prevent this happening (we did actually have this removed, but it still will only allow you to fill half way up the window).
Likely replying to Nikki Jenkins
@Nikki Jenkins, I’m sure that bearings will fail on every washing machine at some point, they always do. I wonder if bearings on modern washing machines are stronger for 3 reasons: 1) Washing machine drums are bigger and typically wash 7KG or more at once 2) Modern washing machines claim to be capable of washing duvets. You can imagine how heavy a soaking wet duvet is!! 3) Faster spin speeds are available now, such as 1600rpm or higher. “Washerhelp” would know more about bearings and roughly how long they last. I don’t know how old your Miele is?
Maybe you could fill the drum 1/3 with hot water, instead of 1/2 and see how that goes? Perhaps 2 of the rinses in 1/3 of hot water may work? Hopefully nothing will come out ruined, but it should be ok if everything is cotton e.g. towels, jeans etc. The water going in must be hot as it cools down instantly when it hits the cold water and the inside of the washing machine.
Likely replying to WMUser
Hi WMUser,
Bearings have actually decreased in size as manufacturers are cost cutting, it is not uncommon for a washing machine to have collapsed bearings within 18 months. Higher spin speeds, larger load sizes and taking into account for overloading mean the need for decent sized bearings, the majority of manufacturers refuse to upgrade bearings on their large capacity machines and those with high spin speeds.
Incidentally adding water will have very little effect on bearings simply because the water is held by the tank (outer drum) so the suspension system and springs will suffer. Overloading, over dosing the detergent and also under-dosing the detergent are all detrimental though, the latter two will rot the water seal and thus the bearings get wet and rust though and break up or collapse.
Having repaired a few machines in my time I can tell you My Mums IAR Siltal (nearly 10 years old), a low spin, short cycled machine, 5kg capacity machine has bearings of exactly twice the size on a current Merloni or Electrolux group produced machine both of which will have large load capacities, long cycles and also ridiculously fast spin speeds. My 16 year old Bosch has bearings the same size as the IAR Siltal, however current Bosch machines have much smaller bearings and in the budget end (WAA range) it is not uncommon for failures in 18 months.
Miele and Asko use the best bearings currently on the market today, all the other manufacturers are pandering to what people want, cheap throwaway machines.
And finally a wet thin summer double duvet is not as heavy as a 7kg load of wet towels!
Oliver.
2 replies Really interesting thread. Yet another person here who is suffering from skin irritation from poorly rinsed washing.Like several others who've contributed here my bedding is cotton and most of my clothes are cotton. The synthetics - which I wash very rarely - rinse fine. In my view if a machine can not rinse towels/sheets/jeans properly it is not fit for purpose. I find it particularly annoying that the manufacturers will not provide information on rinsing performance. I rate Miele as a firm but when I asked them about how their machines performed they said their rinsing was "excellent" but couldn't provide any data to back it up. So how do they know it's excellent??? I asked JLP why they didn't supply rinsing information for their machines - answer was because the manufacturers would all have to agree apparently and they will not do so until someone forces them to do so. Like several others I am not "allergic" nor do I have especially sensitive skin and have washed my clothes with out any problems for the last 30 years! It took me 3 years to work out what was causing it and having done so I am taking it up with the retailer in the hope that they will put pressure on the manufacturer. I am quite willing to take them to the small claims court if necessary. In response to my written complaint they have paid for the service call to establish whether any fault with the machine. Which there isn't - engineer confirmed that all was working to manufacturer's criteria. Interestingly he was suffering from exactly the same problem (itchy skin) since buying a new machine two years ago. There must be a lot of us about.......
Really interesting thread. Yet another person here who is suffering from skin irritation from poorly rinsed washing.Like several others who’ve contributed here my bedding is cotton and most of my clothes are cotton. The synthetics – which I wash very rarely – rinse fine. In my view if a machine can not rinse towels/sheets/jeans properly it is not fit for purpose.
I find it particularly annoying that the manufacturers will not provide information on rinsing performance. I rate Miele as a firm but when I asked them about how their machines performed they said their rinsing was “excellent” but couldn’t provide any data to back it up. So how do they know it’s excellent???
I asked JLP why they didn’t supply rinsing information for their machines – answer was because the manufacturers would all have to agree apparently and they will not do so until someone forces them to do so.
Like several others I am not “allergic” nor do I have especially sensitive skin and have washed my clothes with out any problems for the last 30 years!
It took me 3 years to work out what was causing it and having done so I am taking it up with the retailer in the hope that they will put pressure on the manufacturer. I am quite willing to take them to the small claims court if necessary. In response to my written complaint they have paid for the service call to establish whether any fault with the machine. Which there isn’t – engineer confirmed that all was working to manufacturer’s criteria.
Interestingly he was suffering from exactly the same problem (itchy skin) since buying a new machine two years ago. There must be a lot of us about…….
Likely replying to Ruth
Ruth, I too have noticed the synthetics cycle rinses better (the rare times I use it) and it does that because it uses more water than the cottons cycle. Crazy really! Like you, my “allergies” only appear from chemicals in contact with skin, otherwise my skin is fine. If you look at the label on laundry detergent such as Ariel Excel Gel, it has the word “irritant” along with the symbol of a black “X” on a red background. New washing machines don’t rinse properly at all, thus leaving this “irritant” in the clothes, so when we sweat and we wear clothes which are in contact with our skin all day long and our bedding all night, it’s no wonder people are itching and allergic!!
Oliver, I recommended clear vinegar to clear out limescale in the washing machine. Does this “Maytag Affresh” product clear limescale? I’ve had a look at it, but no mention of limescale removal. It sounds like a good product, especially if it can clear out remains of old detergent.
For anyone wondering about warm rinsing, it could be similar to this: If you rinse your toothbrush in very hot water for a few minutes, you’ll be surprised at how much old toothpaste disappears. No matter how much you rinse it under the cold tap, it won’t remove much of the hardened toothpaste. It’s probably related to running maintenance washes at the highest temperature of 90C or 95C (depending which one your washing machine has). A maintenance wash would not work very well with cold water only!
Likely replying to WMUser
Hi WMUser,
Affresh does not remove limescale deposites. Clearing limescale is a completley seperate job from removing a bio-film or gunk from low temperature washing. The gunk needs an Alkali and a bleach to remove and break it up whereas limescale needs a dedicated acidic product.
If you have a dirty machine it is wise to clear the gunk using bio-bleach powder or Affresh which works quicker and is more effective. Only once all that is removed limescale is a secondary job with the use of a proper washing machine safe descaling product, Electrolux make a nice effective one.
It is a direct opposition from you trying to achieve good rinsing with a modern machine but if the correct amount of detergent is used for your own water hardness there should never be any need to descale a washing machine.
Vinegar does NOT remove limescale from a washing machine in the slightest, because it is not strong enough, plus over doing it by say adding 10 pints may do harm to the machine itself, so I would always recommend the correct product as if that damages your machine you have a come back.
It was Kim and Aggie that started the vinegar and caustic soda thing and neither make the slightest difference to a washing machine, besides what do they know about them anyway?
All the best.
Oliver.
2 replies In the perfect world, the washing machine could use gallons of warm (40C) water in each rinse and perform at least 6 rinses. But for the main wash and pre-wash programmes, use only the amount of water necessary, especially if heating the water higher than 40C. It would be nice if there was some easy "hack" with the electronics to make the drum fill halfway up the door only on rinses. The warm water could flow into the washing machine by a Thermostatic Mixing Valve and could be set as low as 30C if you wash delicates or 40C if everything you wash can handle 40C or warmer. Until then, I have to fill a large jug from the hot tap and pour into the soap drawer time after time in order to raise the rinse level high, until I get fed-up or have other things to do. I agree with you Nikki Jenkins about cotton and linen. I don't like delicate fabrics and I don't like the thought of having one delicate item amongst "normal" clothing and having to use a delicate programme, with a slow spin, just for the one delicate item. It's easier to wash everything on the "cottons" programme and use warm water without worrying about the clothes being ruined. I wash all my bedding on 60C and I don't care what the wash labels say - I know that 60C kills the dust mites and allergens. My bedding has not been shrunk nor ruined in any way, however I don't have silk bedding! I would love to know the science behind warm water rinsing. It must be doing something, compared to incoming water that's just above freezing in January every year.
In the perfect world, the washing machine could use gallons of warm (40C) water in each rinse and perform at least 6 rinses. But for the main wash and pre-wash programmes, use only the amount of water necessary, especially if heating the water higher than 40C.
It would be nice if there was some easy “hack” with the electronics to make the drum fill halfway up the door only on rinses. The warm water could flow into the washing machine by a Thermostatic Mixing Valve and could be set as low as 30C if you wash delicates or 40C if everything you wash can handle 40C or warmer.
Until then, I have to fill a large jug from the hot tap and pour into the soap drawer time after time in order to raise the rinse level high, until I get fed-up or have other things to do.
I agree with you Nikki Jenkins about cotton and linen. I don’t like delicate fabrics and I don’t like the thought of having one delicate item amongst “normal” clothing and having to use a delicate programme, with a slow spin, just for the one delicate item. It’s easier to wash everything on the “cottons” programme and use warm water without worrying about the clothes being ruined. I wash all my bedding on 60C and I don’t care what the wash labels say – I know that 60C kills the dust mites and allergens. My bedding has not been shrunk nor ruined in any way, however I don’t have silk bedding!
I would love to know the science behind warm water rinsing. It must be doing something, compared to incoming water that’s just above freezing in January every year.
Likely replying to WMUser
Hi WMUser,
Using vinegar to clean a washing machine does not work. I have tried it on 2 machines with the tank an inch thick in slime/bio-film, I ran one with water and the other the same with 1 bottle of vinegar, the 2 were exactly the same after each treatment, no difference. Both were done on boil washes from a cold water supply. Soda Crystals do not clean a badly messed up machine either. Neither are strong enough to combat the bio-film which forms.
To properly clean a machine it should be done using a normal dose of biological washing powder containing bleach on a boil wash. If you are concerned about detergent residues you can run a boil wash again afterwards to clear it. Alternatively I have found a product called Maytag “Affresh”. It works very well and leaves the machine residue free, it also clears detergent accumulation.
If the machine is very bad when it has filled up for the boil wash add enough COLD water to raise the level an inch up the door glass. The Affresh works a lot better when kicked off from cold as does the bio powder.
A washing machine can be “hacked” as you put it, to fill half-way up the door by adjusting the pressure switch, I have done it with my parents’ Siltal, I did not make it fill that high though. Your Zanussi-Electrolux will have an adjustable pressure switch. With the right software a washing machine can easily be altered to perform more rinses, but manufacturers are not going to give technical information away, especially Miele!
One thing to consider is some detergent rinse out a lot easier than others, Proctor and Gambles offerings are 10 times harder to shift than Unilever’s. And as Simon has found out Ecover is the easiest to rinse out of all.
All the best,
Oliver.
2 replies I never had any problem before in my life with itchy skin until these stupid EEC regulations came into play such that only an eggcupfull of water is allowed into the machine, and no cold rinse. It is a travesty, and I say yah boo sucks to the EEC. I rinse my clothes by hand in hot water in the sink, and am now starting to have nice fluffy towels and clothes once more. It has taken time, it has taken gallons of water and doubtless the death of thousands of trees due to all the extra carbon, but I am getting there. I wash everything at 60 degrees, with a soak and a pre-wash selected. I put in 1 scoop of "Vanish" and this seems to be doing the trick. The secret to soft fluffy clothes is rinsing in LOTS of water, preferably warm or even more preferably hot. Of course, some fabrics won't take this treatment, but as I have said before, I prefer natural fibres of cotton and linen, and all my towels, bed linens and most of my clothes are fine on high temperatures. Anything synthetic is washed at 40 degrees, but I have very little that is synthetic.
I never had any problem before in my life with itchy skin until these stupid EEC regulations came into play such that only an eggcupfull of water is allowed into the machine, and no cold rinse. It is a travesty, and I say yah boo sucks to the EEC. I rinse my clothes by hand in hot water in the sink, and am now starting to have nice fluffy towels and clothes once more. It has taken time, it has taken gallons of water and doubtless the death of thousands of trees due to all the extra carbon, but I am getting there. I wash everything at 60 degrees, with a soak and a pre-wash selected. I put in 1 scoop of “Vanish” and this seems to be doing the trick.
The secret to soft fluffy clothes is rinsing in LOTS of water, preferably warm or even more preferably hot. Of course, some fabrics won’t take this treatment, but as I have said before, I prefer natural fibres of cotton and linen, and all my towels, bed linens and most of my clothes are fine on high temperatures. Anything synthetic is washed at 40 degrees, but I have very little that is synthetic.
Likely replying to Nikki Jenkins
@Nikki Jenkins, I agree with what you say:
I am solving my detergent-residue problem by rinsing my laundry in hot water by hand, after it has been washed by my Miele washing machine, but the point is I shouldn’t have to. My machine is described as an automatic washing machine, therefore it should be fit for purpose and rinse automatically; it should not be necessary for me to have to rinse my laundry by hand.
I understand your frustration. I wish washing machines were truly-automatic and you could simply load it with the laundry, detergent and fabric conditioner, switch on and come back to it later with perfectly clean and perfectly rinsed washing. No modern washing machine will rinse properly, even if people activate the-extra rinse option every time (or other name given to-extra rinse by each manufacturer).
I don’t like giving out advice, but in this case I feel it’s relevant. As an eczema sufferer, I’ve been able to cure it by making sure all soaps, shower gels and shampoo are thoroughly rinsed away, wear gloves when cleaning and making sure the washing is rinsed properly. I’ve tried many ways to rinse the washing properly, as mentioned further up in several comments of mine and the only one I find works best is 1/2 a drum of WARM water when re-rinsing. It may be very hard for people to accept, but you can ONLY rinse properly by re-rising and manually adding jug after jug of HOT water to raise the water level high in the washing machine.
To save rinsing your washing by hand Nikki, maybe you could copy my method? I now have my hot water set at 80C (very hot I know and could scald!!) and have to switch my hot water on and off once a day to avoid a higher gas bill! When re-rising, I select the quick-wash, the highest spin speed (1600 is default on the cottons quick wash on my machine) and pause the washing machine when it has stopped filling with the cold water. Now I put a large jug in the kitchen sink, fill it up with this hot water and pour it into the soap drawer again and again until I have 1/2 a drum of warm water. 80C may sound too hot, but by the time it mixes with the cold water already in the washing machine, it cools down rapidly. The porthole door glass feels warm to the touch, but not hot. DOING THIS REALLY WORKS!! Once the water level is 1/2 way up the door, I un-pause and watch with horror as the soapsuds fizz out of the clothes as the drum rotates.
If anyone copies my method, please DON’T even think about trying it if you have anything delicate in the wash like a silk item that may shrink. This method is really for cotton and polyester items. It works so well, that the water in the last rinse (when re-rinsing) with the softener added is CLEAR!
Nikki, I don’t know if your washing machine is near a hot tap, but if it is, copying this method may save you a lot of time compared to rinsing the laundry by hand. Let the washing machine do the hard work. :)
Finally, I always load each item of laundry one by one LOOSELY. I know it’s tempting to grab lots of washing at once and push it into the drum, but it will be washed and rinsed better and won’t crease as much if loosely loaded and making sure there’s a gap of about 6 between the top of the washing and the top of the drum for a full load. Bulky items like jackets are best loaded no more than 2/3 the drum height.
Hope that helps.
Likely replying to Nikki Jenkins
Hi Nikki, there’s no stigma attached to being allergic ;-) People commonly become allergic to something they’ve been exposed to all their life without previous problems. People can suddenly become allergic to peanuts as adults when they’ve previously eaten thousands of them, or become allergic to their pet they’ve had for years, or suddenly develop intolerance to foods they’ve always eaten – or detergents. You keep emphasising you are not allergic but then describe how you have allergic reactions to detergent and how your skin cannot tolerate undiluted detergent. I can’t see how an intolerance to detergent in washed laundry could be anything other than an allergic reaction. It doesn’t mean it’s your fault :-)
2 replies Washerhelp : what part of the sentence "it is scientific fact that detergent cannot be rinsed out of towels using cold water" would you argue with?
Washerhelp : what part of the sentence “it is scientific fact that detergent cannot be rinsed out of towels using cold water” would you argue with?
Likely replying to Nikki Jenkins
Hi Nikki,
Read your comment (247) more closley, the first line to be exact, you wern’t talking about your laundry or your machine you were talking about mine.
I did all of your test and they all came back the same, no detergent could be extracted from my TOWELS and I have tried it with JEANS and again nothing could be removed by hot hand rinses, also to give the test a bit more kick after rinsing them in hot water I spun them at 2800rpm in a spin dryer with gravity drain into a bucket and absolutley nothing came out except pure water. I even tasted the water and it was as if it came straight from the tap.
Looks like my old Bosch rinses properly with cold water………..
Oliver.
Likely replying to Nikki Jenkins
Hi Nikki: When you say, it is scientific fact that detergent cannot be rinsed out of towels using cold water I have two issues. The first is that even if true, it isn’t relevant to washing machines because for the majority of people (including the manufacturers) the criteria for satisfactory rinsing of laundry is not to remove all traces of detergent. That’s your criteria because you have an allergy. There is indisputable evidence that washing machines are capable of rinsing to perfectly acceptable standards for most people (or at least used to) using cold water.
My washing machine rinses perfectly well in cold water and by perfectly well I mean to our satisfaction. It doesn’t matter to me if there are still traces of detergent microscopically there. I cannot smell any detergent on any of our laundry, my wife is perfectly happy with results too as are most people I know.
The second one is that I’m not convinced that it is scientifically impossible to rinse out all detergent with cold water. Are you saying if a towel was placed in a fast flowing river or even thrashed around in the sea it could never get rid of the detergent? Even after months in these places the detergent would never be dislodged and diluted or washed away? The definition of scientifically impossible is that no matter how much water was used, and no matter how much agitation or time was used cold water could never remove all detergent, which I find difficult to believe.
I’ve just tried your experiment myself with two identical thin cotton towels. I rinsed one in a bowlful of fairly hot water and squeezed it out. I did the same for the second but in cold water. In both cases all I could see was a few patches of clear bubbles created when I wrung out the towels. The water remained clear and there was no evidence of any soap and no difference in results between the two.
I can only conclude that anyone who can get soapy water out of their laundry when rinsing manually in warm or even cold water must have laundry that has rinsed very poorly and left a lot of detergent in them. In that case the washing machine is either useless at rinsing, or there is some problem with partial blockages affecting its ability to rinse, or some other as yet unknown cause. It can’t be due to a fact that it is using cold water to rinse.
I understand you aspire for much better rinsing and have real issues, as do others. I’m just saying most people don’t, and manufacturers always manufacture for most people unless specifically making a niche product. I’m also saying warm water may or may not be more efficient at rinsing but unless there’s a proven link between large numbers of allergy sufferers and poor rinsing in washing machines no one is going to make washing machines rinse in warm water because it makes them more expensive, decreases reliability and adds to running costs.
2 replies Oliver I’m with you on the whole colour care thing. I use it pretty much-just in case on loads that have nice clothes in, but if its just a load of say trackies, joggers, rough t shirts, underwear etc I will use biological even on dark's. There is a noticeable amount of fading around the seams but that’s it really black joggers are still black and not a washed out grey as the adverts would make you think. I think with me it’s just the principle that if I spent £40 on a top I want to take care of it, and I will do, but seeming as at the moment the majority of my wardrobe is from Primark at £3 or £4 a piece, colour care doesn't seem worth it on these items. Of course, I also wash some of my mums M&S, Edinburgh Woollen Mill, and Debenhams stuff, and I daren't use anything but colour care or 30*C for fear of my mother’s wrath lol. The latest adverts make me laugh for Vanish. Scaring people into using the new Extra Hygiene stuff but if the mum on the advert washed the sheets on 60*C cottons instead of a 30 minute quick wash.. need I say more? I will admit to buying a tub of this, simply on an impulse, and is probably the biggest waste of £3 so far this year, I might as well have invested in a bumper bar of Galaxy :). Jon
Oliver I’m with you on the whole colour care thing. I use it pretty much-just in case on loads that have nice clothes in, but if its just a load of say trackies, joggers, rough t shirts, underwear etc I will use biological even on dark’s. There is a noticeable amount of fading around the seams but that’s it really black joggers are still black and not a washed out grey as the adverts would make you think. I think with me it’s just the principle that if I spent £40 on a top I want to take care of it, and I will do, but seeming as at the moment the majority of my wardrobe is from Primark at £3 or £4 a piece, colour care doesn’t seem worth it on these items.
Of course, I also wash some of my mums M&S, Edinburgh Woollen Mill, and Debenhams stuff, and I daren’t use anything but colour care or 30*C for fear of my mother’s wrath lol.
The latest adverts make me laugh for Vanish. Scaring people into using the new Extra Hygiene stuff but if the mum on the advert washed the sheets on 60*C cottons instead of a 30 minute quick wash.. need I say more? I will admit to buying a tub of this, simply on an impulse, and is probably the biggest waste of £3 so far this year, I might as well have invested in a bumper bar of Galaxy :).
Jon
Likely replying to Jon
Jon, Just read your post dated 22nd March. You say you recommend Persil tablets? Do you find the tablets and powders then rinse out better than the liquids then? Have used Persil colour care and bio and agree the water seems clearer for some reason. I though switched to Persil Small and Mighty liquids and rinsing has been poor ever since. You would think liquids rinsed better than powder but maybe I’m wrong. I have checked the Unilever and PandG website and all powders and tablets have anti foam agents but liquids don’t.
I have a Hotpoint and it seems to like Persil but not Ariel much. When it was bought in 1998 Hotpoint recommended Persil and not Ariel. I think Persil is probably better and has been around longer than Ariel.
Simon
Likely replying to Anonymous
Hi Simon,
I would say the Persil tabs are a good performer yes, only bugger is you have to mess around putting them in that net but aprt from that they clean/rinse really well – though I will say I’ve only used the colour care ones and haven’t used the bio version for a long while. I’ve always foudn Persil and Ariel somewhat equal in terms of performance, the new Actilift range of Ariel is pretty good at rinsing too from what I’ve used of it. From what I’ve found you will get high and low sudsing liquids, and high and low sudsing powders – it’s more a point of experimenting to find out what works best for yourself rather than a blanket statement. One of the best liquids of late for rinsing was Ariel Power, but that seemed to be replaced by Excel Gel after only a year or so, shame as it was a great product.
I’ve always thought P&G powders better for whites, but I’m not sure if that’s my imagination more than anything else.
Is your Hotpoint one of the last timer ones? Our last one was, a WM64 from 98/99, and rinsing on that was far from great to say the least. Still completed the cycle in an hour though, but wasn’t that great at performing, or reliability, at least in a heavy use family – but put it this way, the ultra stingy low level Bosch that replaced it actually rinsed better for us!
Jon
2 replies I think that rinsing is mainly about dissolving the remaining detergent. People on this thread have remarked that if they have a cold feed on their detergent draw it progressively clogs up. Thats because cold water doesnt dissolve the detergent properly. You can imagine that if detergent sticks firmly to a smooth plastic surface it wont be possible to remove the stuff from being tied up in the fibres of a towel. I have demonstrated to myself that It doesnt seem to matter how many times you do a cold machine rinse a warm manual rinse will release loads of undissolved detergent. I have done this with Bosch & Miele machines. It was possible to buy loads of different keys for doing pretty much any pattern of washing and rinsing on the Hoover Keymatic. There were 4 different programs on each plate and I had about a dozen plates (48 permutations!). Unfortunately the plastic keys worked some metal "fingers" which used to break off so after numerous repairs it was reluctantly dumped. Presumably the manufacturers avoid giving the option of a warm rinse in order to meet certain energy efficiency targets and also because of the cost of electricity, energy efficiency is more of a selling point than rinsing efficiency.
I think that rinsing is mainly about dissolving the remaining detergent. People on this thread have remarked that if they have a cold feed on their detergent draw it progressively clogs up. Thats because cold water doesnt dissolve the detergent properly. You can imagine that if detergent sticks firmly to a smooth plastic surface it wont be possible to remove the stuff from being tied up in the fibres of a towel. I have demonstrated to myself that It doesnt seem to matter how many times you do a cold machine rinse a warm manual rinse will release loads of undissolved detergent. I have done this with Bosch & Miele machines.
It was possible to buy loads of different keys for doing pretty much any pattern of washing and rinsing on the Hoover Keymatic. There were 4 different programs on each plate and I had about a dozen plates (48 permutations!). Unfortunately the plastic keys worked some metal “fingers” which used to break off so after numerous repairs it was reluctantly dumped.
Presumably the manufacturers avoid giving the option of a warm rinse in order to meet certain energy efficiency targets and also because of the cost of electricity, energy efficiency is more of a selling point than rinsing efficiency.
Likely replying to Nikki Jenkins
@Nikki Jenkins – I have come across a patent application regarding warm rinsing: https://www.patentsencyclopedia.com/app/20080271262
Hopefully that link will not break.
For those who want to try warm rinsing, I would be very careful if washing delicates like silks, net curtains etc. A water temperature higher than about 30 degrees is likely to shrink delicate items. It’s cottons and towels that seem to be harder to rinse compared to other types of fabric.
Likely replying to Nikki Jenkins
Hi Nikki,
I have tried your trick, took a clean flanel that has been washed in my old Bosch with a full load of towels (the hardest thing to rinse known to man!), it had a correct dose of detergent (persil bio powder), not underdosed, it was washed on 60oC. When immersed in hot water absolutley nothing came out of it, not even one bubble. I do not use fabric conditioner either, cannot stand the stuff!
So my machine must rinse properly with cold water.
Have you fit the TMV valve yet?
Oliver.
2 replies The only way you can efficiently rinse laundry is with HOT or at worst WARM water. That is the bottom line as far as I am concerned. A cold rinse will never ever ever rinse clothes, it is a scientific fact. I am having some fairly good results with my newly restored Miele using the pre-wash option, so that the clothes are at least semi-rinsed in hot water - by virtue of the fact that at least some of the detergent has been dispensed during the pre-wash. None of this would be necessary if modern washing machine were not restricted by ridiculously low water levels, and cold rinses. Yet again, I will reiterate that it is SCIENTIFIC FACT THAT YOU CANNOT RINSE LAUNDRY EFFECTIVELY IN COLD WATER. You need warm or hot water, and plenty of it. That is the bottom line.
The only way you can efficiently rinse laundry is with HOT or at worst WARM water. That is the bottom line as far as I am concerned. A cold rinse will never ever ever rinse clothes, it is a scientific fact.
I am having some fairly good results with my newly restored Miele using the pre-wash option, so that the clothes are at least semi-rinsed in hot water – by virtue of the fact that at least some of the detergent has been dispensed during the pre-wash.
None of this would be necessary if modern washing machine were not restricted by ridiculously low water levels, and cold rinses. Yet again, I will reiterate that it is SCIENTIFIC FACT THAT YOU CANNOT RINSE LAUNDRY EFFECTIVELY IN COLD WATER. You need warm or hot water, and plenty of it. That is the bottom line.
Likely replying to Nikki Jenkins
@Nikki Jenkins. I think you could tell every washing machine manufacturer what you know about hot or warm rinsing.
One problem I have is the hot water pressure is low, so that could be a problem if I connected the hot water to the washing machine’s cold inlet (it’s cold-fill only). I could fill a large jug or the kettle with water from the hot tap and keep adding it to the rinsing water, if I have time, otherwise it’s a case of re-rinsing on a cycle without detergent, where the first “wash” of the second cycle acts as a warm rinse.
Delicate fabrics like silk can only be washed at about 30 degrees, so warm rinsing water for these delicates can only be that temperature or lower.
Warm or hot rinsing could be similar to steam ironing: the steam and heat “opens up” the clothing fibres. Spraying cottons with water and ironing will have a similar effect, as the hot moisture does something, compared to just dry ironing that won’t give you the same nice finish.
Likely replying to Nikki Jenkins
Hello Nikki. If what you say is true then no washing machine has ever rinsed to a decent standard in the UK since they were invented as they’ve always rinsed in cold water. When they used a lot more water though there didn’t seem to be any issues.
I don’t see how the temperature of water is critical for diluting and washing out detergent. Clearly you can’t rinse in hot water as it would damage and excessively crease and even shrink certain laundry items but if it was the case that warm water is a bit better at it than cold presumably it’s not sufficiently better to justify the extra energy costs involved in rinsing in warm water.
It would be nice to point us in the direction of the scientific evidence so we can make an informed view.
2 replies Thank you for the replies. I know many people reading these comments probably don't have the time to make today's washing machines rinse 'better'. I'm wondering if using the "rinse hold" function, found on many washing machines, would help? Basically, the "rinse hold" will hold the laundry in the final rinse water until you manually advance the washing machine onto the final spin, to reduce creasing, which would occur if you leave the clothes in the washing machine for hours after the final spin has finished. Maybe leaving the washing machine on "rinse hold" overnight might help? If the clothes are left soaking for a long time in the rinsing water, maybe the water will absorb into the clothing fibres better? I'm not a scientist lol. When you are ready to dry the clothes, re-rinse and spin. The clothes should hopefully be rinsed much better and not irritate skin and cause other health problems.
Thank you for the replies.
I know many people reading these comments probably don’t have the time to make today’s washing machines rinse ‘better’. I’m wondering if using the “rinse hold” function, found on many washing machines, would help? Basically, the “rinse hold” will hold the laundry in the final rinse water until you manually advance the washing machine onto the final spin, to reduce creasing, which would occur if you leave the clothes in the washing machine for hours after the final spin has finished.
Maybe leaving the washing machine on “rinse hold” overnight might help? If the clothes are left soaking for a long time in the rinsing water, maybe the water will absorb into the clothing fibres better? I’m not a scientist lol.
When you are ready to dry the clothes, re-rinse and spin. The clothes should hopefully be rinsed much better and not irritate skin and cause other health problems.
Likely replying to WMUser
Hi WMUser,
I don’t think Rinse Hold will help, to remove the detergent from the clothing you need agitation to force it out, it does not just soak out without any movement.
It could also cause bacteria to breed in the laundry and the machine, say if a load of towels were washed at 40oC with liquid detergent (no bleach, no sanitisation effect) the germs in towels will not be killed so could fester and stink to high heaven in the morning after an overnight soak.
To rinse properly you need:
1-A few water changes.
2-Good agitation.
3-High water levels.
4-Intermediate spins that do not sudslock.
Take one away and the results will be serverely compermised.
HTH,
Oliver.
Likely replying to Oliver Shaw
Hi Oliver.
I’m aware that there’s no way to make a modern washing machine rinse properly by either using its default settings or just selecting the “extra rinse” option. Improved rinsing requires manual intervention and valuable time, unfortunately – some people simply don’t have the time to wait longer or the patience to fiddle around with the controls. If I knew of a simple “no fuss” method to improve rinsing, I would have mentioned it by now.
Unless people don’t mind leaving the washing in the drum when the final spin is over and allow the clothes to crease up, the rinse-hold option may help, until the user is ready to re-rinse (and WAIT again until it’s finished).
The quickest method is to add extra water during the rinses, but again that requires manual intervention and it can spill water over the floor, but at least it doesn’t take hours. However, if the washing machine “sudslocks” (to those who don’t know, that term “sudslock” describes the situation where the pump switches off before all of the soapy water is pumped away, then this soapy water is used in the next rinse!) – then adding extra water will not be helpful.
There’s NO simple solution!! Unless you replace your washing machine with one that rinses better: the older refurbished models, that guzzle water, seem to be the best option. Provided the spare parts will be available should it need repairing.
What a bad situation we have with new things. They don’t make ’em like they used to! :(
2 replies I used fabric conditioner on towels in the past, but now I use clear vinegar on towels to be sure any remaining detergent has been neutralised. They don't come out stinking of vinegar and dry without any smell. The label on laundry detergents should recommend using half the recommended amount for half loads (obviously taking into account the recommended dosage for water hardness and level of soiling, and using half of that). I try to wash full loads all the time, but sometimes you can't avoid having to wash less than a full load. If you can avoid using too much detergent in the first place then there's less to be rinsed away, however you need to use the right amount to avoid limescale and a whole load of other problems like a smelly washing machine! I wonder if using less water for rinsing is leaving detergent in the outer tub and causing the smells and grease etc. - especially above the drum?
I used fabric conditioner on towels in the past, but now I use clear vinegar on towels to be sure any remaining detergent has been neutralised. They don’t come out stinking of vinegar and dry without any smell.
The label on laundry detergents should recommend using half the recommended amount for half loads (obviously taking into account the recommended dosage for water hardness and level of soiling, and using half of that). I try to wash full loads all the time, but sometimes you can’t avoid having to wash less than a full load.
If you can avoid using too much detergent in the first place then there’s less to be rinsed away, however you need to use the right amount to avoid limescale and a whole load of other problems like a smelly washing machine! I wonder if using less water for rinsing is leaving detergent in the outer tub and causing the smells and grease etc. – especially above the drum?
Likely replying to WMUser
Hi WMUser,
I too have noticed excess foam on towel only loads, but heres the strange bit, only in a modern Hotpoint and My Mums Siltal. In my Bosch, whether it is set to wash at high (touching the door seal) or low water level (2″ in the bottom of the drum)there is hardly any foam at all, in fact nothing foams that much, well not in the wash phase anyway. Rinses 1 and 2 are usually very soapy, but by 3 it is nearly clear and 4 is as close as you get to propely rinsed. The Bosch still does not sudslock. However in the Siltal the wash phase is very soapy, all 3 rinses are still soapy and it sudslocks thorugh both intermediate spins, The Hotpoint was the same.
However in a couple of weeks we are replacing the bearings, brushes and belt on the Siltal, so at the same time I am going to adjust the pressure switch so the rinse water goes from 3-4″ in the bottom of the drum to about 2″ up the door glass on the rinse phase of the cycle, also this will inadvertantly increase the wool cycle to the same level as it washes at the same level as rinses. I shall be leaving the cotton and synthetic wash level where it is, thats fine. This should increase rinsing efficiency and reduce sudslocking drastically, hopefully.
Up here in West Yorkshire the water is softish, Ariel is quite soapy, but Persil is not as bad. Liquids don’t foam so much, but they don’t clean clothing properly either, so we won’t use them. I still do think that all laundry detergents are getting soapier, when I were a lad I don’t remember them foaming to the excess level they do now. This will reduce rinse efficiency only if it causes the machine to sudslock, from what I gather it is quite a common thing for them to do this now, but NONE of the old machines used to do it. Even with modern powders, so it shows its down to machine design and initial spin speeds.
Spot on about modern machines not compensating for “real world” situstions, the Siltal will not refill if the load soaks up all the water, it will on wash but not on the rinses, hence the little adjustment I intend to make.
Fabric conditioner hides detergent residue by killing the foam, if you use it when you look at the rinse water you can think all the detergent has been removed, which is obviuosly not the case at all. I have not used conditioner for some time as it affects my skin and makes a mess of the washer (nicely scented grease, you wouldn’t put motor oil in the washer, so why animal fats etc.?). So a true test is not to use any them observe the rinse water. It also reduces absorbency of towels as they have been coated in fat and oil, which repells water. As you can see I utterly despise the stuff. Ecover is different they use vegitable fats etc. Still not very nice when you know what these products contain!!
All the best,
Oliver.
Likely replying to WMUser
@WMUser I know exactly what you mean about laundry detergents causing too much foam. It can only be down to very few anti foaming ingredients put in modern laundry products. Ariel Excel is the worst culprit for over foaming even if you do follow the correct dosage. The only liquid that does not over foam is Regular Daz liquid which comes in 1.5 litre bottles, it says 20 washes but you could get more out as I think they recommend too much. I believe the ingredient they use is Diemethicone to stop too much foam forming. You can buy it at Savers, Sainsburys and Waitrose. The concentrated version foams too much so I don’t recommend it. Failing that Simply Active, Surcare?, Ecover or Amway Sa8 (www.amway.com). Hope that helps.
2 replies Andy I was unaware that modern machines spun with water and or detergent in them to aid cleaning. Sounds like a stupid idea as that really will fill the drum and tank with huge torrants of foam, and that WILL decrease rinse efficiency. No wonder you was unsure what I mean't by intermediate spins!! This sounds really bad coming from a 20 year old but I preferred the way things used to be not the way they are now! Everytime they supposably redesign the humble washing machine I am always sceptical of what has happened. Lets face they are deffinatley not improving them, quite the reverse infact!! I am deffinatley going to hang on to my Bosch forever if possible it may look old fashioned but it does a far superior job to the modern machines, I just can't begin to tell people how good it is compared the new "improved" washers!! HTH Oliver
Andy
I was unaware that modern machines spun with water and or detergent in them to aid cleaning. Sounds like a stupid idea as that really will fill the drum and tank with huge torrants of foam, and that WILL decrease rinse efficiency. No wonder you was unsure what I mean’t by intermediate spins!!
This sounds really bad coming from a 20 year old but I preferred the way things used to be not the way they are now! Everytime they supposably redesign the humble washing machine I am always sceptical of what has happened. Lets face they are deffinatley not improving them, quite the reverse infact!!
I am deffinatley going to hang on to my Bosch forever if possible it may look old fashioned but it does a far superior job to the modern machines, I just can’t begin to tell people how good it is compared the new “improved” washers!!
HTH
Oliver
Likely replying to david harris
David,
My Bosch WFF2000 was bought at the-Washer Shop in Halifax West Yorkshire!! Got it for £145 with a 12 month warranty and free delivery. Be wary of the new Bosch machines though as the rinsing is rubbish, look for one about 12-15 years old if possible, other option Hotpoint of similar age they were built properly back then!
What matters unless these products contain any sort of bleach they will shorten the life of the washing machine-in particular the drum spider. To counteract this you will be doing a hell of a lot of maintenance washes with ORDINARY bleach containing powder.
Oliver
1 reply I have made quite a few comments on this thread in the past but I thought I should say that we appear to have stumbled on a satisfactory solution (for our particular circumstances at least). We have an old Miele W919 which has a "Water Plus" feature which introduces more water if selected. On its own this feature did not solve the problem. The water level is detected by a tube which dips into the water, and which which has at the other end a pressure sensor. We shortenned the tube to "fool" the sensor and cause more water to be drawn in. Again this on its own did not solve the problem satisfactorily. We now use the Ecover concentrated Biological powder with this setup and no longer need to perform multiple additional hot water hand rinses by hand or using machine wash cycles as before. We have NOT found the Ecover liquid to be as effective and nor the non-biological powder. Hope this helps. Someone should tell Ecover that they have unintentionally stumbled upon a geat marketing opportunity!
I have made quite a few comments on this thread in the past but I thought I should say that we appear to have stumbled on a satisfactory solution (for our particular circumstances at least). We have an old Miele W919 which has a “Water Plus” feature which introduces more water if selected. On its own this feature did not solve the problem. The water level is detected by a tube which dips into the water, and which which has at the other end a pressure sensor. We shortenned the tube to “fool” the sensor and cause more water to be drawn in. Again this on its own did not solve the problem satisfactorily.
We now use the Ecover concentrated Biological powder with this setup and no longer need to perform multiple additional hot water hand rinses by hand or using machine wash cycles as before. We have NOT found the Ecover liquid to be as effective and nor the non-biological powder.
Hope this helps. Someone should tell Ecover that they have unintentionally stumbled upon a geat marketing opportunity!
Likely replying to NIKKI JENKINS
@NIKKI JENKINS
Having read your comment about Ecover liquid and non-biological powder not performing well, I would suggest trying the “home made” laundry powder. It is very quick and easy to make – my earlier comments explain “how to” in more depth. Be sure to use LIQUID soap flakes, as the non-liquid soap flakes will foam too much! I now use the home made stuff in every wash and I find it’s MUCH easier to rinse off and it cleans just as well as Ariel detergent did. Now I don’t have to run extra programs just for rinsing or fill every rinse with jugs of warm water. Also I’ve stopped using the programmes which automatically reduce the wash time for smaller loads. Instead I use the standard programmes which wash for longer, regardless of load size.
As for rinsing, all I do now is press the “Extra Rinse” option on every wash. During the last rinse I pour in 4 to 6 jugfuls of warm water just to be sure; I probably don’t need to do that. Plus I like to be indoors when I have the washing machine or dishwasher switched on and working, having read the horrifying incidents of fires, broken glass doors etc. on this website!
1 reply Hi all Well I have just ordered from Lakeland's anti-limescales balls to see if this helps as am using only 10mls of powder. I do agree with you Ben and Barbara regarding amounts of washing powder ,I even bought Vernon Schmidt book( sad I know) that says as all front loaders use a 1/3 water we should be using 1/3 detergent . So if persil says use 135mls for a full load a 1/3 = 45MLS but I even find this too much and only ever used half of that ,so that is why I started weighing my washing and now using about 10mls = 2 teasp of MIELE or Persil washing powder for 1/2 load. I have never had a full load yet thats 6kg cottons and 3kg easy care. It's amazing when you think you have a full load only to fine that your lucky to have 2kg of washing when weighed. The cottons are the worse towels , jeans etc and next month I shall get some dolly balls from Lakeland's just to see if they do help get rid of the soap and softer towels , read some of the reviews that are there before buying though. I can't find my glasses so please excuse the spelling and grammar . stressed Gemma
Hi all
Well I have just ordered from Lakeland’s anti-limescales balls to see if this helps as am using only 10mls of powder.
I do agree with you Ben and Barbara regarding amounts of washing powder ,I even bought Vernon Schmidt book( sad I know) that says as all front loaders use a 1/3 water we should be using 1/3 detergent .
So if persil says use 135mls for a full load a 1/3 = 45MLS but I even find this too much and only ever used half of that ,so that is why I started weighing my washing and now using about 10mls = 2 teasp of MIELE or Persil washing powder for 1/2 load. I have never had a full load yet thats 6kg cottons and 3kg easy care.
It’s amazing when you think you have a full load only to fine that your lucky to have 2kg of washing when weighed.
The cottons are the worse towels , jeans etc and next month I shall get some dolly balls from Lakeland’s just to see if they do help get rid of the soap and softer towels , read some of the reviews that are there before buying though.
I can’t find my glasses so please excuse the spelling and grammar .
stressed Gemma
Likely replying to Gemma johnson
Hi Gemma, Barbara and WMuser,
I can confirm that the main reason these days why detergents foam too much is because 1: they are not soap based and have as little as 5% soap 2: poor anti foaming agents.
Bruce at Dripak Uk told me this and was very helpful. He suggested adding a teaspoon of liquid soap flakes to the wash and that would kill the bubbles and it works!
However i have found by pure accident that the new Persil small and mighty capsules do not overfoam at all. Ok there is suds but they collapse and don’t get higher so i am sticking to these now. The Persil colour capsules contain 15-30% soap so perhaps thats why they work. I have very little residue if any with these so perhaps worth a try? The Waitrose Sensitive liquid in 1.5 litre bottle is actually Surcare and has good anti foaming control too, the woman in Waitrose said it was a common problem!!
Best Wishes
Ben
1 reply I Also wanted to ask the question above re soap suds , except i did use powder previous to running the machine empty with just bleach, the whole drum was filled with soap suds, I used a 90 degree wash. Thanks Barbara.
I Also wanted to ask the question above re soap suds , except i did use powder previous to running the machine empty with just bleach, the whole drum was filled with soap suds, I used a 90 degree wash.
Thanks Barbara.
Likely replying to barbara
Hi Barbara,
So i am not the only one who thinks modern detergents are not formulated properly to be non sudsing/low sudsing for modern front loaders? Vanish is low sudsing but they are only stain removers sadly. I am at a loss as to what to buy now. Tablets are a no no. The supermarket own brands have better anti foam though than the big brands which doesn’t make sense. I have written to Unilever and Procter and Gamble and await a reply. At this rate i will be making my own detergent!
Ben
1 reply gemma johnson: The eco valve is just a ball in the bottom of the sump hose. When water goes into the washing machine the first bits of it go into the sump hose (which is a concertina hose leading from the tub to the pump). This forces the "eco valve" ball to float up and seal off the sump hose. All it's supposed to do is prevent detergent getting washed into the sump hose and being wasted. I too cannot think how and where any grease would come from. If you don't pour in water to start with then surely all that would happen is the water from your first wash would go into the sump instead and may send some detergent there with it. I can't imagine how this could possibly cause any problem whatsoever. Once water is inside the sump hose it will stay there forever and be replaced every time you wash.
gemma johnson: The eco valve is just a ball in the bottom of the sump hose. When water goes into the washing machine the first bits of it go into the sump hose (which is a concertina hose leading from the tub to the pump). This forces the “eco valve” ball to float up and seal off the sump hose. All it’s supposed to do is prevent detergent getting washed into the sump hose and being wasted.
I too cannot think how and where any grease would come from. If you don’t pour in water to start with then surely all that would happen is the water from your first wash would go into the sump instead and may send some detergent there with it. I can’t imagine how this could possibly cause any problem whatsoever. Once water is inside the sump hose it will stay there forever and be replaced every time you wash.
1 reply Hi All Just plumbed in zanussi zwf 12070w1 washing machine ,cheap one till I can get my hands on an old one. I have a question, i have too pour in 2 litres of water to activate the eco valve, if I don't do this will I get more water in ? As when I asked zanussi they said I had to or I will get greased all over the washing, my husband did his call lo l(first time ) and got annoyed as he cannot get his head around where this grease would come from and they had no guy we could speak too about the workings of the machine . It beggars belief why on earth they have these call centres.
Hi All
Just plumbed in zanussi zwf 12070w1 washing machine ,cheap one till I can get my hands on an old one.
I have a question, i have too pour in 2 litres of water to activate the eco valve, if I don’t do this will I get more water in ?
As when I asked zanussi they said I had to or I will get greased all over the washing, my husband did his call lo l(first time ) and got annoyed as he cannot get his head around where this grease would come from and they had no guy we could speak too about the workings of the machine .
It beggars belief why on earth they have these call centres.
Likely replying to gemma johnson
Hi Gemma,
I wish i had bought appliances from John Lewis now. Steer clear from Bennetts/Hughes, Comet and Currys. The last 3 are useless and one big joke. They don’t listen and don’t want to know.
Whilst modern washers don’t rinse well i have found a friend of mines Zanussi WJD 1667 W washer/dryer does rinse to a good standard. The water on cottons comes to the bottom of the door glass and 1/4 way on the synthetics cycle. This is using Surf powder at the moment and she uses Daz too. She is in a hard water area but even though she doses correctly will get a lot of foam even on a full load. I think modern detergents have a lot to answer for too as there is not enough anti-foaming agents in the current formulation. The anti foam ingrediets are way down the list whereas years ago they featured quite high if i remember rightly. I can remember in the 90’s detergents never foamed much at all which was brilliant as cleaning was better and this aided the rinsing. I wish the general public would realise foaming hinders cleaning and rinsing.
The old Daz and Ariel liquid did not foam much at all but it looks like there are only concentrates now which i am not sure is such a good thing.
Ben
1 reply I have been commenting on the "I Want A Hot And cold Fill Washing Machine" which is mostly men, their advice however has been very helpful, both these sites should unite as we are all unhappy with "cold only fill" and not enough water to give the results of hot and cold fill. The length of time dissatisfaction has been posted on this site makes we think that we are stuck with this problem. I am considering replacing my top range machine for a reconditioned hot and cold fill.
I have been commenting on the “I Want A Hot And cold Fill Washing Machine” which is mostly men, their advice however has been very helpful, both these sites should unite as we are all unhappy with “cold only fill” and not enough water to give the results of hot and cold fill. The length of time dissatisfaction has been posted on this site makes we think that we are stuck with this problem. I am considering replacing my top range machine for a reconditioned hot and cold fill.
Likely replying to barbara
Hi barbara: I amended the spelling mistake for you. The two articles are both on the same site though. It’s just that they both ended up discussing the same issue. I closed comments on one of the articles several months back to try and get everyone to comment on the same article but re-opened it for comments last week.
1 reply I haven't read all the other comments, so apologies if I'm repeating things. I think it's vital that we reduce our water consumption, particularly our use of drinking water for non-food uses (washing clothes, flushing the loo, etc). Personally I blame the rinsing problems on modern detergents. If you've ever hand-washed a jumper with laundry detergent, you'll know how many rinses it takes to get all the soap out - in fact, you probably gave up rinsing even though you knew there was still detergent in your jumper. On the other hand, if you use a neutral baby shampoo (which is recommended in some knitting books), you can get out all the soap in two rinses. I do have an allergic reaction (asthma) to the perfumes in Persil etc, so I use an eco-friendly un-perfumed detergent called Bio-D. I also usually use the 'quick wash' option on my machine which reduces the amount of water used and the length of the rinse cycle. I've never noticed a problem with soap residue in my laundry. What's more, my detergent's completely biodegradable and not harmful to aquatic life, and therefore the discarded rinse water isn't polluting our waterways. Many washes (eg bathroom towels) don't really need detergent at all - warm water's enough to clean them. Or you could try soapnuts.
I haven’t read all the other comments, so apologies if I’m repeating things. I think it’s vital that we reduce our water consumption, particularly our use of drinking water for non-food uses (washing clothes, flushing the loo, etc). Personally I blame the rinsing problems on modern detergents. If you’ve ever hand-washed a jumper with laundry detergent, you’ll know how many rinses it takes to get all the soap out – in fact, you probably gave up rinsing even though you knew there was still detergent in your jumper. On the other hand, if you use a neutral baby shampoo (which is recommended in some knitting books), you can get out all the soap in two rinses. I do have an allergic reaction (asthma) to the perfumes in Persil etc, so I use an eco-friendly un-perfumed detergent called Bio-D. I also usually use the ‘quick wash’ option on my machine which reduces the amount of water used and the length of the rinse cycle. I’ve never noticed a problem with soap residue in my laundry. What’s more, my detergent’s completely biodegradable and not harmful to aquatic life, and therefore the discarded rinse water isn’t polluting our waterways. Many washes (eg bathroom towels) don’t really need detergent at all – warm water’s enough to clean them. Or you could try soapnuts.
Likely replying to Nina
Hi Nina,
All the products you mention scum a washing machine up, thus rotting it from the inside out, the drum spider will suffer. Many modern machines have sealled tanks which would need a new unit thus writing the machine off as being beyond economical repair. This process can take less than 18 months, this is hardly eco-friendly. The permanent use of quickwash will only accellerate the problem. Its a short term environmental saving, the long term is FAR more damaging.
So to counteract this you would need to do maintainence wash every 2-4 weeks, ie. a boil wash with normal bleach containig powder Persil or Ariel suffice.
Bathroom towels will smell and fester if not washed at at least 60oC with a good bleach containg powder. Warm water will not remove skin grease and flakes they get covered in, not to mention bacteria from sweat even after a bath or shower you are never 100% free from these nasties.
Soap nuts if emerge from the bag can do alot of damage to a washing machine, the minimum being a blocked pump.
Something I feel compelled to ask, now please don’t think I am having a go at you because I certainly am not. Why do we need to reduce water consumption, the UK rains that much we have more water than we can shake a stick at?
All the best,
Oliver.
1 reply I have a Miele washer that I bought in 2004 and have no problem with rinses at all. Everything comes out sparkling clean. May be mine is one of the older one that has "power" rinse....I dont know. But what I do know is that I never use the amount of detergent that they (the detergent box or whatever) recommend. Right now I am using Tide HE (form my colors)and Persil white (for my whites). And I only use about 1/8 cup. (Mind you we have soft water in Vancouver.) I think over all we use too much detergent/soap/shampoo/toothpaste than needed. For those that has rinse problem, try using less detergent. You need to find the right amount for the water(hardness) in your area. Experiment!!! and use the least needed. Save money and the planet.
I have a Miele washer that I bought in 2004 and have no problem with rinses at all. Everything comes out sparkling clean. May be mine is one of the older one that has “power” rinse….I dont know. But what I do know is that I never use the amount of detergent that they (the detergent box or whatever) recommend. Right now I am using Tide HE (form my colors)and Persil white (for my whites). And I only use about 1/8 cup. (Mind you we have soft water in Vancouver.) I think over all we use too much detergent/soap/shampoo/toothpaste than needed. For those that has rinse problem, try using less detergent. You need to find the right amount for the water(hardness) in your area. Experiment!!! and use the least needed. Save money and the planet.
Likely replying to Soon Loo
Hello Soon Loo: I think we all suspect manufacturers want us to use too much of everything and don’t trust their recommendations. After all the more we use the more we have to buy again.
Not using enough detergent could cause problems though, especially in harder water areas. I would advise against using a lot less than recommended for the level of soiling and the hardness of water although using a bit less may well prove economical.
Another problem with not using enough detergent can be whites coming out grey (though that’s not the only possible cause), or white streaks left on laundry after washing. Here’s the explanation –
Some powder detergents can react with the minerals in hard water forming a whitish residue that can be mistaken for undissolved detergent. The film can be avoided by using the recommended amount of detergent
Related: Whites coming out of washing machine looking grey, coloureds losing their colour | White streaks or residual washing powder on laundry after washing
1 reply Has anyone else found that too many companies use too many foam boosters in detergents? I have been using Ecover concentrated and even that produces too much foam. Is it me or does it seem that since concentrated detergents came out their cleaning performance has gone down the drain as well as excess bubbles? I have found using the top named brands now a waste of money as none of them work including Persil. So would i be better off just using cheap own brand detergents? Could i use Granny's soap flakes instead. I am very dubious about using soap based cleaning agents in case i ruin the washing machine. Simon
Has anyone else found that too many companies use too many foam boosters in detergents? I have been using Ecover concentrated and even that produces too much foam. Is it me or does it seem that since concentrated detergents came out their cleaning performance has gone down the drain as well as excess bubbles? I have found using the top named brands now a waste of money as none of them work including Persil. So would i be better off just using cheap own brand detergents? Could i use Granny’s soap flakes instead. I am very dubious about using soap based cleaning agents in case i ruin the washing machine.
Simon
Likely replying to Anonymous
Hi Simon,
Do not put pure soap/soap flakes in an automatic front loading washing machine. First problem is it will sud up that much it will more than likely come out of the detergent drawer and could get inside the machines electrics blowing them sky high. Secondly the machine will sudslock, reduce the water used for rinsing and run the drain pump for extended periods both due to foam locking the pressure switch fully open or closed, so giving a false reading. Also soap is soap, there are no water softeners to inhibit limescale formation in the machine, there are no bleaching agents to keep the innards clean, there are no surfactants and enzymes so the results on cleaning you clothing are not going to be so good.
Detergents do not have foam boosters but rather the opposite, foam inhibitors and I as many others have questionned if there is enough in the formulation.
I do not understand why even Persil is not cleaning to a good standard, having seen it shift motor oil, lithium grease and bearing grease with no pretreatment what so ever I can’t see how it struggles with anything else, I have found it to remove blood with no pre treatment either, thats no mean feat. All this is done with short cycle machines, so a real tough challenge but both myself and my Mum get flawless results everytime, and for my Mum that is about 20 loads a week, so it gets a good test. I have a mucky job and I wear white shirts and nomatter what I get on them Persil gets rid of it effortlessly, it removed gear oil from one of my work shirts and a pair of trousers.
If no detergent is getting your clothing clean I would put it down to one of two things, either your clothing has got something indellable on it, in which case nothing will shift it or you washing machine has a fault or needs a good clean out.
All the best,
Oliver.
1 reply I think "suds locking" refers to the situation where the foam gets trapped between rinses and does not get flushed away. Either the pump gets switched off too soon, before all of the soapy water has a chance to be pumped out completely and/or the foam does not get flushed out between the drum and outer tub. I don't know if the leftover foam itself is full of the detergent chemicals that the rinses are trying to remove, but I have noticed this foam does not get flushed away properly. This is more a problem if I wash a smaller load and use the recommended dosage (even WITHOUT soda crystals I've seen lots of foam!!). Best thing I found for small loads - to avoid excess foam - is to use 2/3 or 1/2 the minimum dosage and always use soda crystals to prevent limescale, if you don't live in a "soft water" area. Thinking back, I remember adding 1/2 a drum of cold water when re-rinsing and not seeing many soapsuds appear, but now that I add 1/2 a drum of hot water, you can really see the soapsuds and if you pause the washing machine for a few minutes, you can see the soap "fizz" out of the clothes soaking in this warm water. It must be doing something and Mira's comment #388 says about baby clothes recommending rinsing in warm water.
I think “suds locking” refers to the situation where the foam gets trapped between rinses and does not get flushed away. Either the pump gets switched off too soon, before all of the soapy water has a chance to be pumped out completely and/or the foam does not get flushed out between the drum and outer tub.
I don’t know if the leftover foam itself is full of the detergent chemicals that the rinses are trying to remove, but I have noticed this foam does not get flushed away properly. This is more a problem if I wash a smaller load and use the recommended dosage (even WITHOUT soda crystals I’ve seen lots of foam!!). Best thing I found for small loads – to avoid excess foam – is to use 2/3 or 1/2 the minimum dosage and always use soda crystals to prevent limescale, if you don’t live in a “soft water” area.
Thinking back, I remember adding 1/2 a drum of cold water when re-rinsing and not seeing many soapsuds appear, but now that I add 1/2 a drum of hot water, you can really see the soapsuds and if you pause the washing machine for a few minutes, you can see the soap “fizz” out of the clothes soaking in this warm water. It must be doing something and Mira’s comment #388 says about baby clothes recommending rinsing in warm water.
Likely replying to WMUser
Hi WMUser,
You are right that is what I mean by sudslock. When the machine is spinning throwing torrants of thick white foam down the door and it just cycles through out the tank, also often you can hear the motor labouring greatly under the extreme situation.
The left over foam is full of the chemicals and will polute the next rinse and will there for massivley decrease rinse efficiency, tried it my self. The load is not spun properly at all if the machine has sudslocked.
All the best,
Oliver.
1 reply Miele have a Water Plus option that increases the water level to 1/3 up the door for rinsing and just lapping at the bottom of the glass on wash. However most Miele machines only do 2 rinses, which is not sufficient at all. Some have the option to add a third rinse but they still do not rinse properly. Oliver all due respect, but as I’ve mentioned way up in the thread, the 4-5 year old Miele machine mum has at home which does 2 rinses as standard rinses more than sufficiently with 2 default rinses and using mainly Ariel or Persil detergents. While all but one of us has moved out her machine has had to deal with 3 people with sensitive skin over the years, and we’ve both found it to be better at washing AND rinsing than any of the previous machines, including the Bosch it replaced which did a mediocre job with 4 with Rinse Plus, and the previous Hotpoint's dating from the early-mid and late 90s respectively. Saying that I have recently moved into a flat with an el-cheapo standard issue Beko, and have to say that does a surprisingly good job at washing and rinsing rinse water is always clear by the 2nd rinse even if you use the Quick wash which does 2 as standard, and can do up to 4 if you select the extra rinse. I did have an incident with Asda tablets, which seemed to froth into oblivion and would interfere with the first few interim spins, but even then that was dealt with by the 2nd rinse. Gone back to branded stuff (despite still having half a box of Asda stuff left) and not had a problem with rinsing at all. It’s interesting to say the least how we all get different results with different machines and powder. Mira old washing machines were indeed hooked up to hot and cold, but most machines only utilised the hot tap to fill the wash water on washes at 60 degrees or above. None, if any of the European front loaders produced in the last 40 years have ever used warm rinsing only the standard cold water rinse, the new LG's with the Medic Rinse aside. The warm rinse option has long been available on American top-loaders, however, but are a rarity in this country. Jon
Miele have a Water Plus option that increases the water level to 1/3 up the door for rinsing and just lapping at the bottom of the glass on wash. However most Miele machines only do 2 rinses, which is not sufficient at all. Some have the option to add a third rinse but they still do not rinse properly.
Oliver all due respect, but as I’ve mentioned way up in the thread, the 4-5 year old Miele machine mum has at home which does 2 rinses as standard rinses more than sufficiently with 2 default rinses and using mainly Ariel or Persil detergents. While all but one of us has moved out her machine has had to deal with 3 people with sensitive skin over the years, and we’ve both found it to be better at washing AND rinsing than any of the previous machines, including the Bosch it replaced which did a mediocre job with 4 with Rinse Plus, and the previous Hotpoint’s dating from the early-mid and late 90s respectively.
Saying that I have recently moved into a flat with an el-cheapo standard issue Beko, and have to say that does a surprisingly good job at washing and rinsing rinse water is always clear by the 2nd rinse even if you use the Quick wash which does 2 as standard, and can do up to 4 if you select the extra rinse. I did have an incident with Asda tablets, which seemed to froth into oblivion and would interfere with the first few interim spins, but even then that was dealt with by the 2nd rinse. Gone back to branded stuff (despite still having half a box of Asda stuff left) and not had a problem with rinsing at all.
It’s interesting to say the least how we all get different results with different machines and powder.
Mira old washing machines were indeed hooked up to hot and cold, but most machines only utilised the hot tap to fill the wash water on washes at 60 degrees or above. None, if any of the European front loaders produced in the last 40 years have ever used warm rinsing only the standard cold water rinse, the new LG’s with the Medic Rinse aside. The warm rinse option has long been available on American top-loaders, however, but are a rarity in this country.
Jon
Likely replying to Jon
Hi Jon,
No disrespect to your good self either, but I have seen current Miele in action with and without Water Plus activated and the final rinse water was piled high with foam and the water completley cloudy (obviously with no conditioner). Sudslocking is also a problem, that is not brand specific though, it seems to be something all modern machines suffer.
There are numerous complaints on this blog about Miele machines rinsing properly, both with and without Water plus.
The reason you are getting good results out of your Miele’s rinse performance is because you massivley underdose the detergent. This does not work when washing any kind of heavily soiled clothing. For a washer to be good at rinsing it should remove a NORMAL dose of detergent efficiently not a lot less than recommended. Also you use fabric condidioner which will clear the soapiest wash making it look well rinse even when it is not.
All the best,
Oliver.
1 reply It is not only the fact modern washing machines do not rinse properly but they do not spin at high enough speed on the spins between the rinses to get all the soap out. I have bought an old Hotpoint 9506 electronic de luxe and it gets all the soap out and only takes 55-60 minutes to do a 60 degrees wash and 4 rinses with water 1/3 up the door glass on washes and rinses. No residue left at all though you can faintly smell some fragrance but perfumes these days seem to survive rinsing no matter how much water is used. But i have plunged towels in hot water after rinsing in the Hotpoint and absolutely no residue using Persil, Ariel, Daz, Bold or Fairy. I can use conventional powders, liquids etc and they do not over foam at all. I believe the powders/liquids over foam in these stupid pathetic attempts of modern machines is because the detergent doesn't have enough water to mix with and there its mainly washing in neat detergent where as the older models 'water it down' with extra water they use in the wash process. I will say this that i think the detergents made of all brands back in the 80's and 90's were way better than what we have now including powders. Washing at 30 degrees is a gimmick and only useful for freshening clothes but as usual the 'so called environmental brigade' think they know best when they haven't got a clue! Don't know if anyone has tried but next time you go into Currys, Comet or Bennetts and complain about the rubbish rinsing of modern machines you just get fobbed off with 'They are excellent at rinsing', 'They are energy efficient', 'Better for the environment'. One man told me in an independant store said that modern machines were better at rinsing lol I felt like wacking him one lol Neither the retailers or manufacturers want to know and its down to individuals to pressurise and demand better machines! Hope all that helps. Simon
It is not only the fact modern washing machines do not rinse properly but they do not spin at high enough speed on the spins between the rinses to get all the soap out. I have bought an old Hotpoint 9506 electronic de luxe and it gets all the soap out and only takes 55-60 minutes to do a 60 degrees wash and 4 rinses with water 1/3 up the door glass on washes and rinses. No residue left at all though you can faintly smell some fragrance but perfumes these days seem to survive rinsing no matter how much water is used. But i have plunged towels in hot water after rinsing in the Hotpoint and absolutely no residue using Persil, Ariel, Daz, Bold or Fairy. I can use conventional powders, liquids etc and they do not over foam at all.
I believe the powders/liquids over foam in these stupid pathetic attempts of modern machines is because the detergent doesn’t have enough water to mix with and there its mainly washing in neat detergent where as the older models ‘water it down’ with extra water they use in the wash process. I will say this that i think the detergents made of all brands back in the 80’s and 90’s were way better than what we have now including powders. Washing at 30 degrees is a gimmick and only useful for freshening clothes but as usual the ‘so called environmental brigade’ think they know best when they haven’t got a clue!
Don’t know if anyone has tried but next time you go into Currys, Comet or Bennetts and complain about the rubbish rinsing of modern machines you just get fobbed off with ‘They are excellent at rinsing’, ‘They are energy efficient’, ‘Better for the environment’. One man told me in an independant store said that modern machines were better at rinsing lol I felt like wacking him one lol Neither the retailers or manufacturers want to know and its down to individuals to pressurise and demand better machines!
Hope all that helps.
Simon
Likely replying to simon smith
Hi Simon,
Thats an excellent choice of old machine to buy, very good quality and there are still plently of parts available to keep it running too.
Like your Hotpoint my Bosch does 4 rinses 1/3 up the door, and can faintly smell Persil, but when I plunge towels into hot water it remains clear and free from any soap residue.
I have complained in the likes of Comet and Currys etc. and they told me the same bullsh1t as well, all their washing machines rinsed properly and they could not understand what I was complaining about, in fact they were most patronising, I told them where to go and then walked up to the Washer Shop and bought my Bosch. Incedentally the Washer Shop knew exactly what I mean’t and were very helpful, still are today, but it is a privately owned shop and has been going since the year dot.
All the Best,
Oliver.
1 reply HI ALL, I have sat in front of my washing machine for hours watching the washing cycles very fed up with it all now, so where to go from here with my washing problem, which is after the washing is dry you pick it up and it feels like a load of pins sticking in your hands and lower arms also put a t shirt over your head you the have it on your eye lids a bit like fibre glass loft insulation feel ! and as for putting your hands in your pockets to get keys or coins out. It is not detergent which is left on my washing i, it is lime which has bonded on the clothes in the wash like dust or fine grit and this is after cold and hot rinses but this lime also has some thing from the washing powder or liquid with it as well a chemical reaction has taken place in the wash i think ? as i can put neat washing powder or liquid on my arm and have no problem with it ( dont try this at home???) . With what i was told today even calgon does not help and people now find it no longer works with the new powders and liquids , as i found out too using the correct amount? I now using ECOVER DELICATE and SURCARE CONDITIONER which after a few washes this week does look like it is working so far , but still with an extra rinse, Also i am going to fit WPRO MAGNET PLUG from comet to my washing machine as other people in hard water areas now fit to there washing machine as a water conditioner. GOOD LUCK OUT THERE ,HOPE THE ABOVE HELPS ADY.
HI ALL,
I have sat in front of my washing machine for hours watching the washing cycles very fed up with it all now, so where to go from here with my washing problem, which is after the washing is dry you pick it up and it feels like a load of pins sticking in your hands and lower arms also put a t shirt over your head you the have it on your eye lids a bit like fibre glass loft insulation feel ! and as for putting your hands in your pockets to get keys or coins out.
It is not detergent which is left on my washing i, it is lime which has bonded on the clothes in the wash like dust or fine grit and this is after cold and hot rinses but this lime also has some thing from the washing powder or liquid with it as well a chemical reaction has taken place in the wash i think ? as i can put neat washing powder or liquid on my arm and have no problem with it ( dont try this at home???) .
With what i was told today even calgon does not help and people now find it no longer works with the new powders and liquids , as i found out too using the correct amount? I now using ECOVER DELICATE and SURCARE CONDITIONER which after a few washes this week does look like it is working so far , but still with an extra rinse,
Also i am going to fit WPRO MAGNET PLUG from comet to my washing machine as other people in hard water areas now fit to there washing machine as a water conditioner.
GOOD LUCK OUT THERE ,HOPE THE ABOVE HELPS
ADY.
Likely replying to ady quartermain
@ady quartermain Have you considered adding soda crystals (also called “washing soda”) into the drum before loading with laundry and detergent? A heaped spoonful from a standard dessert spoon should be enough to soften the water and help remove stains, especially greasy stains. It will allow you to use the recommended amount of detergent for “soft” water. You can find soda crystals in any supermarket with the detergents, but it can be well hidden lol.
I used to have a problem with the washing feeling rough, then I discovered that re-rinsing in LOTS of water did the trick. Finally, after using LOTS of warm water, the clothes now feel really soft and there’s no perfume smells when drying or ironing the washing. I also use Surcare fabric conditioner because it has no perfumes added.
You may wish to clean out the washing machine when it’s empty – on the hottest main wash, without pre-wash, (i.e. 90C or 95C) then pour in no less than 1 pint of clear vinegar into the soap drawer when the machine stops filling for the main wash. This should help to clean out remains of previously used detergents and clear any limescale.
1 reply Washerhelp: I DO NOT HAVE AN ALLERGY !! However, in common with most people, if a large amount of detergent is left in my laundry, it will cause me to have eczema/psoriasis/dermetitis, particularly on the "sweaty" areas such as backs of the knees, elbows, middle of the back area (where, in the case of ladies, the bra strap sits). My husband finds that he has a particular problem in the more sensitive areas (not to put too fine a point on it), if I do not rinse out his underwear by hand in hot water after I have washed it in the Miele. But neither of us have an allergy.
Washerhelp:
I DO NOT HAVE AN ALLERGY !!
However, in common with most people, if a large amount of detergent is left in my laundry, it will cause me to have eczema/psoriasis/dermetitis, particularly on the “sweaty” areas such as backs of the knees, elbows, middle of the back area (where, in the case of ladies, the bra strap sits). My husband finds that he has a particular problem in the more sensitive areas (not to put too fine a point on it), if I do not rinse out his underwear by hand in hot water after I have washed it in the Miele.
But neither of us have an allergy.
Likely replying to Nikki Jenkins
Hi Nikki: I didn’t want an argument about semantics but if you look up eczema or dermatitis on wikipedia they all say they are allergy related conditions. Also, if you have a skin reaction to something, most people would say that’s an allergic reaction. It sounds nasty, I have sympathy for anyone suffering from it especially if it’s particularly bad.
1 reply HI ALL, When the washing powder or liquid leaves you with a itch or burning, and i think you know what i mean ! after you use the right amount. Take it back to shop where you bought it from tell the them product is no good and get refund , it costs the makers more money that way when the shop gets the money back from the makers IT COSTS THEM MORE to refund the shop . Pay back time after you have to rewash all your clothes again thats if they do rinse the chemicals out which have stuck to the lime particals on your clothes which i have now found out is the problem after a lot of tests. So Washerhelp man or woman can you give an answer why the particals no longer rinse out when they did before on a normal wash with the use of the correct amount of washing powder or liquids even after more extra rinses . Thank you for the ecover tip simon . ADY.
HI ALL,
When the washing powder or liquid leaves you with a
itch or burning, and i think you know what i mean ! after you use the right amount.
Take it back to shop where you bought it from tell the them
product is no good and get refund , it costs the makers more
money that way when the shop gets the money back from
the makers IT COSTS THEM MORE to refund the shop .
Pay back time after you have to rewash all your clothes
again thats if they do rinse the chemicals out which have
stuck to the lime particals on your clothes which i have now found out is the problem after a lot of tests.
So Washerhelp man or woman can you give an answer why the
particals no longer rinse out when they did before on a
normal wash with the use of the correct amount of washing
powder or liquids even after more extra rinses .
Thank you for the ecover tip simon .
ADY.
Likely replying to ady quartermain
@ady quartermain
I think you’ll find it’s mostly the fault of the environmentalists who have forced washing machine manufacturers to use stupidly small amounts of water for rinsing. 20 years ago and before, typical rinse levels were about 1/4 or 1/2 way up the door glass for every rinse. You will not find a modern washing machine that uses anywhere near that level of water for rinsing, which is why you have to add it yourself.
Modern detergents do seem to foam more than they used to. When washing towels, I find I can only use HALF the MINIMUM recommended amount to avoid vast amounts of foam forming!
Don’t forget also that the environmentalists have forced the manufacturers of detergents to be more “green”. Today’s detergents have to be able to wash at stupidly low temperatures like 30C and now lower than that i.e. 15C! If you wash at temperatures that low, the inside of the washing machine will quickly become filthy and germ ridden and require twice the number of “maintenance washes” at the highest temperature without any laundry. That basically defeats the purpose of saving energy by washing at very low temperatures, not to mention the fact that it won’t clean the clothes properly and you will probably end up rewashing because the stains are still there.
As usual, the environmentalists invent a ‘problem’, such as running out of water, but never propose a solution and forces legislation that makes us all reduce what we can do and use. To get around it, I have to re-rinse every load and add jugfuls of hot water to raise the water level to rinse the so-called “rinsed” washing properly. The water goes slightly cloudy, which proves that the detergent was still in the supposedly “rinsed” washing.
Sadly, I think this problem will NEVER change and those of us with detergent sensitivity will have to re-rinse and manually add lots of extra water!!
1 reply Does anyone on here know anything about where the Optical brightener Distryl Biphenyl derivative comes from? Have asked numerous detergent manufacturers but as usual they never reply. Simon
Does anyone on here know anything about where the Optical brightener Distryl Biphenyl derivative comes from? Have asked numerous detergent manufacturers but as usual they never reply. Simon
Likely replying to simon smith
Hi Simon,
To get information like that you would need to see the detergent manufactureres industrial chemist! I genuinley don’t know. I suspect the detergent companies haven’t responded is because they don’t know or cannot be bothered to find out, the latter probably being the case!
The best I can say is it will be man-made, and once in your clothing ain’t coming out!!
All the best,
Oliver.
1 reply Ahh the WMA30s. Yours would be a couple years younger than you think they came out in 2000 and believe it or not Indesit kept the basic design on Hotpoint machines until as late as last year when the Wales factory closed. But they were their first A wash performance machines though hence why they have the long cycles as you say. Powerhouse they were still around our way until about 4 years ago, we bought our old AEG dishwasher there (I say old, we bought it in 2005 but sold it 6 months later when we got a new kitchen) they always seemed to be far more helpful than the two C’s. Persil small and mighty isn’t a bad product, although it does foam more than the tablets I’m using. Always seems to be going for quite cheap too, often Sains or Asda have the huge bottles for £4, if its not selling for £4 in one supermarket it generally is in another. Seems a lot more simpler a concept than the gels too the gels certainly perform well but are less value for money. The big bottles sell for £8 I think for only 25 washes or so. I remember you used to be able to buy a huge bottle of Ariel liquid, 50 washes or so, with change from a fiver. I’ve heard about Amway stuff here and there but not seen it anywhere I presume it’s only available from specialist places? Jon
Ahh the WMA30s. Yours would be a couple years younger than you think they came out in 2000 and believe it or not Indesit kept the basic design on Hotpoint machines until as late as last year when the Wales factory closed. But they were their first A wash performance machines though hence why they have the long cycles as you say. Powerhouse they were still around our way until about 4 years ago, we bought our old AEG dishwasher there (I say old, we bought it in 2005 but sold it 6 months later when we got a new kitchen) they always seemed to be far more helpful than the two C’s.
Persil small and mighty isn’t a bad product, although it does foam more than the tablets I’m using. Always seems to be going for quite cheap too, often Sains or Asda have the huge bottles for £4, if its not selling for £4 in one supermarket it generally is in another. Seems a lot more simpler a concept than the gels too the gels certainly perform well but are less value for money. The big bottles sell for £8 I think for only 25 washes or so. I remember you used to be able to buy a huge bottle of Ariel liquid, 50 washes or so, with change from a fiver.
I’ve heard about Amway stuff here and there but not seen it anywhere I presume it’s only available from specialist places?
Jon
1 reply In the ideal world Oliver, every washing machine would be like your Bosch WFF2000 and would work fine with Persil Biological on its own. In reality, modern washing machines don't use enough water, limescale is a nuisance in my "hard water" area and I don't think many people with expensive designer clothes would wash them at 60C, even if they can. You rarely see wash labels on new garments that recommending washing above 40C. I'm suspicious that detergent packets recommend using too much - countless times I've used the "recommended" amount and seen lots of foam. If using less than recommended can cause limescale damage, then soda crystals are the ideal solution. I'm sure people who have problems with rinsing are probably using much less detergent than recommended, but they risk causing other problems like a dirty washing machine, grease, limescale and mould. Again, soda crystals will allow people to use less detergent without risking limescale damage (in all but "soft" water areas) and improve rinsing because there's less detergent in the first place. However, regular hot washes are needed to keep the washing machine clean inside. If soda crystals are known to cause damage to drum spiders, the makers of soda crystals should be contacted immediately!! Reading through the comments, some of you seem to know a lot about detergents and rinsing. You could e-mail every major washing machine manufacturer and pass on your findings. Since there are only a few manufacturers who make different brands e.g. Electrolux make Zanussi and AEG and others, it won't take very long to visit the manufacturer's website and e-mail them with your knowledge. It could help us all, especially the hot rinsing idea and why it works. Alternatively, write to each companies' head office. :) See also "Who owns who? Who really makes your washing machine?
In the ideal world Oliver, every washing machine would be like your Bosch WFF2000 and would work fine with Persil Biological on its own. In reality, modern washing machines don’t use enough water, limescale is a nuisance in my “hard water” area and I don’t think many people with expensive designer clothes would wash them at 60C, even if they can. You rarely see wash labels on new garments that recommending washing above 40C.
I’m suspicious that detergent packets recommend using too much – countless times I’ve used the “recommended” amount and seen lots of foam. If using less than recommended can cause limescale damage, then soda crystals are the ideal solution. I’m sure people who have problems with rinsing are probably using much less detergent than recommended, but they risk causing other problems like a dirty washing machine, grease, limescale and mould. Again, soda crystals will allow people to use less detergent without risking limescale damage (in all but “soft” water areas) and improve rinsing because there’s less detergent in the first place. However, regular hot washes are needed to keep the washing machine clean inside.
If soda crystals are known to cause damage to drum spiders, the makers of soda crystals should be contacted immediately!!
Reading through the comments, some of you seem to know a lot about detergents and rinsing. You could e-mail every major washing machine manufacturer and pass on your findings. Since there are only a few manufacturers who make different brands e.g. Electrolux make Zanussi and AEG and others, it won’t take very long to visit the manufacturer’s website and e-mail them with your knowledge. It could help us all, especially the hot rinsing idea and why it works. Alternatively, write to each companies’ head office. :)
See also “Who owns who? Who really makes your washing machine?
Likely replying to WMUser
Hi WMUser,
The WFF2000 washes with the exact same amount of water any modern machine would, about 2″ in the bottom of the drum. Unless I programme Higher Water Level into the wash as well as the rinses. Then it would wash in water touching the door seal. I have found it unnecessary, it is just a waste of time water and energy. The only reason my Mums machine washes better with more water is because she simply overloads it and she will not be told, she can kill the best quality machines in a very short space of time! Also the Bosch agitates much less than a modern machine and the wash phase is sometimes less than half an hour including heating. So if a good detergent works well on it own under those conditions I can promise if used correctly ALL other additives are a waste of time.
As regards to detergent knowledge I use all sorts of different types in my job, carpet /upholstery cleaning, laundry detergents are very similar to what I use and there are a host of “add on” products here too and if you know what you are doing they are a complete waste of money. Manufacturer’s want you to buy all these add on products in all aspects of life and with a bit of knowledge and knowing the chemical names etc. you can see through the marketing bumf! I am the suspicious type!!!
As regards washing at 30/40oC both my Bosch and the Siltal will get good results, I just prefer to wash at 60 oC, my Mum washes all sorts on 40 oC in the Siltal and it always gets things clean, considering she loads it with a ram rod that’s not bad going. Even before when it washes with 2″ of water in the drum it still washed well, she only uses Ariel powder with no add-ons. She used to use liquid plus an oxygen booster, I explained powder contained it all so she switched and said from the off all her clothing was a lot cleaner with only powder. The Siltal also washes in about half an hour. Add on products can often reduce the efficiency of the detergent itself by altering pH etc.
I promise you with hand on heart I have tried everything and can tell you washing machine additives are a con if you use the detergent correctly. And above all else buy a good brand.
I am only guessing to whether soda crystals will damage a washing machine, I have no evidence either way. If I find out I will post it up here immediately. Soda crystals are also very hard on your skin too, about as bad as detergent I would say judging by the alkalinity of them both.
All the best,
Oliver.
1 reply Can anyone help with problem of very hard towels etc. I have a Miele W3240 and ever since it was installed my towels and other articles feel like stiff cardboard when they dry. As I was sure the conditioner section could not have been working I called out the Miele engineer he stated the machine was perfect and gave no help or explanation as to why the clothes are so hard.
Can anyone help with problem of very hard towels etc. I have a Miele W3240 and ever since it was installed my towels and other articles feel like stiff cardboard when they dry. As I was sure the conditioner section could not have been working I called out the Miele engineer he stated the machine was perfect and gave no help or explanation as to why the clothes are so hard.
Likely replying to Ian Perry
Hi Ian,
Have you tried selecting “Water Plus”? If the clothing is still hard running a couple of extra rinses with water plus after the wash has finished may help. As Andy pointed out tumble drying for the correct amount of time does naturally soften fabrics without fabric conditioner of any kind. Even modern Miele machines are not great at rinsing, as are no modern machine.
Oliver.
1 reply I also have a Bosch Classixx, Ceejay, which I bought last July, and I've also noticed the slightly strange smell that the washing has, so I'm glad you mentioned it. It's really irritating, and even hand rinsing clothes numerous times in lots of water doesn't entirely get rid of it. I was wondering if it was something to do with the machine itself. However, today I was hit with a bit of inspiration, and I think I may have finally found out what it is. So this is what I did: I found 3 old flannels that have never been washed in the Bosch, therefore they could not have any remnants of the odd smell from previous washings. Then I hand washed each flannel the same way, changing only one thing - the amount of water. The constants were 30 degrees temp for the wash, cold water for rinsing, and exactly the same amount of powder in each wash - a very small dose appropriate for the size of item. I squeezed out the flannel a bit after the wash and each rinse, and then as much as I could after the final rinse to simulate a good spin. First, I attempted to simulate the Bosch style of washing - low water in wash, 3 rinses in low water. The result was a lot of foam in the wash phase, and still lots of foam on the third rinse, crackling on top of the water. Second, I used lots of water in the wash phase, and lots in the 3 rinses. The result was no foam in the wash phase, just a few bubbles which would quickly dissipate. The final rinse had no bubbles at all. Third, I used a small amount of water in the wash phase, followed by lots in the 3 rinses. There was lots of foam as before, which did NOT rinse out despite three deep rinses! I have to say I was a bit surprised by this. The flannels are now all hanging up drying. Flannel 1 has the icky smell. Flannel 2 has no smell. Flannel 3 also has the icky smell, but maybe a bit less than flannel 1. I have to conclude from this that the wash phase needs to have more water, and that if it did, the washing would smell fresher, and rinsing would be much easier.
I also have a Bosch Classixx, Ceejay, which I bought last July, and I’ve also noticed the slightly strange smell that the washing has, so I’m glad you mentioned it. It’s really irritating, and even hand rinsing clothes numerous times in lots of water doesn’t entirely get rid of it. I was wondering if it was something to do with the machine itself. However, today I was hit with a bit of inspiration, and I think I may have finally found out what it is. So this is what I did:
I found 3 old flannels that have never been washed in the Bosch, therefore they could not have any remnants of the odd smell from previous washings. Then I hand washed each flannel the same way, changing only one thing – the amount of water. The constants were 30 degrees temp for the wash, cold water for rinsing, and exactly the same amount of powder in each wash – a very small dose appropriate for the size of item. I squeezed out the flannel a bit after the wash and each rinse, and then as much as I could after the final rinse to simulate a good spin.
First, I attempted to simulate the Bosch style of washing – low water in wash, 3 rinses in low water. The result was a lot of foam in the wash phase, and still lots of foam on the third rinse, crackling on top of the water.
Second, I used lots of water in the wash phase, and lots in the 3 rinses. The result was no foam in the wash phase, just a few bubbles which would quickly dissipate. The final rinse had no bubbles at all.
Third, I used a small amount of water in the wash phase, followed by lots in the 3 rinses. There was lots of foam as before, which did NOT rinse out despite three deep rinses! I have to say I was a bit surprised by this.
The flannels are now all hanging up drying. Flannel 1 has the icky smell. Flannel 2 has no smell. Flannel 3 also has the icky smell, but maybe a bit less than flannel 1.
I have to conclude from this that the wash phase needs to have more water, and that if it did, the washing would smell fresher, and rinsing would be much easier.
Likely replying to Michelle
Hi Michelle,
The problem with the low water washes you tried is the detergent didn’t dissolve properly, it will be hiding invisible to the naked eye in the fibres and resoaping in all the rinses as cold water will not dissolve it. If you retry your experiment with a low wash water phase and 3 higher level rinses, with a hot wash phase of 60/70oC (wearing rubber gloves of course) my money is on you will find it doesn’t get the “icky” smell once dried. Another option is to do the hot wash phase and just before you pull the plug add double the amount of cold water to the wash solution (a dilution rinse or cold top-up) and try your 3 rinses and you should still have no smell at the end.
This is why cooler washes on the washing machine sometimes wash longer than hot ones as dirt removal is much slower and detergent doesn’t readily dissolve in cold/cool water, even liquid.
Another problem could be the type of detergent you are using, are you using the correct amount for water hardness and soiling, also remembering a 6kg machine will need just a touch more than a 5 kg machine. Detergents like Ecover are famous for funny smells etc. Has your washing machine developed the mouldy smell from constant low temperature washings and no maintainence washes?
I’ll admit its an odd one that the modern Bosch machines are giving off funny smells, it definatley has to be something going through them as nothing inside a washing machine can smell on its own. The only thing would be a new door seal they can smell abit rubbery for a few weeks but other than I can’t think of anything else.
Oliver.
1 reply Does fabric conditioner help with rinsing? If people don't have time to re-run entire programmes without detergent and instead they try running a "rinse and spin" cycle (on machines that have that option) after the washing machine has finished, I wonder if you use fabric conditioner first time round and then re-rinse, could it help rinsing? I know fabric conditioner permeates deep into the clothing fibres, more so than water alone. If we try re-rinsing clothes after the softener has been added, would this help remove more detergent? Just a thought.
Does fabric conditioner help with rinsing? If people don’t have time to re-run entire programmes without detergent and instead they try running a “rinse and spin” cycle (on machines that have that option) after the washing machine has finished, I wonder if you use fabric conditioner first time round and then re-rinse, could it help rinsing?
I know fabric conditioner permeates deep into the clothing fibres, more so than water alone. If we try re-rinsing clothes after the softener has been added, would this help remove more detergent? Just a thought.
Likely replying to WMUser
Hi WMUser,
Fabric conditioner will have the opposite effect, it will coat the fibres making them water repellant and thus “sealling” in any detergent residue, making further rinse cycles pointless anyway. Fabric conditioner may appear to help rinsing as it turns the water crystal clear but in effect it is locking in dirt and detergent into the fabric. Water alone will not shift fabric conditoner it takes multiple hot washes with a good bio powder.
Quite a few people are allergic to the conditioner anyway as it is never removed from the clothing when added to the last rinse or those nasty tumble dryer sheets.
Oliver.
1 reply Has anyone tried using chlorine bleach instead of powder bleach in the machine to bleach whites? Wondered if it would damage the machine? Also is it safe to use soda crystals in washing machines? Mine is a Hotpoint WMA30 model so think its got an aluminium drum? Also i am looking to replace it though with a Hotpoint 9506 model or that series so if anyone knows whereabouts is best to look would be most helpful. Im in Sudbury, Suffolk. Hotpoint also used to make a washing machine that had a purple door, control dial, buttons and dispenser and think it was called Super de Luxe but wanted one of those in particular as they were very reliable. Not sure if they are about any more though.
Has anyone tried using chlorine bleach instead of powder bleach in the machine to bleach whites? Wondered if it would damage the machine? Also is it safe to use soda crystals in washing machines? Mine is a Hotpoint WMA30 model so think its got an aluminium drum?
Also i am looking to replace it though with a Hotpoint 9506 model or that series so if anyone knows whereabouts is best to look would be most helpful. Im in Sudbury, Suffolk. Hotpoint also used to make a washing machine that had a purple door, control dial, buttons and dispenser and think it was called Super de Luxe but wanted one of those in particular as they were very reliable. Not sure if they are about any more though.
Likely replying to simon smith
Hi Simon,
Using chlorine bleach can yellow certain white fabrics such as Nylon, I have seen people yellow white towels with it as well. Prolonged use could damage the washing machine, if it is not rinsed out properly could also do you a fair bit of damage too. It will reduce the efficiency of the detergent as well as bleach is acid and detergent is alkaline so will “knock” each other out and could cause dangerous fumes. If you use a good quality biological bleaching washing powder and the correct wash temperature for whites (60oC if they will take it), I wash everything on 60oC I just ignore the label on the fabric, nothing of mine is ruined, bleaching, adding vanish and other additives are completely unnecessary yes please and a waste of money and something else to rinse out as well. Just using correct detergents and wash cycles make a massive difference to the quality of the wash. Quick washes, Economy washes and Time Saver options all decrease the efficiency of the wash especially on modern machines which use little water in the first place.
Also separating whites and coloureds is a good idea, I know people who use those daft colour catcher things, not only can the block up the machine but don’t catch colour and the people in question do not have white whites, very grey looking, another stupid invention.
Soda crystals say you can use them in washing machine, all machines have the aluminium drum spider fitted, whether or not it will corrode it quicker than using detergent alone will only be a guess. My personal view is the could harm the machine and the performance of soda crystals is not that good anyway. If the correct amount and type of detergent is used once again soda crystals are another product that is simply not needed, they will not white whites as they are in no way a bleach of any kind.
I get very dirty at work and get my clothing properly clean by just using the correct amount of Persil Biological and Bleach powder (green box) and absolutely nothing else. My whites are properly white and colours bright and fresh all from using the one product, I don’t use fabric conditioner either. I have come to the personal conclusion if you read the detergent box and washing machine instruction manual that all add on products, stain removers, oxygen additives and Calgon are a complete waste of money, time and resources as are washing tablets and capsules etc. For very stubborn stains a spray with “Shout” stain remover gives a bit of help and I very rarely use that, it there for emergency’s only.
The purple door Hotpoint although bared the name Hotpoint was in fact made by Zanussi and was a good machine and does fill 1/2 way up the door to rinse as well. Probably will not find one as they are from the late 70’s and parts are all probably obsolete. You may find one in a local backstreet retailer or re-conditioners but would have thought very unlikely as it was too long ago.
Oliver.
1 reply Oliver Shaw - you are a very lucky man. You have a modern washing machine that rinses effectively! I am madly jealous. I am continuing to resort to hand rinsing, in combination with using the cold water wool wash cycle on the Miele to rinse the clothes as well. This actually works quite well, the clothes are still soapy, but nowhere near as bad as they used to be. I will continue to stick to my mantra that you cannot rinse clothes in anything but hot water ... cold water will not rinse soap out of clothes, only hot or maybe warm water will. Hence my hot hand rinses.
Oliver Shaw – you are a very lucky man. You have a modern washing machine that rinses effectively! I am madly jealous. I am continuing to resort to hand rinsing, in combination with using the cold water wool wash cycle on the Miele to rinse the clothes as well. This actually works quite well, the clothes are still soapy, but nowhere near as bad as they used to be.
I will continue to stick to my mantra that you cannot rinse clothes in anything but hot water … cold water will not rinse soap out of clothes, only hot or maybe warm water will. Hence my hot hand rinses.
Likely replying to Nikki Jenkins
Hi Nikki,
I wouldn’t have said its that modern, the Bosch is 16 years old now, how time flies! Its only 5 years younger than me! If you want to try and find one its a WFF2000. I have seen modern Bosch rinsing and they will only fill to the bottom of the door and only do 3 rinses (with Aqua Plus), 16 years is not that long ago, its amazing how they can cock up a tried and tested design. Modern Bosch are crap in comparison, everything is plastic and flimsy. But if you do find a WFF2000 the parts are very expensive, although they last a repair bill can be frightening. A motor is £256.00 + VAT. A drum spider is nearly £200.
Oliver.
1 reply Oliver: it is extraordinary that you are getting good rinse performance from your machine, and I am not. We have moderately hard water here - hard enough for the kettle to get that brown scale on it - do you have soft water? Maybe this might be at least part of the answer?
Oliver: it is extraordinary that you are getting good rinse performance from your machine, and I am not.
We have moderately hard water here – hard enough for the kettle to get that brown scale on it – do you have soft water? Maybe this might be at least part of the answer?
Likely replying to Nikki Jenkins
Hi Nikki,
Our water is according to Yorkshire water “soft”, but we get the brown limescale in the water and as you say the kettle and a hell of alot of it around taps and shower heads. So my feeling it is “moderately soft”. I cannot be certain of this as I am no scientist, but we are the end of the line and get no end of crap coming through the pipes. I changed the fill hoses on the Siltal about a year ago and when doing so also cleaned the inlet filters and the cold one was almost solid with white chalky limescale. So thats a yearly job from now on, especially as it now uses alot more water. Same for my Bosch. The dishwasher is not as badly affected as it is on a hot water supply but I’ll clean that as well. I think water quality depends up on its source, it does not all come from as locally as you would imagine.
I have being observing the Bosch and in the final rinse there is always some foam in the water, not alot so it shows 4 rinses is perfect and anymore would be a waste as even towels are coming out completely residue free.
Oliver.
1 reply Oliver:I can smell detergent faintly on my clothing" As far as I'm aware you are supposed to. The detergent is purposely perfumed because a lot of people apparently like the laundry to have a light perfumed smell after washing. Maybe that's the problem? I wonder if manufacturers are in cahoots with detergent manufacturers to deliberately not rinse too thoroughly to allow the laundry to retain the detergent manufacturers "pleasant" smell? ;-P
Oliver:
I can smell detergent faintly on my clothing”
As far as I’m aware you are supposed to. The detergent is purposely perfumed because a lot of people apparently like the laundry to have a light perfumed smell after washing.
Maybe that’s the problem? I wonder if manufacturers are in cahoots with detergent manufacturers to deliberately not rinse too thoroughly to allow the laundry to retain the detergent manufacturers “pleasant” smell? ;-P
Likely replying to Washerhelp
Hi Washerhelp
I believe the main ingredient in most modern detergents is a negatively charged (anionic) surfactant. This works by reducing the surface tension of the water so it penetrates the clothes better but also it acts by binding to the fabrics and the dirt particles at the same time and by doing this neutralising the electrical attraction between them and allowing the dirt to be released and dissloved. So the detergent molecules are actually it seems designed to cling to the fibres in the fabrics. The only way of getting rid of them is to dissolve them in the water (release them from the fabric) and then take the water away (rinse cycle).
The formulation of detergents has changed a great deal over the years to improve washing efficiency but perhaps these changes have actually made the rinsing problem worse?
Putting technicalities aside the only way I found I could solve the problem was by using warm or hot hand rinsing. Even multiple cold rinses just didnt work. Using the pre-wash as a main wash cycle (omitting detergent for the main wash therefore using it as a warm rinse) works pretty well except if the clothes are really dirty – then they stay pretty dirty.
I have had engineers out numerous times to challenge them to fix the rinsing problem. I have actually demonstrated to them how detergent remains in the clothes (using new towels so they cant use the excuse that the detergent was from past washes etc). I have returned a Bosch to John Lewis for not rinsing properly (to their credit they didnt argue) and they replaced it with a Miele with extra (cold) rinse and high water level button. This was just as bad as the Bosch.
As I mentioned before the new LG machine with warm rinse will be my next choice!
1 reply I think the fact that LG have taken the trouble to add a warm rinse is confirmation that temperature is a key factor in rinsing efficiency. In the numerous tests that I have done in the past I am absolutely certain that conditioner was not involved since I was not using the stuff. I have even conducted serial tests on new towels which shows that the more they are washed the more detergent they seem to accumulate. The amount of detergent retained in clothes depends on the material. Natural fibres such as cotton are the worst. Try the test again Oliver but do it with the towels themselves. The idea of using a thermostatic valve is attractive - I will look into this but my next washing machine will be an LG!
I think the fact that LG have taken the trouble to add a warm rinse is confirmation that temperature is a key factor in rinsing efficiency. In the numerous tests that I have done in the past I am absolutely certain that conditioner was not involved since I was not using the stuff. I have even conducted serial tests on new towels which shows that the more they are washed the more detergent they seem to accumulate. The amount of detergent retained in clothes depends on the material. Natural fibres such as cotton are the worst. Try the test again Oliver but do it with the towels themselves. The idea of using a thermostatic valve is attractive – I will look into this but my next washing machine will be an LG!
Likely replying to Nikki Jenkins
Hi Nikki,
I have repeated the test with a towel, washed using a normal dose of Persil powder (not underdosed) on a 60oC cycle and part of a FULL load of towels, no fabric conditioner. Once again nothing came out, no bubbles and the water was crystal clear. I used hot water for the test and still it remained free from any detergent.
Oliver.
1 reply For anyone who is tempted to try warm rinsing: I was amazed at the results of warm rinsing when I done my 40 degrees cottons wash. Having first performed the pre-wash, using detergent for the pre-wash only, then running another cycle without detergent, I decided to do a bit more. I run the hot tap and added the hot water for the cold rinses. With all that extra water and it being slightly warmer, I couldn't believe the amount of soap bubbles I could see!! Clothes that you think are rinsed properly STILL contain detergent!! It seems that warmer water does help rinsing, as Nikki Jenkins says in several comments above. I did have a towel on the floor below the detergent drawer, as you may spill some water. Yes it's a bit of hassle, but it doesn't take long to pour in jugfuls of hot water. I'd rather spend just a few minutes adding hot water and fiddling with the controls, it's much better than paying the price with angry skin allergies!! Also, I'd rather be at home when the washing machine is running, having read the section of this site on "Appliance safety warnings & recalls". I don't trust appliances and it's better to be around and deal with a bad situation (which will hopefully never happen), than come home and find the kitchen flooded or worse! Not trying to go off-topic. I've yet to try this warm rinsing on towels and I'm wary about delicates. If anyone else has luck with warm rinsing, please post a comment, as I'm very pleased. There is light at the end of the tunnel. :) I'm aware some people have their washing machine in a location away from a hot tap. I don't know if you can make a washing machine fill with water at 30 degrees every time without turning down the hot water for the whole house? If you only wash cottons, maybe the hot water connection is fine, if you don't mind things coming out creased?
For anyone who is tempted to try warm rinsing: I was amazed at the results of warm rinsing when I done my 40 degrees cottons wash.
Having first performed the pre-wash, using detergent for the pre-wash only, then running another cycle without detergent, I decided to do a bit more. I run the hot tap and added the hot water for the cold rinses. With all that extra water and it being slightly warmer, I couldn’t believe the amount of soap bubbles I could see!! Clothes that you think are rinsed properly STILL contain detergent!!
It seems that warmer water does help rinsing, as Nikki Jenkins says in several comments above. I did have a towel on the floor below the detergent drawer, as you may spill some water.
Yes it’s a bit of hassle, but it doesn’t take long to pour in jugfuls of hot water. I’d rather spend just a few minutes adding hot water and fiddling with the controls, it’s much better than paying the price with angry skin allergies!! Also, I’d rather be at home when the washing machine is running, having read the section of this site on “Appliance safety warnings & recalls”. I don’t trust appliances and it’s better to be around and deal with a bad situation (which will hopefully never happen), than come home and find the kitchen flooded or worse! Not trying to go off-topic.
I’ve yet to try this warm rinsing on towels and I’m wary about delicates. If anyone else has luck with warm rinsing, please post a comment, as I’m very pleased. There is light at the end of the tunnel. :)
I’m aware some people have their washing machine in a location away from a hot tap. I don’t know if you can make a washing machine fill with water at 30 degrees every time without turning down the hot water for the whole house? If you only wash cottons, maybe the hot water connection is fine, if you don’t mind things coming out creased?
Likely replying to WMUser
Hi WMUser,
For hot rinsing permanently you will need a Themostatic mixing valve, they use hot and cold water and feed the mixed water to the machine, tap etc. They can mix 80oC hot water down to 30oC if you set it correctly and they work instantly so no damage to the machine or laundry. They are available from the likes of Screwfix and are not too expensive. This way you will not need to set the domestic hot water supply to 30oC permanantly.
HTH,
Oliver.
1 reply On a note about detergents, do tablets contain less 'filler' material than powders? Forget to ask that when I mentioned liquid detergents.
1 reply On the subject of water temperature and rinsing you have probably noticed that if you want to clean something then hot water is better. This is because its easier to dissolve something (the dirt) in hot water. In fact of couse this is why washing machines warm the water for wash cycles. For most solids the higher the temperature of the solvent (water) the more material is dissolved. Some modern detergents are made to try to overcome this to some extent but even these only really start to dissolve at about 32 degrees. The temperature of a cold rinse will be as cold as the water from the cold tap which is much colder than this. If you want to see this for yourself then take one of those towels you have got which are stiff as a board because of the detergent residue and rinse it in cold water by hand. Then after this rinse it in hot water - you will be shocked at the difference. This of course is why many people on this thread complain of foaming in their washing machine when they have got towels in there! We used to have a hot and cold fill hoover keymatic years ago which would do a hot or warm rinse and I used hoses from the hot and cold taps to fill our old twin tub with warm water for rinsing. Of course I accept that the reduced water volumes in modern washing machines are a factor but in my experience temperature is even more important.
On the subject of water temperature and rinsing you have probably noticed that if you want to clean something then hot water is better. This is because its easier to dissolve something (the dirt) in hot water. In fact of couse this is why washing machines warm the water for wash cycles. For most solids the higher the temperature of the solvent (water) the more material is dissolved.
Some modern detergents are made to try to overcome this to some extent but even these only really start to dissolve at about 32 degrees. The temperature of a cold rinse will be as cold as the water from the cold tap which is much colder than this.
If you want to see this for yourself then take one of those towels you have got which are stiff as a board because of the detergent residue and rinse it in cold water by hand. Then after this rinse it in hot water – you will be shocked at the difference.
This of course is why many people on this thread complain of foaming in their washing machine when they have got towels in there!
We used to have a hot and cold fill hoover keymatic years ago which would do a hot or warm rinse and I used hoses from the hot and cold taps to fill our old twin tub with warm water for rinsing.
Of course I accept that the reduced water volumes in modern washing machines are a factor but in my experience temperature is even more important.
Likely replying to Nikki Jenkins
Thanks Nikki: I’m not sure that rinsing is about dissolving detergent, dissolving it would increase its quantity and activate it which is good for the wash cycle. I’d have thought rinsing is more about removing detergent by flushing it away with water. I wouldn’t have thought it needs dissolving to be removed, only to be dislodged from the fibres and flushed away by the sheer volume of water added during all the rinses.
I used to work on the old Hoover keymatics but can’t remember if they had a warm rinse or not as it was a very long time ago :-)
If warm water rinsing was superior I’d have expected manufacturers who are all desperate for anything to let them claim that their washing machine is better than all the competition to have long since jumped on this and created washing machines with “superior rinsing” to sell to the consumer. I would have expected this to have long since been exploited by at least one of the major washing machine manufacturers.
1 reply ~The Miele is still in bits, although at last hubby has all the parts needed to replace the bearing and fit the two drums back into the machine and put everything back together - hopefully! If it works, I have decided that what I will do is set the machine up to wash in the middle of the night, when our electricity is at its cheapest, and then leave it standing in the machine all day, and then set it up to wash again the following night, but this time with no detergent. It will then "test" one or two bits of laundry by rinsing them by hand, and if they are reasonably soap free, then that will do. If not, the machine will be set up again to do a third soap free wash. We can't rig our washing machine up to the hot water fill - because our hot water is heated by our Coalbrookdale wood burner, as well as by the oil boiler and an immersion too if we want, the water would often be far too hot - although it has to be said all our clothes and laundry are cotton or linen, I hate artificial stuff, but I do have some delicate wool jerseys and underwear that needs to be washed on cool. So that, sadly, is not an option. I shall just have to stick with the method as described above, or rinse by hand. I am looking into the white vinegar route if I can find a supermarket or chinese shop that will sell me white vinegar in bulk.
~The Miele is still in bits, although at last hubby has all the parts needed to replace the bearing and fit the two drums back into the machine and put everything back together – hopefully! If it works, I have decided that what I will do is set the machine up to wash in the middle of the night, when our electricity is at its cheapest, and then leave it standing in the machine all day, and then set it up to wash again the following night, but this time with no detergent. It will then “test” one or two bits of laundry by rinsing them by hand, and if they are reasonably soap free, then that will do. If not, the machine will be set up again to do a third soap free wash.
We can’t rig our washing machine up to the hot water fill – because our hot water is heated by our Coalbrookdale wood burner, as well as by the oil boiler and an immersion too if we want, the water would often be far too hot – although it has to be said all our clothes and laundry are cotton or linen, I hate artificial stuff, but I do have some delicate wool jerseys and underwear that needs to be washed on cool. So that, sadly, is not an option. I shall just have to stick with the method as described above, or rinse by hand. I am looking into the white vinegar route if I can find a supermarket or chinese shop that will sell me white vinegar in bulk.
Likely replying to Nikki Jenkins
Hi Nikki,
You can still connect the miele to a hot water supply using a Thermostatic Mixing Valve. It uses a hot and cold supply and mixes it to the valves manually set temperature, even if your hot water is 80oC the valve will happily mix it to 35/40oC. They work instantly too, so there will be no damage to the washing machine or your delicate woollens.
TMV Valves are available from companies such as Screwfix and are not overly expensive, just make sure it has the correct threaded ends for the hoses you intend to use.
HTH,
Oliver.
1 reply Does anyone find that premium brands i.e. Persil are worth the price? I have found Sainsburys own brand laundry products as good. Also washing powder contains plastic 'fillers' and bulking agents (sodium sulfate) and that can't be good for the clothes or the machine? Always have used a liquid as it rinses better but do a maintenance wash once a month with powder containing oxygen bleach.
Does anyone find that premium brands i.e. Persil are worth the price? I have found Sainsburys own brand laundry products as good. Also washing powder contains plastic ‘fillers’ and bulking agents (sodium sulfate) and that can’t be good for the clothes or the machine? Always have used a liquid as it rinses better but do a maintenance wash once a month with powder containing oxygen bleach.
Likely replying to simon smith
Hi Simon,
Personally I find the premium brand washing powders to work a lot better. It probably depends on what you are washing, if everything you wash is lightly soiled you would probably see no difference at all. My overalls and work clothes will not come clean with own brand detergents, they come up spotless in Ariel or Persil bio powders, even on Cotton 60 deg C and “Short wash” selected.
I too have found liquids to rinse out better but they do not kill germs in either the laundry or the machine, call me old fashioned but the idea of wearing second hand sweat is slightly off putting, so for me the bio powders win hands down! At least you do your monthly maintenance wash!
My Mum has also said she would never use the own brands as she too says they do not clean properly, they cannot shift grease etc. out of my Dads overalls but Ariel can (70 deg C wash). So for me the own brands are rubbish in comparison. Certain detergents work better in certain machines.
Ariel works better in the Siltal.
Persil works better in the Bosch.
You are correct about washing powders having plastic “fillers” in, this is why Ariel and Persil have recently concentrated their formulas to reduce the amount of plastic in their formulations. Also some of the packers are builders or water softeners which help protect the machine from limescale build up. Liquids contain these as well but a lot of the filling in a liquid is water. They will not harm the machine in the least, only if you overdose on a permanent basis or never do a maintenance wash. But if used correctly and a monthly 90/95 deg C you will be fine! Its detergent abuse that damages your machine and the laundry. But most folk will not read the package or get the scoop out!
Oliver.
1 reply Maybe the advice for washing in hot programmes - 60 degrees or higher, is to use a little less detergent if the excess foaming is a problem. It sure is for me. Avoid washing small loads if possible, I find that creates too much foam at any temperature. One of the advantages of re-running programmes without detergent (after the first spin) is the first 'wash' of the second programme without detergent acts as a warm rinse. However, I can imagine if a washing machine performed, say, 4 rinses with the water temperature at 40 degrees and using lots of water every time, your electric bill would be very high! It would also take ages from start to finish!! Unless it was filling from the hot water supply? If warm rinsing is a must, one risky method could be to pour a kettle full of hot (not boiling!) water into the rinsing water, once the machine has filled with cold water, if you can.
Maybe the advice for washing in hot programmes – 60 degrees or higher, is to use a little less detergent if the excess foaming is a problem. It sure is for me. Avoid washing small loads if possible, I find that creates too much foam at any temperature.
One of the advantages of re-running programmes without detergent (after the first spin) is the first ‘wash’ of the second programme without detergent acts as a warm rinse. However, I can imagine if a washing machine performed, say, 4 rinses with the water temperature at 40 degrees and using lots of water every time, your electric bill would be very high! It would also take ages from start to finish!! Unless it was filling from the hot water supply?
If warm rinsing is a must, one risky method could be to pour a kettle full of hot (not boiling!) water into the rinsing water, once the machine has filled with cold water, if you can.
Likely replying to WMUser
Hi WMUser,
I have just thought of something about rerunning a high water use cycle, they all tend to be delicate cycles, so there will not be proper agitation and it may not spin between the rinses, or if it does it will be reduced. So may rinse no better than the normal cycle. Your original idea of rerunning the rinse cycle only could be better, just an idea but it has only just occurred to me after seeing my Mums Siltal on a delicate cycle, it uses more water, a lot less agitation and NO intermediate spins.
Its funny you should mention the foam in washing powders, I was also thinking washing powders were producing a lot more foam than they used to. They do seem to foam more on hotter washes as you say, they do wash longer though, so that could be why? Again in My Mums Siltal it will foam half way up the door on a 70 degrees cycle (washes for 40 minutes before rinsing) with a properly measured dose, she uses Ariel Powder by the way. My Bosch tends not to foam up at all, a little bit runs down the door, I have also used Ariel and have not seen my machine froth like that not even on “Whites Economy” (40 minute 60 deg C wash, before rinsing). I use Persil at the moment and it seems to froth less than Ariel, perhaps trying different brand may be a consideration.
Oliver.
1 reply Rod : a Miele engineer reprogrammed the electronics on my machine in an attempt to bring in more water, but it didn't bring in enough, so he then cut something - I think it was a pipe - which brings in more, but still not enough.
Rod : a Miele engineer reprogrammed the electronics on my machine in an attempt to bring in more water, but it didn’t bring in enough, so he then cut something – I think it was a pipe – which brings in more, but still not enough.
Likely replying to Nikki Jenkins
Hi Nikki,
I can see where you are coming from with warm rinsing due to my dishwasher rinsing a lot better. I see your Miele engineer increased the water level to 1/2 way up the door, you say this is not enough and to my knowledge no machine not even in the 70’s and 80’s has put water any higher. They did do more rinse cycles though usually 4 or 5. Did you think of connecting it to a hot supply as per comment 165?
However my Bosch does rinse properly in cold water, we used to have a Servis Quartz which also rinsed properly in cold. I have never come across a machine that will rinse with warm water except for some American top loaders, you can buy them over here as well so this may also be a consideration for better rinsing.
Oliver.
1 reply I want to try and buy an older machine that uses plenty of water to rinse properly. Can anyone please tell me when the new generation of water rationed machines came on the market? In other words, how old does a machine have to be to wash properly with plenty of water?
I want to try and buy an older machine that uses plenty of water to rinse properly. Can anyone please tell me when the new generation of water rationed machines came on the market? In other words, how old does a machine have to be to wash properly with plenty of water?
1 reply It's around 2 years since I posted my thread about how disappointed I was and still am with the poor rinsing performance of ALL modern-day front loading washing machines. Someone made the comment about white vinegar being very good at helping to remove detergent left in clothing, particularly towels. I can confirm that it is absolutely brilliant. However, I have failed to find anywhere who sell it in bulk. You can buy brown malt vinegar in bulk from places like Daily Bread in Northampton, but not white vinegar. Does anyone know of anywhere? I found one website, but the delivery charges were prohibitive.
It’s around 2 years since I posted my thread about how disappointed I was and still am with the poor rinsing performance of ALL modern-day front loading washing machines. Someone made the comment about white vinegar being very good at helping to remove detergent left in clothing, particularly towels. I can confirm that it is absolutely brilliant. However, I have failed to find anywhere who sell it in bulk. You can buy brown malt vinegar in bulk from places like Daily Bread in Northampton, but not white vinegar. Does anyone know of anywhere? I found one website, but the delivery charges were prohibitive.
Likely replying to Nikki Jenkins
Hi Nikki Jenkins, I’m glad you find the white vinegar is absolutely brilliant. :)
I’m surprised white vinegar is not sold in bulk like brown vinegar. Maybe discount retailers like Aldi or Lidl sell it in larger containers? I’m sure it’s available somewhere because it’s so widely advocated, for example, I know they used lots of white vinegar on episodes of “How Clean is Your House”.
Further to the last paragraph on my comment #143, I follow my water-guzzling method every time and find it works the best. If anyone can copy a similar method on their poor-rinsing washing machine, in 3 easy steps…
1) Wash items in the usual manner (including adding the softener or white vinegar), no “extra rinse” option necessary.
2) After the main wash completes (before it starts ‘rinsing’), the machine is likely to perform a short spin. When this spin has finished, switch off and then select a water-guzzling cycle to run without detergent.
3) If the spin speed is too low at the end of 2), switch off and select a higher spin speed.
DON’T WORRY – you soon get used to following the 3-step method every time you use the washing machine. I imagine using white vinegar with that 3-step method would result in VERY good rinsing??!! If you don’t know which cycle on your washing machine is the most water-guzzling, if you can find its literature, it may tell you which cycle uses the most litres of water, that’s how I discovered which one to use for the rinses.
If I press the “extra rinse” on my washing machine, it stupidly doesn’t perform a spin after the main wash cycle, but if I don’t press “extra rinse” then it does that spin. Daft but true! Spinning the soapy water out does help enormously, but the manufacturers don’t seem to know how to rinse clothes, just how to market these “energy efficient” and “water saving” washing machines that are no good any more!
1 reply If this topic was featured on prime time television, I wonder if a TV documentary, with interviews from allergy sufferers affected by washing machines, would cause a massive public response? I feel sorry for people who have spent a fortune on a brand new washing machine and soon discover they are suffering allergy hell from clothing that is far from "rinsed"!! I'm aware that many people just blame the detergent type/brand only, but the terrible truth is down to their washing machine not rinsing well, even if the "extra rinse" option is always enabled. My eczema has cleared up completely since re-rinsing everything on a water-guzzling cycle (without detergent). It takes over an hour longer, but I don't care. When my washing machine eventually dies, I will definitely buy an old second-hand "water-guzzling" replacement.
If this topic was featured on prime time television, I wonder if a TV documentary, with interviews from allergy sufferers affected by washing machines, would cause a massive public response?
I feel sorry for people who have spent a fortune on a brand new washing machine and soon discover they are suffering allergy hell from clothing that is far from “rinsed”!!
I’m aware that many people just blame the detergent type/brand only, but the terrible truth is down to their washing machine not rinsing well, even if the “extra rinse” option is always enabled.
My eczema has cleared up completely since re-rinsing everything on a water-guzzling cycle (without detergent). It takes over an hour longer, but I don’t care. When my washing machine eventually dies, I will definitely buy an old second-hand “water-guzzling” replacement.
Likely replying to WMUser
Hi WMUser,
That is a really good idea! Then the manufacturers will be aware of how big the problem is and how widespread skin problems from washing machines are then.
Its true people think that having an extra rinse option is going to solve the problem, but it won’t as you say. You just assume that any washing machine will rinse properly without any hassle of re running rinses and other cycles etc. Like they used to in times of old. Nobody will stop to think about rinse efficiency when they buy a washing machine, lets face it I didn’t.
The second hand machine is a top idea, it worked for me, there is no new machine that you can buy today that will even rinse half properly, which is absolutley DISGUSTING. Thank you very much environMENTAL do gooders, look what you have managed to achieve.
All the best, glad you have some relief from the eczema,
Oliver.
1 reply (Formerly called "WhatMatters"). Hi, I am writing another posting as I've discovered on the Which? website a washing machine rated "very poor" for rinsing on the cottons cycle is a "Best Buy". Get this: Which? suggests using the "easy care" programme if you have sensitive skin, as there is no extra rinse option. However the cleaning is not as good on this washing machine's "easy care" programme. Due to copyright I can't reveal the make/model. It is alarming that a washing machine that is very poor at rinsing with no extra rinse can be awarded a "Best Buy". At least Which? warn you about the very poor rinsing. As I put earlier, if you own a modern washing machine, you have to force it to rinse better. Has anyone had any luck with this?
(Formerly called “WhatMatters”).
Hi, I am writing another posting as I’ve discovered on the Which? website a washing machine rated “very poor” for rinsing on the cottons cycle is a “Best Buy”. Get this: Which? suggests using the “easy care” programme if you have sensitive skin, as there is no extra rinse option. However the cleaning is not as good on this washing machine’s “easy care” programme.
Due to copyright I can’t reveal the make/model.
It is alarming that a washing machine that is very poor at rinsing with no extra rinse can be awarded a “Best Buy”. At least Which? warn you about the very poor rinsing.
As I put earlier, if you own a modern washing machine, you have to force it to rinse better. Has anyone had any luck with this?
Likely replying to WMUser
Hi WMUser (I still like “WhatMatters”,it summed up this situation very well!)
I noticed this too, back in 2005 when we subscribed to their magazine, not one washing machine made it past “satisfactory” for rinsing. I too thought it diabolical that anyone of them should be awarded “Best Buy”, when obviously they are some what lacking in one VERY major area.
I am sceptical of Which?, I am not completely convinced that they are 100% unbiased, that cannot be proven. A good example is washing powders, they said Ariel cleans better then Persil, but in my Bosch Persil can p*ss all over Ariel, it is better by a long way. Did P&G drop them a back hander I wonder.
Another example is vacuum cleaners, they award countless Dysons “Best Buys” and also publish poor brand reliability, a bit contradictory is it not. I can tell you as a carpet cleaner Dysons are the worst performing cleaners you can buy, and do shorten the life of carpets etc. But thats a little of topic!!
Personally I take no notice of which, for a washing machine to be a “Best Buy” it should wash, rinse and spin to perfection. And also be built to last.
We no longer subscribe to Which? as we no longer give them any credability in what they publish.
All the best,
Oliver.
1 reply It's always the simplest solutions that work best. I would think every washing machine made in the past 10 years can be forced to re-rinse, whether it involves switching off and turning the dial back to the beginning of the rinse cycles or something else. Anyway... I thought I'd try this "easy" method and re-rinse. I used the rinse-hold option on my machine, so the clothes are left in water until I'm ready to advance the programme: I turned the selector to "off", added the fabric conditioner, turned the dial selector to the "rinse" position and choose the correct spin speed. Switched on and let it do the rinses again and perform the final spin. So far so good :) Clothes no longer feel like sandpaper, there's no smell of detergent perfumes, no little white marks on the clothes and no traces of foam on the door seal or inner door glass. What a difference!! You may want to forget my previous suggestions and other drastic ideas mentioned previously. Anyone can do this re-rinsing and it really works (preferably if you have "rinse hold" on your machine, it reminds you to re-rinse). Also you won't need to press the "extra rinse" option (or whatever it's called on your machine). Ironically, I found that by NOT pressing the "extra rinse" button, the machine spins faster between the rinses (without sudslocking), I have no idea why. Only one thing to be careful with: if you have to select the spin speed when you re-run the rinse cycles, be careful not to spin your delicates too fast e.g. curtains or they won't look nice afterwards! Readers - please let me know if this works after trying it for a few weeks. One last thing: fabric conditioner can also chemical sensitivity, something to consider if you're having allergic reactions to laundry and chemicals. Thanks for reading and good luck. :D
It’s always the simplest solutions that work best. I would think every washing machine made in the past 10 years can be forced to re-rinse, whether it involves switching off and turning the dial back to the beginning of the rinse cycles or something else.
Anyway… I thought I’d try this “easy” method and re-rinse. I used the rinse-hold option on my machine, so the clothes are left in water until I’m ready to advance the programme: I turned the selector to “off”, added the fabric conditioner, turned the dial selector to the “rinse” position and choose the correct spin speed. Switched on and let it do the rinses again and perform the final spin.
So far so good :)
Clothes no longer feel like sandpaper, there’s no smell of detergent perfumes, no little white marks on the clothes and no traces of foam on the door seal or inner door glass. What a difference!!
You may want to forget my previous suggestions and other drastic ideas mentioned previously. Anyone can do this re-rinsing and it really works (preferably if you have “rinse hold” on your machine, it reminds you to re-rinse). Also you won’t need to press the “extra rinse” option (or whatever it’s called on your machine). Ironically, I found that by NOT pressing the “extra rinse” button, the machine spins faster between the rinses (without sudslocking), I have no idea why.
Only one thing to be careful with: if you have to select the spin speed when you re-run the rinse cycles, be careful not to spin your delicates too fast e.g. curtains or they won’t look nice afterwards!
Readers – please let me know if this works after trying it for a few weeks. One last thing: fabric conditioner can also chemical sensitivity, something to consider if you’re having allergic reactions to laundry and chemicals.
Thanks for reading and good luck. :D
Likely replying to WhatMatters
Hi Whatmatters,
Glad that a simple solution works for you. The only downside will be time I guess. What make and model is your machine please. How many rinses does it perform in total with the re-rinsing?
My 15 year old Bosch spins slower between the rinses with “Higher water Level” selected, but still rinses better because it does 4 rinses 1/3 up the door, whereas it does 3 rinses with 2″ of water in the bottom of the drum if not. My feeling is the water is removing the detergent opposed to the spinning, so the machine does not have to work as hard.
Correct about fabric conditioner, I stopped using it and my skin did improve, there again it is only nicely scented grease!!
The intermediate spins do not play as much as a part in the rinsing as you think, if there is not enough water to remove the detergent in the first place, the spins will sudslock. The residue takes a hell of alot of diluting in order to remove properly, the spins then aid the process.
E.g.
4 Rinses 1/3 up the door with 300-400rpm spins rinses properly.
3 Rinses with 2″ of water and 800rpm spins is as close to not bothering to rinse as you will get.
On the synthetic cycles it does a Dilution rinse and then 4 rinse 1/4 up the door but seems to rinse as well as the 1/3 cotton cycles.
Anything past 800rpm is pointless as the water removed is negligable, the difference between 800rpm and 1000rpm is a thimble full. Difference between 1000rpm and 2000rpm is 4 table spoons all for full loads, basically not worth the wear and tear and expense.
All the best,
Oliver.
1 reply There is a simple way to get more water into the drum for better rinsing.Every washing machine contains a water level transducer to which are connected tubes from the drum.When the water reaches a certain level in the drum,the pressure transducer activates and sends a signal to the electronics to close the water inlet valve. However there are 'adjustable tuning slugs' on the pressure transducer so that the level of water can be adjusted.I experimented on a Hotpoint and manage to get the drum completely full of water!.So careful how you make adjustments. I am a retired electronics engineer and would love to design a washing machine complete with PID temperature control,brushless motor, etc etc.but I'm afraid the cost would be prohibitive.
There is a simple way to get more water into the drum for better rinsing.Every washing machine contains a water level transducer to which are connected tubes from the drum.When the water reaches a certain level in the drum,the pressure transducer activates and sends a signal to the electronics to close the water inlet valve.
However there are ‘adjustable tuning slugs’ on the pressure transducer so that the level of water can be adjusted.I experimented on a Hotpoint and manage to get the drum completely full of water!.So careful how you make adjustments.
I am a retired electronics engineer and would love to design a washing machine complete with PID temperature control,brushless motor, etc etc.but I’m afraid the cost would be prohibitive.
Likely replying to richard
Hi Richard and Whatmatters,
I’ve heard of this before and is a viable option, but if an incorrect adjustment is made it could cause a serious flood. Which may not be covered be home insurance as it would be the homeowners fault. So I would say extreme caution is needed.
However I do agree with what you both say, I am very tempted (and have been for a long time) to adjust the pressure switch on my Mums Siltal as rinsing is so bad.
In all fairness selecting a prewash and adding nothing or soda crystals to the main wash probably will affect cleaning drastically as the main wash will ineffect be the first rinse. There will be hardly anything in the main wash to facillitate cleaning, it may work on light soil only though? Never tried this but please do come back with your experience Whatmatters.
I have found when it comes to laundry soda crystals are just plain snake oil! They do not work as they say, plus prolonged use may damsge the aluminium drum spider in your washing machine.
All the best,
HTH,
Oliver.
1 reply Our 21 year old Hotpoint 96700 Top Loader has just expired having given no previous trouble at any time in it's long life. The repair man says the gearbox may have seized and of course these are now obsolete. In our opinion this is a superb machine of which this is the third we have purchased. They have all lasted into double figures. Nothing else washes as white or rinses as clean. My wife was a chronic eczema sufferer and these machines have played their part in her relief from allergies. Does anyone know where a replacement gearbox or machine may be found? Any of the original Hotpoint Top Loaders will be acceptable.
Our 21 year old Hotpoint 96700 Top Loader has just expired having given no previous trouble at any time in it’s long life. The repair man says the gearbox may have seized and of course these are now obsolete. In our opinion this is a superb machine of which this is the third we have purchased. They have all lasted into double figures. Nothing else washes as white or rinses as clean. My wife was a chronic eczema sufferer and these machines have played their part in her relief from allergies. Does anyone know where a replacement gearbox or machine may be found? Any of the original Hotpoint Top Loaders will be acceptable.
Likely replying to David
Hi David,
The gear box has been obsolete for sometime now, unless there are any kicking around in back street retailers, but I wouldn’t have thought so, but all is not lost…..
Try taking the gear box to a car garage and see if they can repair it. This is a shot in the dark but well worth a try! Another option is to get a specialist to make you a new one, it can be done but will be expensive, there isn’t that much inside so making a copy shouldn’t be too hard!
As regards buying a Hotpoint top loader, I haven’t seen one in 20 years! Nor have I seen a reconditioned one either, but if I come across one I will let you know via this site, but don’t hold too much hope out though!!
HTH,
Oliver.
1 reply Well, I had 2 Hoover washing machines that, between the two of them, lasted over 27 years. No problem whatsoever with smell or grey slime. Didn't even know it could be a problem. My new machine is a Bosch and grey slime is a mega problem, though I haven't changed my habits at all. I don't use fabric conditioner, don't add too much powder (I am mean if anything) and do the occasional 60 deg wash. I guess it must be the poor rinsing that is to blame. So, does anyone know if the new Hoover machines have developed this problem? Have they sacrificed the rinse to be eco-friendly? I would put up with the noise (if they are still noisy), anything to escape the grey slime. I only changed to Bosch because the Hoovers were noisy and my Bosch dishwasher lasted 20 years. I just hope this machine doesn't last 20 years.
Well, I had 2 Hoover washing machines that, between the two of them, lasted over 27 years. No problem whatsoever with smell or grey slime. Didn’t even know it could be a problem.
My new machine is a Bosch and grey slime is a mega problem, though I haven’t changed my habits at all. I don’t use fabric conditioner, don’t add too much powder (I am mean if anything) and do the occasional 60 deg wash. I guess it must be the poor rinsing that is to blame.
So, does anyone know if the new Hoover machines have developed this problem? Have they sacrificed the rinse to be eco-friendly?
I would put up with the noise (if they are still noisy), anything to escape the grey slime. I only changed to Bosch because the Hoovers were noisy and my Bosch dishwasher lasted 20 years. I just hope this machine doesn’t last 20 years.
Likely replying to cath
Hi Cath,
This sounds as if you are not using the correct amount of detergent. Are you using a bleach containing powder, eg. not a colour friendly type? Also are you doing a lot of low temperature washing, as this will cause slime also.
To help remove the slime select a 90/95 wash with bleach containing powder, such as Ariel biological (using the correct amount of course). Do not use liquid or colour powder as none will contain bleach. This is called a maintenance wash and should be carried out monthly. If it is really bad using a specialist washer cleaner such as “Maytag Affresh” will also reduce the slime.
The lower water level on the wash phase is not going to help with slime build up, and as you say the lack of water in the rinsing cycle does not flush the machine through properly. If this machine has “Aqua plus” it may be worth while having it constantly selected.
I also have a Bosch (15 year old) and have no trouble with slime but I always wash at 60 and regularly do a maintenance wash.
Sadly your Bosch may last a few years they are still built quite well, though not as well as they used to be. Also Hoover will have reduced water in the rinse to be eco-friendly, all manufacturers have. No modern machine will rinse like the old ones did!
HTH,
Oliver.
1 reply Hi again Oliver :D Ah cool yes thought Fast Wash 60C rinses should be high as they are only quick and as for Super Wash 60C well my machine doesn't have it. The new Hotpoints don't have that programme anymore. The synthetics programme is a fair bit below the fast wash 60C rinse water level on mind which is good too. Shame you don't have the Hottie anymore :( but the reconditioned Bosch sounds great, what model is it :) infact I know someone on YouTube which has a recondtioned Bosch I think. You might not know me from there though, my account is HooverAC110. As for the intermediate spin speeds well Hotpoint have changed the Cottons to 1000rpm and the Synthetics 600rpm. Fast wash 60C is a little faster at 800rpm, this is only between the rinses though because on all programmes (which do spin after the wash) are all at 600rpm. Thanks again :D sorry for the delay though :S Gary
Hi again Oliver :D
Ah cool yes thought Fast Wash 60C rinses should be high as they are only quick and as for Super Wash 60C well my machine doesn’t have it. The new Hotpoints don’t have that programme anymore. The synthetics programme is a fair bit below the fast wash 60C rinse water level on mind which is good too. Shame you don’t have the Hottie anymore :( but the reconditioned Bosch sounds great, what model is it :) infact I know someone on YouTube which has a recondtioned Bosch I think. You might not know me from there though, my account is HooverAC110. As for the intermediate spin speeds well Hotpoint have changed the Cottons to 1000rpm and the Synthetics 600rpm. Fast wash 60C is a little faster at 800rpm, this is only between the rinses though because on all programmes (which do spin after the wash) are all at 600rpm.
Thanks again :D sorry for the delay though :S
Gary
Likely replying to Gary Pendlebury
Hi Gary,
My Bosch is a WFF2000, about 15 years old or so. Sorry mate not me on YouTube, never been on that site in my life!! It would appear they have changed Hotpoint machines yet again, they are consantly peeing around with them and making them even MORE unrelaible. Thats why I haven’t got it anymore. It never washed that well anyway, never as good as my Mums IAR Siltal (8 years old), whereas the Bosch does!
They do keep increasing the spin speeds on the Indesit based machines to try to get a better rinse but all they are doing is wearing everything out alot quicker, and doing very little for rinsing. After about 800rpm the extraction rate tales off some what, the difference between 800rpm and 1000rpm is a thimble full of water! The difference between 1000rpm and 2000rpm is 4 table spoons full of water, so not worth the bother! The Bosch spins at 400rpm after the wash and between the rinses for about a minute, but uses alot of water so gives a perfect rinse on any load as it does 4 rinses 1/3 up the door, and it NEVER sudslocks, it would appear all modern machines do this.
All the best,
Oliver.
1 reply Where can I buy a Hotpoint top loader second hand? Model numbers Electronic De Luxe 9600, 9604 and 9605? The hotpoint wma30 is absolutely rubbish at rinsing unless i use ecover liquid. However i need to use bio as cleans better. Even a twin tub would be better than the modern rubbish we have no. Failing that I suppose it will have to be an Amercican top loading washing machine. Any recommendations greatly appreciated.
Where can I buy a Hotpoint top loader second hand? Model numbers Electronic De Luxe 9600, 9604 and 9605? The hotpoint wma30 is absolutely rubbish at rinsing unless i use ecover liquid. However i need to use bio as cleans better. Even a twin tub would be better than the modern rubbish we have no. Failing that I suppose it will have to be an Amercican top loading washing machine. Any recommendations greatly appreciated.
Likely replying to Simon Smith
Simon,
The only place I could think of getting a second hand washing machine is a back street retailler, such as our local one in Halifax called the “Washer Shop”. Any particular reason you want a top loader? The old front loaders rinse perfectly well such as a Bosch WFF2000, Servis Quartz, Hoover Electron, Old Hotpoints. Well anything from just before 1992 should put water half way up the door to rinse and would usually do 4 on the cotton cycles, sometimes 5 such as old AEG’s (very hard to come by though).
My Bosch dates from about 1996 and does 4 rinses with water a third up the door for each.
American top loaders use water in excess, also most of them now are high efficiency and people complain about the rinsing just as we do about our energy efficient models. Also American top loader spin very slowly about 650rpm and use a hell of alot of elecrticity as there is so much water to heat and they are rated “G” for wash, so they do not wash as well as the frontload machines either! You are probably better off with a second hand front load machine than a new top loader IMHO.
Twin tubs are another issue you will not find a good one from the 70s or 80s unless you know someone that has one and are willing to part with it for cash! There are a few new ones about but they are cheap Chinese made jobs (mainly plastic), called a Thompson I think, that will not last. They are for VERY light usage indeed. I havn’t seen a twin tub machine round here for donkeys years!
HTH
Oliver.
1 reply It seems I was talking about something different due to misinterpreting the "intermediate spins" phrase. I thought it was referring to the spins during wash and rinse that some machines do with the water still inside. In the old days that would only happen if something went wrong but these days it's used to force water through the laundry.
It seems I was talking about something different due to misinterpreting the “intermediate spins” phrase. I thought it was referring to the spins during wash and rinse that some machines do with the water still inside. In the old days that would only happen if something went wrong but these days it’s used to force water through the laundry.
Likely replying to Washerhelp
Dear Washerhelp
I have ordered a Miele WT2670 1600rpm washer dryer which is coming next week and am looking forward to it. I don’t suffer with any allergies or skin conditions so the rinsing shouldn’t be an issue. Although I may put Water Plus on if I feel that it doesn’t have enough water and I won’t be having washes which are too sudsy. Detergents such as Ariel Excel Gel can get very sudsy iof too much is used. I discovered this in my Hotpoint WD42O washer dryer. If you know of the rinse water levels then please let me know as it would be very good to be aware of this before the machine arrives. Like I said above the machine is due for delivery on 28th August.
And could you or someone else please tell me about its tumbles that it does as I would like to know. I am thinking that the tumbles are 13/2 for the cottons programme but could also be the same on other programmes. I think that good and fast tumbling can help improve wash and rinse performance. Please could you help. Many thanks.
1 reply I bought a Hotpoint Aquarius WF530T washing machine when I was 17 and moved out on my own, since moving back with my parents late 2008 just before my 20th birthday I have had this machine plumbed in on the 3rd storey of our house. Having done this the computer has gone wrong, but the main point is poor rinsing even with extra rinse pressed. I have had dermatitis and eczema for many years and had virtually no problems with it when we had an old Servis when I was a young child, this machine put water HALF way up the door to rinse and did this three times un like the terrible machines of today which only do two. How on earth can two 10 litre rinses be as good as three 29 litre rinses on the Servis? My mum and dads whirlpool is no better it fills for each rinse and the clothes soak up all the water and ends up rinsing with an inch of water in each rinse. I am so fed up with my Hotoint I am getting a new machine one that lasts more than two ans a half years and rinses properly. Could you please help advise me which machine rinses to a proper standard or do I have to get a second hand machine dating from before my self to get rid of this horrible skin irritation! PS. Its marvellous to find some like minded people who know the truth about our new race of ecoliogically sound rinse compromising washing machines! Oliver.
I bought a Hotpoint Aquarius WF530T washing machine when I was 17 and moved out on my own, since moving back with my parents late 2008 just before my 20th birthday I have had this machine plumbed in on the 3rd storey of our house. Having done this the computer has gone wrong, but the main point is poor rinsing even with extra rinse pressed. I have had dermatitis and eczema for many years and had virtually no problems with it when we had an old Servis when I was a young child, this machine put water HALF way up the door to rinse and did this three times un like the terrible machines of today which only do two. How on earth can two 10 litre rinses be as good as three 29 litre rinses on the Servis? My mum and dads whirlpool is no better it fills for each rinse and the clothes soak up all the water and ends up rinsing with an inch of water in each rinse.
I am so fed up with my Hotoint I am getting a new machine one that lasts more than two ans a half years and rinses properly.
Could you please help advise me which machine rinses to a proper standard or do I have to get a second hand machine dating from before my self to get rid of this horrible skin irritation!
PS. Its marvellous to find some like minded people who know the truth about our new race of ecoliogically sound rinse compromising washing machines!
Oliver.
Likely replying to Oliver Shaw
Hello Oliver Shaw: I haven’t done personal research into the rinsing capabilities of washing machines other than to find out that most of them don’t appear to rinse too well. According to Which? research, most washing machines were poor and almost none were better than satisfactory, which inspired this topic.
I could of course read all Which? reports and put the results on my sites but it’s very unethical to steal other people’s content. One thing I can say though is that I was surprised to see Which said the Indesit Moon was above average at rinsing and I included that information on my article here – Indesit Moon
If Indesit made high-quality washing machines with an above-average reliability reputation I’d gladly recommend it for you. As it happens they are made by the same company that makes Hotpoint and of similar build quality. If you were happy to buy another washing machine of similar build quality to the Hotpoint with a pre-requisite of being above average rinsing you may be interested in it. Other than that I can only really suggest that you research Which? and take advantage of their trial offer.
1 reply Thanks for that Washerhelp - in particular with regards to the soda crystals which on the packet I bought only mentions what you would do with block sinks and drains. No mention of cleaning washing machines at all. Do you think adding water to the final rinse would make a significant difference to the rinsing? I believe my smell problems are worse due to the idiot who refitted my kitchen. I came home to have him proudly announce he had "rationalised" my drainage. Instead of a fairly standard and immediate U-trap with the hose connected to a 50cm drop it now trails 2m across the floor and up into the sink cupboard where it joins just above the kitchen sink trap. I have managed to raise the pipe around 4-6 inches behind the washer to form some sort of water trap, however the current arrangement where the trap as a long run before a 40cm rise seems to make water seeping back from the waste pipe into the machine inevitable. This adds stagnant water to the problem if the machine is not used very regularly. I would have put the old waste route back but he had cut off the old waste pipe and concreted it up. The problem is now compounded as I now have a dishwasher joining the sink outlet. The only solution to water seeping back that I see is to put a join for both dish and clothes washer just at the combined waste pipe's exit point from the house.
Thanks for that Washerhelp – in particular with regards to the soda crystals which on the packet I bought only mentions what you would do with block sinks and drains. No mention of cleaning washing machines at all.
Do you think adding water to the final rinse would make a significant difference to the rinsing?
I believe my smell problems are worse due to the idiot who refitted my kitchen. I came home to have him proudly announce he had “rationalised” my drainage. Instead of a fairly standard and immediate U-trap with the hose connected to a 50cm drop it now trails 2m across the floor and up into the sink cupboard where it joins just above the kitchen sink trap. I have managed to raise the pipe around 4-6 inches behind the washer to form some sort of water trap, however the current arrangement where the trap as a long run before a 40cm rise seems to make water seeping back from the waste pipe into the machine inevitable. This adds stagnant water to the problem if the machine is not used very regularly.
I would have put the old waste route back but he had cut off the old waste pipe and concreted it up.
The problem is now compounded as I now have a dishwasher joining the sink outlet. The only solution to water seeping back that I see is to put a join for both dish and clothes washer just at the combined waste pipe’s exit point from the house.
1 reply Most people I have spoken to (moaned at) about powder stains agree that the rinsing on their modern machine is terrible. Powder stains seem almost inevitable and so I switched to liquid to avoid them. Unfortunately this doesn't mean they have been rinsed any better you just can't see it any more! A (somewhat inconvenient) possible solution that occurs to me is to hang around (or use rinse hold?) for the final rinse and use a large jug/kettle/hose to add more water (obviously don't over fill it) to the rinse cycle(s) via the powder draw. PS Liquids gives other problems (bad smells & scum) for which I had previously done 95C washes but I wonder following reading your article if I might be able to achieve a better outcome with Soda Crystals (possibly at a cheaper lower temperature). How much Soda crystals should I add ?
Most people I have spoken to (moaned at) about powder stains agree that the rinsing on their modern machine is terrible. Powder stains seem almost inevitable and so I switched to liquid to avoid them.
Unfortunately this doesn’t mean they have been rinsed any better you just can’t see it any more!
A (somewhat inconvenient) possible solution that occurs to me is to hang around (or use rinse hold?) for the final rinse and use a large jug/kettle/hose to add more water (obviously don’t over fill it) to the rinse cycle(s) via the powder draw.
PS Liquids gives other problems (bad smells & scum) for which I had previously done 95C washes but I wonder following reading your article if I might be able to achieve a better outcome with Soda Crystals (possibly at a cheaper lower temperature). How much Soda crystals should I add ?
Likely replying to Steve
Hello Steve: sorry I missed your question. You are right in that liquids do give other problems which I highlight on Washerhelp. Anyone using liquids should definitely do a high temperature maintenance wash once a month to prevent a buildup of grease and slime and even black mould because these detergents don’t contain any bleaching agent.
Soda crystals are good at dissolving grease. I used to pour half a packet in and put my washing machine on a boil wash. However, this could be a good idea every three or four months, but I would use an ordinary detergent powder that contains bleaching agents for the regular monthly maintenance wash. Usually any non biological detergent, or any detergent not claiming to be kind on coloureds should contain bleaching agents.
1 reply My old energy 'inefficient' water guzzling machine finally gave up the ghost in January of this year after 15 years of excellent service (and great rinsing). So, I purchased a A*AA Hoover model (It's one of the models with 'fuzzy logic' that calculates the amount of water to use.) having read over 200 positive online reviews. No rinsing issues were mentioned so I didn't give it a thought. However, the rinsing is awful. Even reducing the amount of detergent to as little as 15mls still required me to do additional rinse cycles because of excess suds. Not very energy efficient. I also noticed that the cold water going into the machine left powder or liquid residue in the drawer, meaning that some of this would be flushed down with the rinse cycle. I tried loads of different UK marketplace detergents (including a couple of the new mega concentrated liquids that require tiny amounts, and found that they are no improvement on the regular type in terms of suds production) and the result was always the same. This worked out very expensive...but I was on a mission to find something that worked with this machine as I would have to live with it for a while. Really cheesed off, I did some research and discovered this brilliant website where you happened to mention HE detergent which is produced for High Efficiency washing machines in the US. I gathered that HIgh Efficiency was their equivalent to our Energy Efficient machines. More research and I discovered that some ecological brands of HE detergent are exported from the US to the UK and are sold by 'Green' companies. I wasn't on the lookout for any Biologicals, but they may be available too. Anyway, I ordered myself a bottle of low foaming HE, and it works! I have been using it for over a week now on all sizes and types of washes and haven't needed to do one extra rinse cycle. The clothes etc. have come up great. And because it is less viscous, the entire dosage is washed from the drawer into the drum. I am so relieved to have found a solution. So, what I'm left wondering is, why haven't manufacturers of UK detergents revised their formulas in order to be compatible with the new energy efficient machines when this type is all that will be produced from now on? And why aren't more consumers picking up on this issue? Finally, I really wish that I had discovered your website before purchasing a new machine as its a great source of information. I'll still be doing my monthly maintenance wash!
My old energy ‘inefficient’ water guzzling machine finally gave up the ghost in January of this year after 15 years of excellent service (and great rinsing).
So, I purchased a A*AA Hoover model (It’s one of the models with ‘fuzzy logic’ that calculates the amount of water to use.) having read over 200 positive online reviews. No rinsing issues were mentioned so I didn’t give it a thought. However, the rinsing is awful. Even reducing the amount of detergent to as little as 15mls still required me to do additional rinse cycles because of excess suds. Not very energy efficient. I also noticed that the cold water going into the machine left powder or liquid residue in the drawer, meaning that some of this would be flushed down with the rinse cycle.
I tried loads of different UK marketplace detergents (including a couple of the new mega concentrated liquids that require tiny amounts, and found that they are no improvement on the regular type in terms of suds production) and the result was always the same. This worked out very expensive…but I was on a mission to find something that worked with this machine as I would have to live with it for a while.
Really cheesed off, I did some research and discovered this brilliant website where you happened to mention HE detergent which is produced for High Efficiency washing machines in the US. I gathered that HIgh Efficiency was their equivalent to our Energy Efficient machines. More research and I discovered that some ecological brands of HE detergent are exported from the US to the UK and are sold by ‘Green’ companies. I wasn’t on the lookout for any Biologicals, but they may be available too. Anyway, I ordered myself a bottle of low foaming HE, and it works! I have been using it for over a week now on all sizes and types of washes and haven’t needed to do one extra rinse cycle. The clothes etc. have come up great. And because it is less viscous, the entire dosage is washed from the drawer into the drum. I am so relieved to have found a solution.
So, what I’m left wondering is, why haven’t manufacturers of UK detergents revised their formulas in order to be compatible with the new energy efficient machines when this type is all that will be produced from now on? And why aren’t more consumers picking up on this issue?
Finally, I really wish that I had discovered your website before purchasing a new machine as its a great source of information.
I’ll still be doing my monthly maintenance wash!
1 reply I have recently had my 4 mth old Bosch front loader replaced with an Electrolux toploader and have had no end of problems with residual washing powder build up. It has got to the point now where after every load I have to remove half the load and re-rinse, then put in said remaining 1/2 load and re-rinse also. The kids' school uniforms (navy) don't even look clean for the start of the week because of soap build up. I've tried everything - dissolving the powder (only using 1/3 of recommended amount) in hot water for an hour while previous loads are finishing, using liquid wash detergent (which apparently is a no-no because it's a low suds machine), putting it down the middle, on the bottom (before washing goes in) and around top, hot load, warm load, cold load! NOTHING IS WORKING!!! I too have a child with eczema and he is starting to itch like crazy. You would think with all this modern technology at our fingertips they could sort out a decent machine with a proper rinse cycle or a decent powder that doesn't cost the earth. As for my water-aid eco friendly machine - well it's not so eco friendly or water aiding at all because I'm having to run it three times per load to effectively rinse everything through.
I have recently had my 4 mth old Bosch front loader replaced with an Electrolux toploader and have had no end of problems with residual washing powder build up. It has got to the point now where after every load I have to remove half the load and re-rinse, then put in said remaining 1/2 load and re-rinse also. The kids’ school uniforms (navy) don’t even look clean for the start of the week because of soap build up. I’ve tried everything – dissolving the powder (only using 1/3 of recommended amount) in hot water for an hour while previous loads are finishing, using liquid wash detergent (which apparently is a no-no because it’s a low suds machine), putting it down the middle, on the bottom (before washing goes in) and around top, hot load, warm load, cold load! NOTHING IS WORKING!!! I too have a child with eczema and he is starting to itch like crazy. You would think with all this modern technology at our fingertips they could sort out a decent machine with a proper rinse cycle or a decent powder that doesn’t cost the earth. As for my water-aid eco friendly machine – well it’s not so eco friendly or water aiding at all because I’m having to run it three times per load to effectively rinse everything through.
Likely replying to Teri NZ
Hello Teri: I’ve written a new article especially to address your problem, it may not contain the answer but you never know. Hopefully it will help. white streaks of washing powder after washing
1 reply I have a 20 yr old Hotpoint 9520 which had no repairs appart from brushes in all that time. Whilst having to ultimately renew the drum bearings/spider etc I decided to get a new backup machine. I chose a Bosch WEA 24162 not thinking about rinsing efficiency. I am very unhappy with the rinsing of the Bosch. The washing smells stronly of detergent even after 1 or 2 additional rinses and using the extra water button. I completely agree with your opinions and am at a loss as how to pick a suitable machine. For me poor or inadequate rinsing is a major drawback which it seems all current machines suffer. I tend to wash all important things, towels etc in the old Hotpoint and socks, jeans etc in the bosch if I use the Bosch at all. By the way Bosch say its not a problem and I must use a certain powder to avoid undisolved powder which I noticed on the door seal. I'd rather have properly rinsed washing and forgo washing the car to be environmentally friendly.
I have a 20 yr old Hotpoint 9520 which had no repairs appart from brushes in all that time. Whilst having to ultimately renew the drum bearings/spider etc I decided to get a new backup machine. I chose a Bosch WEA 24162 not thinking about rinsing efficiency. I am very unhappy with the rinsing of the Bosch. The washing smells stronly of detergent even after 1 or 2 additional rinses and using the extra water button. I completely agree with your opinions and am at a loss as how to pick a suitable machine. For me poor or inadequate rinsing is a major drawback which it seems all current machines suffer. I tend to wash all important things, towels etc in the old Hotpoint and socks, jeans etc in the bosch if I use the Bosch at all. By the way Bosch say its not a problem and I must use a certain powder to avoid undisolved powder which I noticed on the door seal. I’d rather have properly rinsed washing and forgo washing the car to be environmentally friendly.
Likely replying to kevin tripp
Kevin, if rinsing is an important issue you should check out the Which? washing machine and washer dryer guides, each of which has a rinsing rating. These are affiliate links, which help Washerhelp and Whitegoodshelp if used (at no cost to the user) but I can honestly say that after being a member of Which? online for over a year now I would not buy any expensive product without checking them out first.
0 replies I've had to close this popular article to new comments. I tried loading the article on a different computer, which having not loaded it before (and therefore having nothing cached) simulated how a new visitor would get it and it took so long to load all the comments I suspect many people would abandon it. Therefore to prevent things just getting worse I've started a topic on my Washerhelp forums. I hope all you lovely contributors will be happy to continue to comment, discuss and help each other over there. Please feel free to start new topics on anything you want as long as it's appropriate for the forum you post it in, and many thanks for your valued contributions so far - don't forget all my other blog articles :-) Continue the debate - Do washing machines use too little water now?
I’ve had to close this popular article to new comments. I tried loading the article on a different computer, which having not loaded it before (and therefore having nothing cached) simulated how a new visitor would get it and it took so long to load all the comments I suspect many people would abandon it.
Therefore to prevent things just getting worse I’ve started a topic on my Washerhelp forums. I hope all you lovely contributors will be happy to continue to comment, discuss and help each other over there. Please feel free to start new topics on anything you want as long as it’s appropriate for the forum you post it in, and many thanks for your valued contributions so far – don’t forget all my other blog articles :-)
Continue the debate – Do washing machines use too little water now?
0 replies Hi. I have the LG with the medic programme but have not used it yet, I will use it on my next wash and let you know, however the normal washes do not remove the powder satisfactory. Most people on here appear to have a problem with soap suds, I do not,, probably because my machine does not take enough water to produce suds, (I think its faulty ?) I add 3/4 jugs of water to the wash and then another 3/4 jugs to the final rinse and only then do I see suds. Maybe somebody can explain why to me. ? Thanks.
Hi. I have the LG with the medic programme but have not used it yet, I will use it on my next wash and let you know, however the normal washes do not remove the powder satisfactory. Most people on here appear to have a problem with soap suds, I do not,, probably because my machine does not take enough water to produce suds, (I think its faulty ?) I add 3/4 jugs of water to the wash and then another 3/4 jugs to the final rinse and only then do I see suds. Maybe somebody can explain why to me. ? Thanks.
0 replies Nikki that is really interesting info on miele machine, will show my husband this . As for the home made washing powder if you're really worried about foam suds using soap flakes, grate a bar of simple soap instead it takes seconds , I have done this with four bars of old fashion sunlight soap which I got on line and put in separate small bags ready for use later as I think I said in early posts ,I put Napisan in one for whites ,this is the old fashion again we used it to soak our towelling nappies in many moons ago ,got this on line too from chemist direct and the cheap too . SUMMER NATURALS I bought in bulk even the vinegar from here ,all came yesterday and the postage was good considering the hugh vinegar bottle I have been told that even with soap flakes this does not sud up and if your add half a cup of baking soda to the mix it will definitely be no suds . Gemma
Nikki that is really interesting info on miele machine, will show my husband this .
As for the home made washing powder if you’re really worried about foam suds using soap flakes, grate a bar of simple soap instead it takes seconds , I have done this with four bars of old fashion sunlight soap which I got on line and put in separate small bags ready for use later as I think I said in early posts ,I put Napisan in one for whites ,this is the old fashion again we used it to soak our towelling nappies in many moons ago ,got this on line too from chemist direct and the cheap too .
SUMMER NATURALS I bought in bulk even the vinegar from here ,all came yesterday and the postage was good considering the hugh vinegar bottle
I have been told that even with soap flakes this does not sud up and if your add half a cup of baking soda to the mix it will definitely be no suds .
Gemma
0 replies Hi There Thanks WMuser for that recipe, Have spent days researching home made washing powder and have all the ingredients now surf the net and found sunlight soap which I have already grated ,got a great deal on cheap processor from amazon kenwood 23.00 postage free , same kenwood in john lewis 34.99. this recipe I found on an Aussie site you can of course make smaller batch to see if it words and doesn't suds up ,she makes a point of this if you put in Rhonda"s CONCENTRATED LAUNDRY POWDER the site should come up. I am also going to add half cup of Napisan for the whites. CONCENTRATED LAUNDRY POWDER 4 cups grated laundry soap or soap flakes (Lux) 2 cups borax 2 cups washing soda Mix all the ingredients thoroughly and store in a plastic container with a lid. Use 2 tablespoons per wash. This powder will not make suds and this is perfectly okay. This homemade lard laundry detergent is great for those who have sensitive skin or have had problems using commerical laundry detergent. Recipe: 1 bar of 100% Lard Soap (approx 4 to 5 ounces) 1/2 cup of baking soda 1 cup of washing soda 1 cup of borax Using a smooth edge knife, cut the soap bar into small pieces. Be careful cutting the soap because it is very hard and the knife can slip. You don't want to get cut! Then add the small pieces of soap along with 1/2 cup of baking soda to your food processor or blender. Using the "pulse" button, grind up the soap/baking soda mixture. Then remove the mixture from the food processor/blender and into a bowl and add 1 cup of borax and 1 cup of washing soda. Stir the ingredients well until blended under a vent (to remove the dust from the air). You do not want to breathe in the dust as it can be irritating. Then place your completed mixture of homemade laundry detergent into an air-tight container for storage. Use: 1 tablespoon for regular loads of laundry or 2 tablespoons for heavily soiled or large loads of laundry This is a low sudsing detergent so you should be able to use it in your HE washing machines with no problems.
Hi There
Thanks WMuser for that recipe, Have spent days researching home made washing powder and have all the ingredients now surf the net and found sunlight soap which I have already grated ,got a great deal on cheap processor from amazon kenwood 23.00 postage free , same kenwood in john lewis 34.99.
this recipe I found on an Aussie site you can of course make smaller batch to see if it words and doesn’t suds up ,she makes a point of this if you put in Rhonda”s CONCENTRATED LAUNDRY POWDER the site should come up. I am also going to add half cup of Napisan for the whites.
CONCENTRATED LAUNDRY POWDER
4 cups grated laundry soap or soap flakes (Lux)
2 cups borax
2 cups washing soda
Mix all the ingredients thoroughly and store in a plastic container with a lid. Use 2 tablespoons per wash. This powder will not make suds and this is perfectly okay.
This homemade lard laundry detergent is great for those who have sensitive skin or have had problems using commerical laundry detergent.
Recipe:
1 bar of 100% Lard Soap (approx 4 to 5 ounces)
1/2 cup of baking soda
1 cup of washing soda
1 cup of borax
Using a smooth edge knife, cut the soap bar into small pieces. Be careful cutting the soap because it is very hard and the knife can slip. You don’t want to get cut! Then add the small pieces of soap along with 1/2 cup of baking soda to your food processor or blender. Using the “pulse” button, grind up the soap/baking soda mixture. Then remove the mixture from the food processor/blender and into a bowl and add 1 cup of borax and 1 cup of washing soda. Stir the ingredients well until blended under a vent (to remove the dust from the air). You do not want to breathe in the dust as it can be irritating. Then place your completed mixture of homemade laundry detergent into an air-tight container for storage.
Use: 1 tablespoon for regular loads of laundry or 2 tablespoons for heavily soiled or large loads of laundry
This is a low sudsing detergent so you should be able to use it in your HE washing machines with no problems.
0 replies Hi Everyone, There is a British twin tub manufacturer and wondered if anyone had bought one of the new modern twin tubs? The Polar models are all made in the UK however the body work is plastic but they come with 5 year parts. Do you think they would be a good option and last long? Oppinions greatly appreciated. Ben
Hi Everyone,
There is a British twin tub manufacturer and wondered if anyone had bought one of the new modern twin tubs? The Polar models are all made in the UK however the body work is plastic but they come with 5 year parts. Do you think they would be a good option and last long? Oppinions greatly appreciated.
Ben
0 replies Hello everyone, thank you all for your replies to my last posting. I have just checked my in-box and Hotpoint has not replied to my email yet! However, all automatic washing machines are now going down the low water consumption road, which as we know, is useless for people with skin disorders. It seems their aim to use even less water, almost dry cleaning with the use of washing beads, that is the latest big brothers dictate, regardless of our health needs. They have a damn cheek! So I have decided to buy a cheap (£89) little twin-tub (ironically) by Good Ideas on Ebay. It only has a 3.5kgs capacity, nor does it have a heater, but it does mean I can control the the water level in both the wash and rinse, which of course is the root problem with all other new machines. Plus, I will have a go at making my own washing powder, that sounds a great idea, thanks. I guess the only thing is to pre-soak the washing in a sink with hot water, washing powder (or soap flakes) and soda crystals for about 20 minuets. Then rinse them in a twin tub, once that is done put them in a wash in the twin-tub (30 minuets), followed by the desired amount of rinses. That should do the job! So you are looking at it taking up just over one hour of your day, per wash. It think that would be just as labour intensive, than adding more water to automatics and using no end of washing programs. Least this way we can know what is going in our wash and can achieve better results. One final thing, it would help if we stopped voting for all the political parties who support the EU and their low everything derivatives, of course, all policed by very strange happy-clappy folk (giggle). Hope that is helpful? Kind regards, from, Judy
Hello everyone,
thank you all for your replies to my last posting. I have just checked my in-box and Hotpoint has not replied to my email yet! However, all automatic washing machines are now going down the low water consumption road, which as we know, is useless for people with skin disorders. It seems their aim to use even less water, almost dry cleaning with the use of washing beads, that is the latest big brothers dictate, regardless of our health needs. They have a damn cheek!
So I have decided to buy a cheap (£89) little twin-tub (ironically) by Good Ideas on Ebay. It only has a 3.5kgs capacity, nor does it have a heater, but it does mean I can control the the water level in both the wash and rinse, which of course is the root problem with all other new machines. Plus, I will have a go at making my own washing powder, that sounds a great idea, thanks.
I guess the only thing is to pre-soak the washing in a sink with hot water, washing powder (or soap flakes) and soda crystals for about 20 minuets. Then rinse them in a twin tub, once that is done put them in a wash in the twin-tub (30 minuets), followed by the desired amount of rinses. That should do the job! So you are looking at it taking up just over one hour of your day, per wash. It think that would be just as labour intensive, than adding more water to automatics and using no end of washing programs. Least this way we can know what is going in our wash and can achieve better results.
One final thing, it would help if we stopped voting for all the political parties who support the EU and their low everything derivatives, of course, all policed by very strange happy-clappy folk (giggle).
Hope that is helpful?
Kind regards, from,
Judy
0 replies Hi . Judy, I add (as above ) 3 jugs of water to the main wash and 3 more to the final rinse of 2 extra rinses, this helps a little but I am so glad I am not on a water meter as i am using more water than ever. I feel all of the problems people are experiencing are all from lack of water, but then again are you and I having "less" water consumption than is normal ? Manufactures should not be allowed to put people health in danger for " what purpose "
Hi . Judy, I add (as above ) 3 jugs of water to the main wash and 3 more to the final rinse of 2 extra rinses, this helps a little but I am so glad I am not on a water meter as i am using more water than ever. I feel all of the problems people are experiencing are all from lack of water, but then again are you and I having “less” water consumption than is normal ? Manufactures should not be allowed to put people health in danger for ” what purpose “
0 replies @ WMUser sadly the stupid manufactuerers have cut down on water levels for the Wool Cycles as well, well they have in Bosch and in my Bosch Classix the water level does not even cover the woollens in my machine. How daft is that? Basically i don't wash woollens any more in the machine because of the poor water level. Even my Hotpoint WMA30 used loads of water on the wool cycle at least half way up the door. These modern machines make me so angry and will be glad when mine packs up. Have no idea what i would use though as everything modern today is a load of rubbish. Ben
@ WMUser sadly the stupid manufactuerers have cut down on water levels for the Wool Cycles as well, well they have in Bosch and in my Bosch Classix the water level does not even cover the woollens in my machine. How daft is that? Basically i don’t wash woollens any more in the machine because of the poor water level. Even my Hotpoint WMA30 used loads of water on the wool cycle at least half way up the door. These modern machines make me so angry and will be glad when mine packs up. Have no idea what i would use though as everything modern today is a load of rubbish.
Ben
0 replies I have just read a blog from December . that states ,the water consumption for washing machines is going to get reduced from 12 to 8 liters of water. O dear.!!!
I have just read a blog from December . that states ,the water consumption for washing machines is going to get reduced from 12 to 8 liters of water. O dear.!!!
0 replies As I do not have the problem of excess soap suds, I am wondering if this is because my machine is not taking in enough water to lather the powder ? I know cold water fill machines ( to my horror ) do not use much water but i am wondering if mine is using less than normal and that is why (sorry to repeat this again ) my washing is grubby and not fresh smelling despite fabric conditioner. If I do not add 3 jugs of water there is no water visible . I loath these "STRESS MACHINES".
As I do not have the problem of excess soap suds, I am wondering if this is because my machine is not taking in enough water to lather the powder ? I know cold water fill machines ( to my horror ) do not use much water but i am wondering if mine is using less than normal and that is why (sorry to repeat this again ) my washing is grubby and not fresh smelling despite fabric conditioner. If I do not add 3 jugs of water there is no water visible . I loath these “STRESS MACHINES”.
0 replies You always get suds or foam when you run the washer without laundry in, always have as far back as I remember no matter which detergent you use. I personally don't like liquid detergents much, they tend to cause or make worse the gunge and black mould problem.
You always get suds or foam when you run the washer without laundry in, always have as far back as I remember no matter which detergent you use. I personally don’t like liquid detergents much, they tend to cause or make worse the gunge and black mould problem.
0 replies @ Washerhelp Do liquid detergents leave a film of residue after every wash cycle round the outer drum? I ask this because when i would run my machine on empty i would get a few suds, is this left over liquid detergent sunk to the bottom of the drum? I don't get this one i used powder or tablets. And in terms of rinsing what rinses best powder or liquid? Its tempting to say liquid but what you think?
@ Washerhelp Do liquid detergents leave a film of residue after every wash cycle round the outer drum? I ask this because when i would run my machine on empty i would get a few suds, is this left over liquid detergent sunk to the bottom of the drum? I don’t get this one i used powder or tablets. And in terms of rinsing what rinses best powder or liquid? Its tempting to say liquid but what you think?
0 replies Sorry guys I should have said Anglian Water in my last post [edited now] and did speak today with a nice chap whom did go on to this site and surprised at how long the comments were . I explained that with weighing washing and using the approx amount of powder per kg am still filling up with extra rinses, a simple wash cycle can go on for hours He did confirm that we do here in Milton Keynes live in a very hard water area and that he will take my issues regarding the rinse problem to a meeting of colleagues . I also went to the miele centre to test the 5740 and again the lack of water makes me wary again ,am thinking of getting the ISE10 ,am waiting for the answers to some questions and as it happened the chap from Sweden is there too ,so hoping to hear Monday from them . I have been using Miele washing powder and with it baking soda and the rinsing has been good and using vinegar as softener but found a tear in one of my new tops and am wondering if it's the baking soda or vinegar cause it ,still the washing is lovely and soft . Gemma
Sorry guys I should have said Anglian Water in my last post [edited now] and did speak today with a nice chap whom did go on to this site and surprised at how long the comments were .
I explained that with weighing washing and using the approx amount of powder per kg am still filling up with extra rinses, a simple wash cycle can go on for hours
He did confirm that we do here in Milton Keynes live in a very hard water area and that he will take my issues regarding the rinse problem to a meeting of colleagues .
I also went to the miele centre to test the 5740 and again the lack of water makes me wary again ,am thinking of getting the ISE10 ,am waiting for the answers to some questions and as it happened the chap from Sweden is there too ,so hoping to hear Monday from them .
I have been using Miele washing powder and with it baking soda and the rinsing has been good and using vinegar as softener but found a tear in one of my new tops and am wondering if it’s the baking soda or vinegar cause it ,still the washing is lovely and soft .
Gemma
0 replies Thanks for the link to that comment Washerhelp I found it very helpful and it does make a lot of sense as this is what was happening ,the more i rinsed the worse it became. I will go to Tesco to get their liquid bio let hope they are still the same as that comment was some time ago. I also rang the water board today to have it confirmed my water is very hard as when ever I used calgon or soda crystals to reduce powder it was impossible to rinse the soap out ,they are getting back to me. Ben I got a small tub of persil small and mighty to try . Ben does it say 30-50% soap on the packets or am I looking for something else , sorry to sound thick but would you let me know . Oh and just to round the day off my 3 week washing machine has stopped spinning .
Thanks for the link to that comment Washerhelp I found it very helpful and it does make a lot of sense as this is what was happening ,the more i rinsed the worse it became.
I will go to Tesco to get their liquid bio let hope they are still the same as that comment was some time ago.
I also rang the water board today to have it confirmed my water is very hard as when ever I used calgon or soda crystals to reduce powder it was impossible to rinse the soap out ,they are getting back to me.
Ben I got a small tub of persil small and mighty to try .
Ben does it say 30-50% soap on the packets or am I looking for something else , sorry to sound thick but would you let me know .
Oh and just to round the day off my 3 week washing machine has stopped spinning .
0 replies @ washerhelp yes its artificially softened and no it isn't my water softener! Its modern detergents and lack of good quality anti-foam! I have had the water softner for over 12 years and never had a problem before. Since using capsules which have a high soap content i don't get foaming issues anymore nor if i add a capful of liquid soap flakes to Persil powder. I no longer use powders or tablets because of the unnecessary bulking agents and fillers they put in. Instead i use a detergent and limescale remover once a month at 90 degrees. I don't have many whites anyway so no need to have bleach powder and i can't use it anyway because of the reaction i have to optical brighteners.
@ washerhelp yes its artificially softened and no it isn’t my water softener! Its modern detergents and lack of good quality anti-foam! I have had the water softner for over 12 years and never had a problem before. Since using capsules which have a high soap content i don’t get foaming issues anymore nor if i add a capful of liquid soap flakes to Persil powder. I no longer use powders or tablets because of the unnecessary bulking agents and fillers they put in. Instead i use a detergent and limescale remover once a month at 90 degrees. I don’t have many whites anyway so no need to have bleach powder and i can’t use it anyway because of the reaction i have to optical brighteners.
0 replies I’ve had exactly the same problem with detergents foaming too much and coming over the top of the door glass. Powders, liquids and just about every type of laundry detergent can foam too much if you wash a very small load or in my case, wash only towels. I have always used detergent for front loading washing machines and I’ve never used twin tub or hand-wash detergent. This foaming problem is more prevalent now and I have no idea why, but I guess it’s because the detergent manufacturers are cutting costs and reducing the amount or type of anti-foaming agents which are meant to stop the excess foam. I’ve proven that you can prevent this from happening in the first place by adding 2 cupfuls of baby oil to the load it’s really that easy! I find it appalling that the manufacturers will charge the same amount of money for the detergent but not care about the excess foaming problem! I’m pleased to say that the home-made mixture DOES work and you won’t get any foaming at all provided you use LIQUID soap flakes instead of the standard soap flakes; the standard (non-liquid) soap flakes will generate lots of foam very quickly! I’ve only tried this home-made stuff once and apparently it softens the clothes, so you save money on not buying fabric conditioner. I will keep using it and see how I get on. There’s normal detergents I’ve nearly used up and now I know baby oil will stop the foaming.
I’ve had exactly the same problem with detergents foaming too much and coming over the top of the door glass. Powders, liquids and just about every type of laundry detergent can foam too much if you wash a very small load or in my case, wash only towels. I have always used detergent for front loading washing machines and I’ve never used twin tub or hand-wash detergent. This foaming problem is more prevalent now and I have no idea why, but I guess it’s because the detergent manufacturers are cutting costs and reducing the amount or type of anti-foaming agents which are meant to stop the excess foam. I’ve proven that you can prevent this from happening in the first place by adding 2 cupfuls of baby oil to the load it’s really that easy! I find it appalling that the manufacturers will charge the same amount of money for the detergent but not care about the excess foaming problem!
I’m pleased to say that the home-made mixture DOES work and you won’t get any foaming at all provided you use LIQUID soap flakes instead of the standard soap flakes; the standard (non-liquid) soap flakes will generate lots of foam very quickly! I’ve only tried this home-made stuff once and apparently it softens the clothes, so you save money on not buying fabric conditioner. I will keep using it and see how I get on. There’s normal detergents I’ve nearly used up and now I know baby oil will stop the foaming.
0 replies Quote from Ben:.. If i was to use powder or tablets or a heavily detergent based liquid even as little as 10ml the foam would reach as high as the top of the drum and poor out on the floor through the soap dispenser. And this would then acitivate the foam sensor." I've never seen anywhere near that amount of oversudsing using proper detergent designed for automatic washing machines. Is your water incredibly soft, is it artificially softened? The only time I've seen foam coming out like that is when someone's put washing up liquid in the machine, or used twin tub detergent instead of front loading washing machine detergent.
Quote from Ben:
.. If i was to use powder or tablets or a heavily detergent based liquid even as little as 10ml the foam would reach as high as the top of the drum and poor out on the floor through the soap dispenser. And this would then acitivate the foam sensor.”
I’ve never seen anywhere near that amount of oversudsing using proper detergent designed for automatic washing machines. Is your water incredibly soft, is it artificially softened? The only time I’ve seen foam coming out like that is when someone’s put washing up liquid in the machine, or used twin tub detergent instead of front loading washing machine detergent.
0 replies Today I added 2 capfuls of baby oil to the drum before loading the towels (only towels) and to my surprise there was no foaming. None whatsoever! To make sure the baby oil would mix with the detergent, I poured the 2 capfuls (yes it’s a small cap) of the baby oil next to a drum paddle so it wouldn’t dribble down the holes in the drum. I don’t know if this will harm the washing machine or clothes, but I’m so impressed that I had NO FOAM AT ALL! Without the baby oil, any amount of detergent, even 1/3 of the minimum recommended amount will cause foaming with towels, which gets worse as the water temperature reaches 60C, the usual temperature I use for washing towels on their own. The towels look perfectly washed and there’s no smell. I’m using up the last of the detergents I already have, so I will be using baby oil every time. Why can’t the detergent manufacturers use proper anti-foaming agents? Baby oil stops the foaming; I hope it doesn't harm the laundry and the washing machine! I’ve yet to try this with soda crystals, but will do so next time. The baby oil seems to REALLY improve rinsing too because without the baby oil the rinsing water would be opaque and have foam bubbles, which never seem to go away. The home-made mixture I will make will use liquid soap flakes, which could help stop the foam? Do people really need to see foam in a washing machine? Can’t the detergent manufacturers make a non foaming detergent and convince the public that it never creates masses of foam that’s almost impossible to rinse off? As for clothes smelling nice, the perfumes which produce that nice smell also cause nasty skin reactions! The smell is added because people like it and the nice smell can be used in marketing to increase sales and profit.
Today I added 2 capfuls of baby oil to the drum before loading the towels (only towels) and to my surprise there was no foaming. None whatsoever! To make sure the baby oil would mix with the detergent, I poured the 2 capfuls (yes it’s a small cap) of the baby oil next to a drum paddle so it wouldn’t dribble down the holes in the drum.
I don’t know if this will harm the washing machine or clothes, but I’m so impressed that I had NO FOAM AT ALL! Without the baby oil, any amount of detergent, even 1/3 of the minimum recommended amount will cause foaming with towels, which gets worse as the water temperature reaches 60C, the usual temperature I use for washing towels on their own.
The towels look perfectly washed and there’s no smell. I’m using up the last of the detergents I already have, so I will be using baby oil every time. Why can’t the detergent manufacturers use proper anti-foaming agents? Baby oil stops the foaming; I hope it doesn’t harm the laundry and the washing machine! I’ve yet to try this with soda crystals, but will do so next time. The baby oil seems to REALLY improve rinsing too because without the baby oil the rinsing water would be opaque and have foam bubbles, which never seem to go away.
The home-made mixture I will make will use liquid soap flakes, which could help stop the foam? Do people really need to see foam in a washing machine? Can’t the detergent manufacturers make a non foaming detergent and convince the public that it never creates masses of foam that’s almost impossible to rinse off? As for clothes smelling nice, the perfumes which produce that nice smell also cause nasty skin reactions! The smell is added because people like it and the nice smell can be used in marketing to increase sales and profit.
0 replies I meant to add that i put one capsule of small and mighty in a 90 degree wash with no clothes and no overfoaming occurred at all. If i was to use powder or tablets or a heavily detergent based liquid even as little as 10ml the foam would reach as high as the top of the drum and poor out on the floor through the soap dispenser. And this would then acitivate the foam sensor. Ben
I meant to add that i put one capsule of small and mighty in a 90 degree wash with no clothes and no overfoaming occurred at all. If i was to use powder or tablets or a heavily detergent based liquid even as little as 10ml the foam would reach as high as the top of the drum and poor out on the floor through the soap dispenser. And this would then acitivate the foam sensor.
Ben
0 replies I've become sick and tired of re-rinsing, pausing the washing machine and adding jugfuls of warm water to get rid of the detergent and its nasty chemicals. I've decided I will try making my own detergent using 4 packets of "safer" cleaning products, which claim not to have all the nasties that irritate skin. If it works and cleans well, I will stop doing the tedious extra rinses and see if I don't get skin irritation from these "kinder" products. In the meantime there is still some Ariel detergents I need to use up, when I'm around to perform the re-rinsing. I've provided a link to the "how to" video (apologies if I added it before, I can't remember). Basically the 4 ingredients consist of these being added into a tall plastic container, a lid put on and shaking the mixture well: _ Soda Crystals (aka "Washing Soda") Borax substitute 2 tablespoons of Soap Flakes (use liquid soap flakes for washes below 40C) 2 tablespoons of Oxygen Bleach powder _ I will make 2 containers of this mixture: one will have the oxygen bleach for whites (and pale colours) and the other will not have the oxygen bleach and will be used for coloured laundry. This concoction will be added to the drum to avoid the soap drawer getting mucky. I will use about half a mug of it on full loads and much less for small loads and "tweak" the amount needed according to: load size, water hardness and level of soiling. If you can't find all these 4 products in the supermarket, you can order them online and it may work out cheaper if you buy them in bulk? I see others are having the same problems with modern detergents foaming too much. I think baby oil is a good anti-foaming agent? Maybe worth trying a small amount to see if it stops the foaming. The detergent should remove the baby oil (soda crystals and detergent definitely will!). Remember that very small loads need just 1/3 of the MINIMUM recommended amount of the detergent to stop the excess foam. Full loads don't cause foaming if the detergent dosage is correct. I will try making my own "washing powder" with the 4 products and let you know how I get on. I hope it cleans well and saves me having to spend time manually re-rinsing and tipping jugfuls of warm water into the machine via the soap drawer. It's really annoying having to do this; granted, it doesn't take up much time to add the extra water, but it's still VERY annoying and it takes longer to finish each washload because of the extra rinses being performed. I hope the next series of BBC Watchdog investigates modern washing machines which don't rinse properly and the health problems it causes! Thanks for opening this blog again.
I’ve become sick and tired of re-rinsing, pausing the washing machine and adding jugfuls of warm water to get rid of the detergent and its nasty chemicals. I’ve decided I will try making my own detergent using 4 packets of “safer” cleaning products, which claim not to have all the nasties that irritate skin. If it works and cleans well, I will stop doing the tedious extra rinses and see if I don’t get skin irritation from these “kinder” products. In the meantime there is still some Ariel detergents I need to use up, when I’m around to perform the re-rinsing.
I’ve provided a link to the “how to” video (apologies if I added it before, I can’t remember). Basically the 4 ingredients consist of these being added into a tall plastic container, a lid put on and shaking the mixture well:
_
Soda Crystals (aka “Washing Soda”)
Borax substitute
2 tablespoons of Soap Flakes (use liquid soap flakes for washes below 40C)
2 tablespoons of Oxygen Bleach powder
_
I will make 2 containers of this mixture: one will have the oxygen bleach for whites (and pale colours) and the other will not have the oxygen bleach and will be used for coloured laundry. This concoction will be added to the drum to avoid the soap drawer getting mucky. I will use about half a mug of it on full loads and much less for small loads and “tweak” the amount needed according to: load size, water hardness and level of soiling.
If you can’t find all these 4 products in the supermarket, you can order them online and it may work out cheaper if you buy them in bulk?
I see others are having the same problems with modern detergents foaming too much. I think baby oil is a good anti-foaming agent? Maybe worth trying a small amount to see if it stops the foaming. The detergent should remove the baby oil (soda crystals and detergent definitely will!). Remember that very small loads need just 1/3 of the MINIMUM recommended amount of the detergent to stop the excess foam. Full loads don’t cause foaming if the detergent dosage is correct.
I will try making my own “washing powder” with the 4 products and let you know how I get on. I hope it cleans well and saves me having to spend time manually re-rinsing and tipping jugfuls of warm water into the machine via the soap drawer. It’s really annoying having to do this; granted, it doesn’t take up much time to add the extra water, but it’s still VERY annoying and it takes longer to finish each washload because of the extra rinses being performed.
I hope the next series of BBC Watchdog investigates modern washing machines which don’t rinse properly and the health problems it causes! Thanks for opening this blog again.
0 replies Hi While my machine was full of suds on a wash with no powder ( I use ariel for whites and persil or ariel for coloured ) normally there are no suds visible , my main concern is the lack of water in todays machines hence a very poor rinse leaving a lot of detergent in the clothes and grubby looking clothes.. Barbara
Hi While my machine was full of suds on a wash with no powder ( I use ariel for whites and persil or ariel for coloured ) normally there are no suds visible , my main concern is the lack of water in todays machines hence a very poor rinse leaving a lot of detergent in the clothes and grubby looking clothes.. Barbara
0 replies Ok well i will do that then. I want to ask you something regarding liquids that your blog doesn't cover. Why is it when i put my machine on an empty wash with no detergent and no clothes at 60 or 90 degrees i get a load of foam in the drum? This only happens if i have been using liquids NEVER powder/tablets. Maybe the liquids contain animal tallow fats that line the inner drum with a residue film, could it be lack of builders? I checked the Bosch filter WAE24165GB and was fine. Too any one else experiencing trouble getting rid of soap residue you could try spinning the clothes out in a spin dryer. It removes a heck of a lot of residue! Thanks Ben
Ok well i will do that then. I want to ask you something regarding liquids that your blog doesn’t cover. Why is it when i put my machine on an empty wash with no detergent and no clothes at 60 or 90 degrees i get a load of foam in the drum? This only happens if i have been using liquids NEVER powder/tablets. Maybe the liquids contain animal tallow fats that line the inner drum with a residue film, could it be lack of builders? I checked the Bosch filter WAE24165GB and was fine.
Too any one else experiencing trouble getting rid of soap residue you could try spinning the clothes out in a spin dryer. It removes a heck of a lot of residue!
Thanks
Ben
0 replies Oxygen bleach contains hydrogen peroxide Ben. I'm no chemical expert but I assume that the process of whitening whites with it may impact colours. It would be nice to get some clarification by an expert on oxygen bleach.
Oxygen bleach contains hydrogen peroxide Ben. I’m no chemical expert but I assume that the process of whitening whites with it may impact colours. It would be nice to get some clarification by an expert on oxygen bleach.
0 replies Ben: I use Surf or Aerial tablets, or should I say Mrs Washerhelp does and we have no complaints. I think most people should buy more than one type of detergent because neither type is perfect for all laundry and maintenance washes. Bleach whitens whites but fades colours, colour friendly detergent doesn’t fade colours (as much or at all) but doesn’t get whites as white etc. If you are getting too many suds you could still be using too much, especially if you have softened water. Softened water requires less, so the amount of detergent needed for-normal soiling should be different depending on the hardness of the water. The instructions on the detergent should not only advise on amounts depending on level of soiling but on hardness or water. You might these articles interesting Which is best detergent: You don't just use one type do you? Eco friendly (green) detergents Whites coming out of washing machine looking grey, coloureds losing their colour
Ben: I use Surf or Aerial tablets, or should I say Mrs Washerhelp does and we have no complaints. I think most people should buy more than one type of detergent because neither type is perfect for all laundry and maintenance washes. Bleach whitens whites but fades colours, colour friendly detergent doesn’t fade colours (as much or at all) but doesn’t get whites as white etc.
If you are getting too many suds you could still be using too much, especially if you have softened water. Softened water requires less, so the amount of detergent needed for-normal soiling should be different depending on the hardness of the water. The instructions on the detergent should not only advise on amounts depending on level of soiling but on hardness or water.
You might these articles interesting
Which is best detergent: You don’t just use one type do you?
Eco friendly (green) detergents
Whites coming out of washing machine looking grey, coloureds losing their colour
0 replies @ Washer help can i ask what detergent brand do you reccommend? Do you find colour care stuff is worth bothering with or just stick to one bleach containing powder? I know the modern automatic powders are supposed to be low foaming but i totally disagree with them being low foaming. They create too many suds which stops my machine draining and spinning. Im currently use Amway SA8 (Made in USA) but i have a feeling there is no anti foam and that these products are best suited to US models or it could be they work better in US than here down to different water? The rinse water is never crystal clear and i always have a 'pillow' of bubbles on the rinse water even on the last rinse. I do have a water softner but it is plumbed into the main household water supply not directly to machine so i can't see that the problem. I can only assume modern detergents foam too much. I also think its not a good thing that powders have become concentrated. We never had foaming issues in the 90's from what i remember. I am not over dosing and put less than the reccommend amount. E.G. for normal soil my detergent says 30ml of liquid but i put in 10ml and it still bloody foams grrrrrrr. Please can anyone reccomend a NON SUDSING detergent? Thanks
@ Washer help can i ask what detergent brand do you reccommend? Do you find colour care stuff is worth bothering with or just stick to one bleach containing powder? I know the modern automatic powders are supposed to be low foaming but i totally disagree with them being low foaming. They create too many suds which stops my machine draining and spinning. Im currently use Amway SA8 (Made in USA) but i have a feeling there is no anti foam and that these products are best suited to US models or it could be they work better in US than here down to different water? The rinse water is never crystal clear and i always have a ‘pillow’ of bubbles on the rinse water even on the last rinse. I do have a water softner but it is plumbed into the main household water supply not directly to machine so i can’t see that the problem. I can only assume modern detergents foam too much. I also think its not a good thing that powders have become concentrated. We never had foaming issues in the 90’s from what i remember. I am not over dosing and put less than the reccommend amount. E.G. for normal soil my detergent says 30ml of liquid but i put in 10ml and it still bloody foams grrrrrrr.
Please can anyone reccomend a NON SUDSING detergent?
Thanks
0 replies Had a WM52. It's rinse was terrible, in fact had to use liquid just to stop clothes being covered in powder. The main bearing disintegrated after 14 months. Hotpoint failed to turn up to fix it but by then it had quietened down. It sounded like the bearings had disintegrated to nothing and it sort of rattled as it turned I decided to just ignore the strange noises until it finally died when I would replace it because it rinsed that badly it wasn't worth keeping.
Had a WM52. It’s rinse was terrible, in fact had to use liquid just to stop clothes being covered in powder. The main bearing disintegrated after 14 months. Hotpoint failed to turn up to fix it but by then it had quietened down. It sounded like the bearings had disintegrated to nothing and it sort of rattled as it turned I decided to just ignore the strange noises until it finally died when I would replace it because it rinsed that badly it wasn’t worth keeping.
0 replies Can anyone tell me if a Hotpoint WM51,52,53 or 54 range will rinse properly and use enough water say 1/3 or 1/4 up the door glass? The Hotpoint 95 series are becoming increasingly hard to find and mostly on Ebay. In my personal experience i wouldn't buy second hand electrical appliances from a private seller as i did recently buy a machine only to find the tub leaks and the programmer has failed. Is my safest bet t buy from a reconditioned place second hand shop or somewhere like the British Heart Foundation? Guy's Domestic Appliances is one idea though its over 70 miles from me so not a viable option. If anyone can suggest any models please let me know. If i had the money would buy the Miele 'Little Giant'. Thanks
Can anyone tell me if a Hotpoint WM51,52,53 or 54 range will rinse properly and use enough water say 1/3 or 1/4 up the door glass? The Hotpoint 95 series are becoming increasingly hard to find and mostly on Ebay. In my personal experience i wouldn’t buy second hand electrical appliances from a private seller as i did recently buy a machine only to find the tub leaks and the programmer has failed. Is my safest bet t buy from a reconditioned place second hand shop or somewhere like the British Heart Foundation? Guy’s Domestic Appliances is one idea though its over 70 miles from me so not a viable option.
If anyone can suggest any models please let me know. If i had the money would buy the Miele ‘Little Giant’.
Thanks
0 replies gemma johnson:Thanks very much. I have good contacts to Which? and sent them a link to this article yes. They appear to have changed the way they rank rinsing now to make it a bit clearer as I pointed out the way they were doing it before was confusing and at times contradictory but they don't seem to be interested in pushing the issue of poor rinsing as a consumer issue. I must get the ISE10 review finished. Unfortunately they keep running out of stock of them so I put the review on hold as I didn't want to promote something that was unavailable for several weeks. The numbers unfortunately disappeared when I put a new skin on this Blog. On the old one every comment had a number. I want to get them back but it's not straight forward to work out how and I haven't had time to sort it.
gemma johnson:Thanks very much. I have good contacts to Which? and sent them a link to this article yes. They appear to have changed the way they rank rinsing now to make it a bit clearer as I pointed out the way they were doing it before was confusing and at times contradictory but they don’t seem to be interested in pushing the issue of poor rinsing as a consumer issue.
I must get the ISE10 review finished. Unfortunately they keep running out of stock of them so I put the review on hold as I didn’t want to promote something that was unavailable for several weeks.
The numbers unfortunately disappeared when I put a new skin on this Blog. On the old one every comment had a number. I want to get them back but it’s not straight forward to work out how and I haven’t had time to sort it.
0 replies Gemma: You are a lady after my own heart! I started this whole argument off years ago - if you wade back, you will find them. I have found one washing power that rinses a better than any others, and that is Ecover Biological - it is brilliant, it rinses out pretty well, although thick towels need running through the wash cycle again with no soap added. The problem is that modern washing machines only bring in a tiny amount of water, and in addition to that only rinse in cold water. The scientific facts of rinsing are that you need bags of warm/hot water to rinse properly, you CANNOT RINSE IN COLD WATER EFFECTIVELY. Well done you!
Gemma:
You are a lady after my own heart! I started this whole argument off years ago – if you wade back, you will find them.
I have found one washing power that rinses a better than any others, and that is Ecover Biological – it is brilliant, it rinses out pretty well, although thick towels need running through the wash cycle again with no soap added.
The problem is that modern washing machines only bring in a tiny amount of water, and in addition to that only rinse in cold water. The scientific facts of rinsing are that you need bags of warm/hot water to rinse properly, you CANNOT RINSE IN COLD WATER EFFECTIVELY.
Well done you!
0 replies Andy I have spent all day and managed to get through all the comments, have you ever thought of passing this blog on (if thats the right word) to WHICH who tells us machines don't rinse properly and still gives it a best buy. we joined Which for a pound and ask them have they ever did a trial on the right amount of detergent apart from what it says on the box their answer look at the page on detergent was not impressed at so won't be joining ,I got more help here ,so thanks everyone its nice to know am not going mad . And was it you that had a ISE10 in his garage to review ,and have you . One comment that scared me was the spanish one that said water could be reduced to 8L . I have to tell you that scares me. I know I sound thick but when people say comment 334 ,where are these numbers ? Thank you Gemma
Andy
I have spent all day and managed to get through all the comments, have you ever thought of passing this blog on (if thats the right word) to WHICH who tells us machines don’t rinse properly and still gives it a best buy.
we joined Which for a pound and ask them have they ever did a trial on the right amount of detergent apart from what it says on the box their answer look at the page on detergent was not impressed at so won’t be joining ,I got more help here ,so thanks everyone its nice to know am not going mad .
And was it you that had a ISE10 in his garage to review ,and have you . One comment that scared me was the spanish one that said water could be reduced to 8L . I have to tell you that scares me.
I know I sound thick but when people say comment 334 ,where are these numbers ?
Thank you
Gemma
0 replies is there any possibility that hot and cold fill machines with a good intake of water will come back onto the market ?
is there any possibility that hot and cold fill machines with a good intake of water will come back onto the market ?
0 replies Yes, this is growing very long - will this be the last comment? I think it's very clear that lack of water and the constant changes to laundry detergents are responsible for skin allergies and other health problems. Here are 6 things I've learnt, which can help anyone who suffers from allergies related to laundry chemicals: 1) Cotton items - especially towels - are harder to rinse and need the most water. 2) Warm or hot water rinses MUCH better than cold water (thanks Nikki for that tip in your earlier comments :)) and warm or hot water rinses the detergent's perfumes out, which cold water will NOT, no matter how much cold water is used. 3) Interim spins between rinses are very important at forcing out the soap, so this may be affected by the chosen wash programme or settings chosen, such as a setting to reduce ironing. 4) Modern detergents create too much foam, so be careful about dosage and if you have to under-dose, use 1 tablespoon of soda crystals to avoid limescale damage and grease build up. 5) If you like really soft clothes, Surcare is the only fabric conditioner I know of which has no perfumes, as the perfumes in conditioners and detergents are often the cause of skin allergies; the softener is always added to the final rinse. 6) Here's the most obvious one - plenty of water is needed per rinse. If you add extra water, I suggest keeping it well below half way, otherwise the washing machine's bearings will be worn out much quicker. I'm sure there are many more tips, but I've kept it down to 6 tips for everyone reading. Thanks for creating this blog Washerhelp/Andy and I hope it's been helpful to everyone. It's sure helped me and I no longer get "mystery" red marks on my skin. :)
Yes, this is growing very long – will this be the last comment? I think it’s very clear that lack of water and the constant changes to laundry detergents are responsible for skin allergies and other health problems.
Here are 6 things I’ve learnt, which can help anyone who suffers from allergies related to laundry chemicals:
1) Cotton items – especially towels – are harder to rinse and need the most water.
2) Warm or hot water rinses MUCH better than cold water (thanks Nikki for that tip in your earlier comments :)) and warm or hot water rinses the detergent’s perfumes out, which cold water will NOT, no matter how much cold water is used.
3) Interim spins between rinses are very important at forcing out the soap, so this may be affected by the chosen wash programme or settings chosen, such as a setting to reduce ironing.
4) Modern detergents create too much foam, so be careful about dosage and if you have to under-dose, use 1 tablespoon of soda crystals to avoid limescale damage and grease build up.
5) If you like really soft clothes, Surcare is the only fabric conditioner I know of which has no perfumes, as the perfumes in conditioners and detergents are often the cause of skin allergies; the softener is always added to the final rinse.
6) Here’s the most obvious one – plenty of water is needed per rinse. If you add extra water, I suggest keeping it well below half way, otherwise the washing machine’s bearings will be worn out much quicker.
I’m sure there are many more tips, but I’ve kept it down to 6 tips for everyone reading. Thanks for creating this blog Washerhelp/Andy and I hope it’s been helpful to everyone. It’s sure helped me and I no longer get “mystery” red marks on my skin. :)
0 replies I agree big time with Nikki re poor rinsing and the huge increase in asthma and asthma-related problems in recent years - the Government should pay for research into a possible/probable connection between poorly rinsed clothes and asthma problems. I have watched various comments on this blog for a couple of years or more now and note you will soon be closing down this particular blog after 500+ comments. I have had 5 washing m/cs in 5 years, all because rinsing was a major problem - coughing, sneezing, breathing problems AND loads of dust on kitchen surfaces made me realise there was a big problem with the rinsing on the first 3-4 m/cs. I have had a Hotpoint Acqualitis 9Kg 1400 A Class m/c for a little over a year now and it certainly rinses SO much better than all the others. I use Marks & Spencer's washing powder ('for coloureds') and add a little Napisan with the washing powder - great results EVERY time! Without the Napisan, clothes are not rinsed quite as well so I will then add an extra rinse cycle or two. From my experience, the M&S powder is the best powder on the market to enable reasonable/good rinsing of clothes - and I've tried a dozen or more brands - Daz is the one of the worst. So, try M&S powder with Napisan - and see how the rinsing goes. And, M&S, please keep selling this great product at a reasonable price - and I'll keep buying and promoting it! Occasionally I use soap nuts as these are good for freshening up clothes - do not for removing stains though. PS: My friends thought I was neurotic about the rinsing capability of my various m/cs ... when I found this blog a couple of years ago, it was very reasuring there were others in the UK who also had rinsing problems - thank you for setting it up and continuing it for this long, Washerhelp!
I agree big time with Nikki re poor rinsing and the huge increase in asthma and asthma-related problems in recent years – the Government should pay for research into a possible/probable connection between poorly rinsed clothes and asthma problems.
I have watched various comments on this blog for a couple of years or more now and note you will soon be closing down this particular blog after 500+ comments. I have had 5 washing m/cs in 5 years, all because rinsing was a major problem – coughing, sneezing, breathing problems AND loads of dust on kitchen surfaces made me realise there was a big problem with the rinsing on the first 3-4 m/cs.
I have had a Hotpoint Acqualitis 9Kg 1400 A Class m/c for a little over a year now and it certainly rinses SO much better than all the others. I use Marks & Spencer’s washing powder (‘for coloureds’) and add a little Napisan with the washing powder – great results EVERY time! Without the Napisan, clothes are not rinsed quite as well so I will then add an extra rinse cycle or two. From my experience, the M&S powder is the best powder on the market to enable reasonable/good rinsing of clothes – and I’ve tried a dozen or more brands – Daz is the one of the worst. So, try M&S powder with Napisan – and see how the rinsing goes. And, M&S, please keep selling this great product at a reasonable price – and I’ll keep buying and promoting it! Occasionally I use soap nuts as these are good for freshening up clothes – do not for removing stains though. PS: My friends thought I was neurotic about the rinsing capability of my various m/cs … when I found this blog a couple of years ago, it was very reasuring there were others in the UK who also had rinsing problems – thank you for setting it up and continuing it for this long, Washerhelp!
0 replies I would go further than Mike would suggest the possibility that laundry powder from unrinsed clothes may actually be a major factor in the inexplicable steep increase in the incidence of asthma. In other words although it may trigger an attack, the powder could also cause the asthma in the first place by breaking down the lining of the lungs and allowing the inappropriate allergic reactions to develop.
I would go further than Mike would suggest the possibility that laundry powder from unrinsed clothes may actually be a major factor in the inexplicable steep increase in the incidence of asthma. In other words although it may trigger an attack, the powder could also cause the asthma in the first place by breaking down the lining of the lungs and allowing the inappropriate allergic reactions to develop.
0 replies Re #503 Yes, unrinsed laundry power, dried, and then subsequently turned into dust is a rather extreme respiratory allergen even for people who don't think they have allergies "but their noses are congested all the time"... It can come out of clothes, pyjamas, sheets, towels, basically ANYTHING that gets washed... It IS peculiar that it's only very rarely (maybe once a decade) rinsing performance isn't measured by Which? or Comsumer Reports...
Re #503
Yes, unrinsed laundry power, dried, and then subsequently turned into dust is a rather extreme respiratory allergen even for people who don’t think they have allergies “but their noses are congested all the time”… It can come out of clothes, pyjamas, sheets, towels, basically ANYTHING that gets washed…
It IS peculiar that it’s only very rarely (maybe once a decade) rinsing performance isn’t measured by Which? or Comsumer Reports…
0 replies One question to all readers: if you are NOT sensitive to laundry detergent and nobody else in your household are sensitive, do you still want your skin to be in contact with clothes, bedding and towels that have unrinsed detergent residue? From the moment you put your clothes on in the morning to sleeping in bedding at night, your skin rubs against fabrics for many hours everyday. I sometimes wonder if it's only the skin that reacts to unrinsed detergent? If unrinsed powder residue becomes airborne, that can surely be a trigger to sensitive people e.g. asthmatics? It always surprises me in our "health and safety" obsessed society that poor rinsing is not being taken into account! Do the environmentalists - who somehow believe we will "run out" of water - have priority over a genuine case of health and safety i.e. allergic reactions to chemicals?
One question to all readers: if you are NOT sensitive to laundry detergent and nobody else in your household are sensitive, do you still want your skin to be in contact with clothes, bedding and towels that have unrinsed detergent residue? From the moment you put your clothes on in the morning to sleeping in bedding at night, your skin rubs against fabrics for many hours everyday.
I sometimes wonder if it’s only the skin that reacts to unrinsed detergent? If unrinsed powder residue becomes airborne, that can surely be a trigger to sensitive people e.g. asthmatics?
It always surprises me in our “health and safety” obsessed society that poor rinsing is not being taken into account! Do the environmentalists – who somehow believe we will “run out” of water – have priority over a genuine case of health and safety i.e. allergic reactions to chemicals?
0 replies Re Comment #500. You're right, though "rinse well enough for the masses" is kind of relative. SOME people think it's quite odd to rinse the toothpaste out of one's mouth with water ("you mean, you don't just leave it in?"), and others probably WOULD be satisfied by shampooing their hair, towelling it off, and dunking one's head ONCE into a bucket of rinse water...
Re Comment #500. You’re right, though “rinse well enough for the masses” is kind of relative. SOME people think it’s quite odd to rinse the toothpaste out of one’s mouth with water (“you mean, you don’t just leave it in?”), and others probably WOULD be satisfied by shampooing their hair, towelling it off, and dunking one’s head ONCE into a bucket of rinse water…
0 replies The Miele W3740 and indeed the John Lewis washer dryer I've just tested rinse "properly" for us as they will for most people Oliver. We have absolutely no complaints about the rinsing quality because we are fortunate to not have any sensitivity to detergents. Rinsing "properly" is likely to be essential only for people with sensitivity to detergents.
The Miele W3740 and indeed the John Lewis washer dryer I’ve just tested rinse “properly” for us as they will for most people Oliver. We have absolutely no complaints about the rinsing quality because we are fortunate to not have any sensitivity to detergents. Rinsing “properly” is likely to be essential only for people with sensitivity to detergents.
0 replies Thanks people. I do still have that nagging feeling that ISE was the way to go but the Miele is on it's way now and I 'm sure it will be fine. We were rather taken by the whole water saving side of things but as you quite rightly point out that may well be at the cost of clothes not being rinsed properly. Suck it and see I guess. We use liquid tabs as well as power tablets so will have to review that for the benefit of our washing machine.
Thanks people. I do still have that nagging feeling that ISE was the way to go but the Miele is on it’s way now and I ‘m sure it will be fine. We were rather taken by the whole water saving side of things but as you quite rightly point out that may well be at the cost of clothes not being rinsed properly. Suck it and see I guess. We use liquid tabs as well as power tablets so will have to review that for the benefit of our washing machine.
0 replies Damian: The ISE route is definitely best if you want to ensure you can get it repaired easily and relatively cheaply and/or diy repairs with good access to technical support and even help and advice from ISE. On the other hand the W5740 should be an extremely good washing machine. Which? said of it, "This star performer from Miele more than deserves its Best Buy status - it's the highest scoring washing machine we've ever tested. It's extremely fast, gives excellent cleaning results and is easy to use". It has a 10 year warranty so by the time it runs out who knows what the situation will be. Enjoy the Miele.
Damian: The ISE route is definitely best if you want to ensure you can get it repaired easily and relatively cheaply and/or diy repairs with good access to technical support and even help and advice from ISE.
On the other hand the W5740 should be an extremely good washing machine. Which? said of it, “This star performer from Miele more than deserves its Best Buy status – it’s the highest scoring washing machine we’ve ever tested. It’s extremely fast, gives excellent cleaning results and is easy to use”. It has a 10 year warranty so by the time it runs out who knows what the situation will be. Enjoy the Miele.
0 replies Oh, how can I forget THAT? Electric blow dryers in public toilets are often touted as "not cuasing chapped hands", "being more hygienic", and "reducing paper waste"... Unfortunately, if there are a lot of people in the washroom, people almost NEVER dry their hands completely (a task that should take around 20 seconds, to do properly takes well over a minute with anemic hand dryers, so if one considers a whole bunch of people with damp hands all pulling the door handles "more sanitary", that's news to me... Somehow I don't see people saying things like "sure, I've had a cold three times this winter, but I helped save a tree, so my weeks of misery are worht it for the planet".
Oh, how can I forget THAT? Electric blow dryers in public toilets are often touted as “not cuasing chapped hands”, “being more hygienic”, and “reducing paper waste”… Unfortunately, if there are a lot of people in the washroom, people almost NEVER dry their hands completely (a task that should take around 20 seconds, to do properly takes well over a minute with anemic hand dryers, so if one considers a whole bunch of people with damp hands all pulling the door handles “more sanitary”, that’s news to me… Somehow I don’t see people saying things like “sure, I’ve had a cold three times this winter, but I helped save a tree, so my weeks of misery are worht it for the planet”.
0 replies I agree Mark. Another laughable example I've come across was an electric hand dryer in a public toilet which switched off far too soon and resulted in me having to press it again to finish off drying my hands only to leave it still running when I'd finished. Many of these measures turn out to be counter productive.
I agree Mark. Another laughable example I’ve come across was an electric hand dryer in a public toilet which switched off far too soon and resulted in me having to press it again to finish off drying my hands only to leave it still running when I’d finished. Many of these measures turn out to be counter productive.
0 replies There are a lot of ridiculous things done "in the name of the environment", like forcing detergent manufacturers to make phosphate-free detergents, yet there is no control of INDUSTRIAL uses of phosphates, which is a larger amount by magnitudes, or requiring low-flow showerheads (and people compensate by taking showers that are twice as long) and cheap low-flow toilets which require multiple flushes to leave no trace of solid waste... (The more expensive ones often have some sort of pressure tank inside or a more efficient flow pattern.)
There are a lot of ridiculous things done “in the name of the environment”, like forcing detergent manufacturers to make phosphate-free detergents, yet there is no control of INDUSTRIAL uses of phosphates, which is a larger amount by magnitudes, or requiring low-flow showerheads (and people compensate by taking showers that are twice as long) and cheap low-flow toilets which require multiple flushes to leave no trace of solid waste… (The more expensive ones often have some sort of pressure tank inside or a more efficient flow pattern.)
0 replies Yes, liquid detergents don't rinse out of either the laundry OR out of the machine (apparently people who use liquid laundry detergent have significantly more problems with "an off-odour in the washer" (caused by detergent deposits and limescale deposits - a good environment for bacteria to grow). Plus, liquid detergents are kind of messy... Having a lot of water is especially important in the rinse - in the wash, there are two schools of thought: using less water will concentrate the detgerent vs using a lot of water will pleasantly dilute the wash solution.
Yes, liquid detergents don’t rinse out of either the laundry OR out of the machine (apparently people who use liquid laundry detergent have significantly more problems with “an off-odour in the washer” (caused by detergent deposits and limescale deposits – a good environment for bacteria to grow). Plus, liquid detergents are kind of messy… Having a lot of water is especially important in the rinse – in the wash, there are two schools of thought: using less water will concentrate the detgerent vs using a lot of water will pleasantly dilute the wash solution.
0 replies Re: comment #482 Nina, if water is so scarce in this country, why do water companies spend about 2 weeks doing nothing before attending to a reported water leak in the street? I agree with Oliver's comment #483 110-percent!! If the environment is THAT important to the environmentalists, why don't they insist that the washing machine manufacturers make washing machines much more reliable, as modern ones get scrapped at very young ages and also insist on returning to using the hot water valve to benefit owners of solar-heated hot water, instead of just making washing machines use too little water? It's lack of water being used that's forcing people like myself to pour in extra water through the soap drawer, otherwise my skin suffers!! If washing machines used enough warm water and actually rinsed properly, then I would not need to fill the drum with lots of extra water. Maybe I'm now using too much water to compensate for not enough being used in the first place? Maybe good rinsing can be achieved with less warm water compared to cold? But the rinses have to be performed for long enough and interim spins must also be performed, which helps to force out the soapsuds. If towels are not washed at 60C, expect to become ill more often!! The same applies to any bacteria-prone items e.g. nurses' uniforms.
Re: comment #482
Nina, if water is so scarce in this country, why do water companies spend about 2 weeks doing nothing before attending to a reported water leak in the street?
I agree with Oliver’s comment #483 110-percent!!
If the environment is THAT important to the environmentalists, why don’t they insist that the washing machine manufacturers make washing machines much more reliable, as modern ones get scrapped at very young ages and also insist on returning to using the hot water valve to benefit owners of solar-heated hot water, instead of just making washing machines use too little water? It’s lack of water being used that’s forcing people like myself to pour in extra water through the soap drawer, otherwise my skin suffers!!
If washing machines used enough warm water and actually rinsed properly, then I would not need to fill the drum with lots of extra water. Maybe I’m now using too much water to compensate for not enough being used in the first place? Maybe good rinsing can be achieved with less warm water compared to cold? But the rinses have to be performed for long enough and interim spins must also be performed, which helps to force out the soapsuds.
If towels are not washed at 60C, expect to become ill more often!! The same applies to any bacteria-prone items e.g. nurses’ uniforms.
0 replies (Comment number 470 continued) Hi again! We received the used Bosch WFB 1605 washing machine. It washes and rinses very well. After washing, it rinses the clothes three times, and each time, the water level rises up to a third of the height that you can see through the glass. Moreover, if you press the "more water" button, then, the level rises up more than half the height you can see! We do not have any skin problems, so we will not use the "more watter" button very often. The machine looks well and sounds well when working, and Bosch has a reputation for having spare parts for its discontinued appliances during many years, so we hope that we will be able to use this one for about 10 or 15 years yet. In some previous comments I read that the British Which? magazine rated only 3 washing machines as good at rinsing, and that the overall rating of these three machines was bad. Well, the main (and well reputed) Spanish consumer organization OCU publishes monthly a magazine called Compra Maestra where many consumer reports are available. In the last months two reports of interest have been published. One of them rated 24 models of washing machines that spin the load up to 1200 RPM, and none of them received a "good" rating for rinsing, at least for cotton load programs. The report also said what we all know: that modern washing machines use less energy and water at the expense of poorer washing and rinsing. The other report rated another 24 washing machines that spin the load up to 1000 RPM and only one of them (the Bosch WAE 20260EE) was rated as "good" for rinsing (but did not receive the top "very good" rating). The overall rating of the machine was slightly above average and it ranked 12th. of the 24 models. I do not know it this model is or has been sold in Britain and another countries. One of the corollaries to Murphy's Law states "Just when you think things cannot get any worse, they will". Well, this seems to be the case with the European regulation which affects water consumption of washing machines and has versions from years 1995, 1999, ,,,etc. I found a document on the web (unfortunately, I did not save or bookmarked it) where it read that they are preparing a new version of the regulation that will further reduce the limit of water consumption from 12 to 8 liters of water per kilogram of load in the 60 degrees cotton load program. Apparently, that does not affect the other programs, but experience shows that manufacturers tend to reduce the water consumption of all programs when they have to reduce that of the 60 degrees cotton load one. So, I think that if we were thinking of buying a new washing machine, we would buy one before the new regulation applies!. Best regards.
(Comment number 470 continued)
Hi again!
We received the used Bosch WFB 1605 washing machine.
It washes and rinses very well. After washing, it rinses the clothes three times, and each time,
the water level rises up to a third of the height that you can see through the glass. Moreover,
if you press the “more water” button, then, the level rises up more than half the height
you can see! We do not have any skin problems, so we will not use the “more watter” button
very often. The machine looks well and sounds well when working, and Bosch has a reputation
for having spare parts for its discontinued appliances during many years, so we hope that we
will be able to use this one for about 10 or 15 years yet.
In some previous comments I read that the British Which? magazine rated only 3 washing machines
as good at rinsing, and that the overall rating of these three machines was bad. Well, the main
(and well reputed) Spanish consumer organization OCU publishes monthly a magazine called Compra Maestra where many consumer reports are available. In the last months two reports of interest have been published. One of them rated 24 models of washing machines that spin the load up to 1200 RPM, and none of them received a “good” rating for rinsing, at least for cotton load
programs. The report also said what we all know: that modern washing machines use less energy
and water at the expense of poorer washing and rinsing. The other report rated another 24
washing machines that spin the load up to 1000 RPM and only one of them
(the Bosch WAE 20260EE) was rated as “good” for rinsing (but did not receive the top
“very good” rating). The overall rating of the machine was slightly above average and it ranked
12th. of the 24 models. I do not know it this model is or has been sold in Britain and another
countries.
One of the corollaries to Murphy’s Law states “Just when you think things cannot get any
worse, they will”. Well, this seems to be the case with the European regulation
which affects water consumption of washing machines and has versions from years 1995, 1999,
,,,etc. I found a document on the web (unfortunately, I did not save or bookmarked it)
where it read that they are preparing a new version of the regulation that
will further reduce the limit of water consumption from 12 to 8 liters of water per kilogram
of load in the 60 degrees cotton load program. Apparently, that does not affect the other programs,
but experience shows that manufacturers tend to reduce the water consumption of all programs
when they have to reduce that of the 60 degrees cotton load one. So, I think that if we were
thinking of buying a new washing machine, we would buy one before the new regulation applies!.
Best regards.
0 replies I'm surprised few people have commented on how to successfully solve rinsing problems. Stopping your allergy may be as simple as running a "rinse" cycle after the washing machine has finished, which should also perform a final spin afterwards at your chosen speed. Doing this won't void the guarantee and won't take up much time. Given that new washing machines are full of features, the separate rinse and spin cycle should be present on just about every new washing machine. I know Miele's have "Water Plus" which needs setting up to perform extra rinses in higher levels of water than the default. I can understand when people are very sensitive to detergents and need more than just a few extra rinses in cold water. I know it's frustrating not having high levels of warm water rinsing, especially for towels, but it can be achieved with little effort and stop you itching. I have found that the last rinse with Surcare softener (it has no perfumes) with warm water, instead of cold, leaves the clothes feeling MUCH softer. To anyone who doesn't believe warm water rinses better, try it on your cottons and watch the soapsuds appear from nowhere! The warm rinsing water will also remove the detergent's perfumes from your clothes, which cause skin reactions. White vinegar also neutralises just about anything, but I know it's hard to find it cheap, so warm rinsing alone may be sufficient.
I’m surprised few people have commented on how to successfully solve rinsing problems.
Stopping your allergy may be as simple as running a “rinse” cycle after the washing machine has finished, which should also perform a final spin afterwards at your chosen speed. Doing this won’t void the guarantee and won’t take up much time. Given that new washing machines are full of features, the separate rinse and spin cycle should be present on just about every new washing machine. I know Miele’s have “Water Plus” which needs setting up to perform extra rinses in higher levels of water than the default.
I can understand when people are very sensitive to detergents and need more than just a few extra rinses in cold water. I know it’s frustrating not having high levels of warm water rinsing, especially for towels, but it can be achieved with little effort and stop you itching. I have found that the last rinse with Surcare softener (it has no perfumes) with warm water, instead of cold, leaves the clothes feeling MUCH softer. To anyone who doesn’t believe warm water rinses better, try it on your cottons and watch the soapsuds appear from nowhere! The warm rinsing water will also remove the detergent’s perfumes from your clothes, which cause skin reactions. White vinegar also neutralises just about anything, but I know it’s hard to find it cheap, so warm rinsing alone may be sufficient.
0 replies If the detergent is scented there should be SOME scent left over, but not much! And yes, unfortunately most modern machines don't rinse very well. The "if the clothes are wet, the cycle must have done its job in washing and rinsing" mentality is there.
If the detergent is scented there should be SOME scent left over, but not much! And yes, unfortunately most modern machines don’t rinse very well. The “if the clothes are wet, the cycle must have done its job in washing and rinsing” mentality is there.
0 replies I look forward to your report Felix.
I look forward to your report Felix.
0 replies Hi everybody! I am somewhat relieved to know that Spain is not the only country where washing machines rinse poorly. I will tell you our story: We had an old Zanussi SL-503 washing machine (made around the year 1982). Of course it washed and rinsed very well. Its main axle broke in year 2006, and we were so stupid not to have it repaired (the technician told us that they still had all spare parts for this model). We bought a new Whirlpool AWO 8107 model and soon noticed that it did not wash well and rinsed very, very, very poorly. We called Whirlpool's technical service twice, the first time they told us that these machines used very little soap, much less than the quantity that we added. We tried to add less and rinsing became only very poor, while clothes were almost so dirty as they had entered the washing machine. We tried changing the detergent's brand, adding several rinsing cycles, pressing the extra water button, but nothing helped. The second time the technician came, I asked him if he could make the machine take more water, and he told me he couldn't, because he was not allowed to, but that a private technician not belonging to any washing machine's official technical service could do it by replacing the pressure gauge and the main electronic board of the machine by older models. He told me that it would cost more than 400 euros, and we didn't know if we would find a non-official technician that was qualified to do the job, so we didn't try to do it. Two weeks ago, the machine broke and we have not tried to repair it. Instead we have bought an old Bosch WFB 1605 machine that will be delivered tomorrow and costs 165 euros. It was made some year between 1995 and 2000, before the main European regulation limiting the amount of water that washer machines can use began to apply (the regulation dates back from year 1999, but I think it did not begin to be applied in Spain till years 2000-2001. There is an older regulation, from year 1995, but it did not restrict water's usage, only made compulsory for the manufacturers to inform about the amount of water that the machines use in the 60 degrees cotton cycle). So, it is not so old as Oliver's Bosch WFF2000, but I hope that it will do a proper rinse. It has, as Oliver's, a more water button. Moreover, in case it still does not take enough water, the seller told us that any technician could easily adjust its pressure gauge to rise the water level, since it is a fully mechanical machine. In a few days, when we will have tried it, I will let you know how it rinses and some more information that we have and may be of interest to all of you, but that I do not post now in order not to make this comment too long. Best Regards
Hi everybody!
I am somewhat relieved to know that Spain is not the only country where washing machines rinse poorly. I will tell you our story:
We had an old Zanussi SL-503 washing machine (made around the year 1982). Of course it washed and rinsed very well. Its main axle broke in year 2006, and we were so stupid not to have it repaired (the technician told us that they still had all spare parts for this model). We bought a new Whirlpool AWO 8107 model and soon noticed that it did not wash well and rinsed very, very, very poorly.
We called Whirlpool’s technical service twice, the first time they told us that these machines used very little soap, much less than the quantity that we added. We tried to add less and rinsing became only very poor, while clothes were almost so dirty as they had entered the washing machine. We tried changing the detergent’s brand, adding several rinsing cycles, pressing the extra water button, but nothing helped. The second time the technician came, I asked him if he could make the machine take more water, and he told me he couldn’t, because he was not allowed to, but that a private technician not belonging to any washing machine’s official technical service could do it by replacing the pressure gauge and the main electronic board of the machine by older models. He told me that it would cost more than 400 euros, and we didn’t know if we would find a non-official technician that was qualified to do the job, so we didn’t try to do it.
Two weeks ago, the machine broke and we have not tried to repair it. Instead we have bought an old Bosch WFB 1605 machine that will be delivered tomorrow and costs 165 euros. It was made some year between 1995 and 2000, before the main European regulation limiting the amount of water that washer machines can use began to apply (the regulation dates back from year 1999, but I think it did not begin to be applied in Spain till years 2000-2001. There is an older regulation, from year 1995, but it did not restrict water’s usage, only made compulsory for the manufacturers to inform about the amount of water that the machines use in the 60 degrees cotton cycle). So, it is not so old as Oliver’s Bosch WFF2000, but I hope that it will do a proper rinse. It has, as Oliver’s, a more water button. Moreover, in case it still does not take enough water, the seller told us that any technician could easily adjust its pressure gauge to rise the water level, since it is a fully mechanical machine.
In a few days, when we will have tried it, I will let you know how it rinses and some more information that we have and may be of interest to all of you, but that I do not post now in order not to make this comment too long.
Best Regards
0 replies If you really want to get rid of them irritating perfumes from your washing, the affected washing needs rinsing in lots of warm or hot water and to be really sure, white (clear) vinegar could be used in the final rinse instead of fabric conditioner, it just needs to be added to the compartment of the soap drawer where the conditioner normally gets added. Vinegar is said to neutralise just about anything nasty and it's also meant to be good for the clothes as well, so they say. The clothes won't come out stinking of vinegar as the amount is too small, but it should be enough to hopefully rid the clothes of the irritating perfumes. I know earlier in this blog people were saying that white vinegar is expensive unless you can buy it in bulk. If hot rinsing with fast interim spins doesn't work on its own, white vinegar may be worth a try.
If you really want to get rid of them irritating perfumes from your washing, the affected washing needs rinsing in lots of warm or hot water and to be really sure, white (clear) vinegar could be used in the final rinse instead of fabric conditioner, it just needs to be added to the compartment of the soap drawer where the conditioner normally gets added. Vinegar is said to neutralise just about anything nasty and it’s also meant to be good for the clothes as well, so they say. The clothes won’t come out stinking of vinegar as the amount is too small, but it should be enough to hopefully rid the clothes of the irritating perfumes.
I know earlier in this blog people were saying that white vinegar is expensive unless you can buy it in bulk. If hot rinsing with fast interim spins doesn’t work on its own, white vinegar may be worth a try.
0 replies Yes, detergents these days are commonly specifically designed to leave the clothes smelling of fragrance and some people like it. The smell is not supposed to be rinsed out.
Yes, detergents these days are commonly specifically designed to leave the clothes smelling of fragrance and some people like it. The smell is not supposed to be rinsed out.
0 replies @ Oliver thanks for that helpful info about laundry liquids smelling stronger. In the past i used Persil silk and wool and even after many rinses it would still smell strongly of the stuff. Detergents in the 1980's early 90's were never difficult to rinse out or smelt too bad either. Another case of manufacturers trying to 'improve' something when it didn't need improving. Modern technology and life don't you just love it LOL
@ Oliver thanks for that helpful info about laundry liquids smelling stronger. In the past i used Persil silk and wool and even after many rinses it would still smell strongly of the stuff. Detergents in the 1980’s early 90’s were never difficult to rinse out or smelt too bad either. Another case of manufacturers trying to ‘improve’ something when it didn’t need improving. Modern technology and life don’t you just love it LOL
0 replies @ wmuser i don't buy the branded detergents for ethical reasons i.e. animal testing hence why i ask do you know of any other brands that are just as good. Many Thanks
@ wmuser i don’t buy the branded detergents for ethical reasons i.e. animal testing hence why i ask do you know of any other brands that are just as good. Many Thanks
0 replies @brenda hughes, I have some suggestions for you: I'm tempted to try the home-made stuff one day as it's said to be much cheaper and just as effective as branded detergents. Please read comment #443 - I'm keen to find out if the home-made stuff is both cheaper and more effective than shop-bought detergent before I go making it myself. As I already have plenty of Ariel, which I stocked up on when it was on offer, I want to use it all before I think about making the home-made stuff. Pour in a few jugs of hot and lukewarm water into the soap drawer when your washing machine stops filling for the main wash, just enough so the water covers the bottom of the door seal by roughly a finger's width only. This seems to enhance cleaning and the rinses later on and it stops things like socks being caught on the door seal below the door glass. Make sure you are not overloading the drum as this will prevent the clothes from being rinsed properly. With the exception of foaming, it's not the fault of the detergent itself for bad rinsing - it's caused by too little water and shorter rinses. I suggest you re-rinse and when you do, please pour in extra water or fit a hose to a tap and fill the washing machine with extra water to 1/3 up the door for at least 2 of the rinses, preferably warm water on all rinses. If your machine has a start/pause button, you can pause it when it stops filling for each rinse, add the water then start it again when you've added the extra water. If you use fabric conditioner, add it second time round when re-rinsing, otherwise it will be wasted before you perform the rinses again. I hope that helps. I know it sounds like a lot of hassle, but having manually re-rinsed and added extra water many times myself, it's something I've got used to doing and my skin allergies have completely disappeared. Please post again to let us know how you get on. :)
@brenda hughes, I have some suggestions for you:
I’m tempted to try the home-made stuff one day as it’s said to be much cheaper and just as effective as branded detergents. Please read comment #443 – I’m keen to find out if the home-made stuff is both cheaper and more effective than shop-bought detergent before I go making it myself. As I already have plenty of Ariel, which I stocked up on when it was on offer, I want to use it all before I think about making the home-made stuff.
Pour in a few jugs of hot and lukewarm water into the soap drawer when your washing machine stops filling for the main wash, just enough so the water covers the bottom of the door seal by roughly a finger’s width only. This seems to enhance cleaning and the rinses later on and it stops things like socks being caught on the door seal below the door glass. Make sure you are not overloading the drum as this will prevent the clothes from being rinsed properly.
With the exception of foaming, it’s not the fault of the detergent itself for bad rinsing – it’s caused by too little water and shorter rinses. I suggest you re-rinse and when you do, please pour in extra water or fit a hose to a tap and fill the washing machine with extra water to 1/3 up the door for at least 2 of the rinses, preferably warm water on all rinses. If your machine has a start/pause button, you can pause it when it stops filling for each rinse, add the water then start it again when you’ve added the extra water.
If you use fabric conditioner, add it second time round when re-rinsing, otherwise it will be wasted before you perform the rinses again.
I hope that helps. I know it sounds like a lot of hassle, but having manually re-rinsed and added extra water many times myself, it’s something I’ve got used to doing and my skin allergies have completely disappeared. Please post again to let us know how you get on. :)
0 replies The comment from Soon Loo sounds right. All too often the "recommended" dosage results in over-foaming, even WITHOUT the use of soda crystals (washing soda). Therefore, I now use 2/3 of the recommended detergent for full loads along with soda crystals to soften the hard water. For small loads, you only need 1/3 of the MINIMUM recommended detergent to avoid excessive foam, provided you also use something to soften the water if you live in a "hard water" area (using soda crystals is the cheapest way to soften the main wash water and it also helps to remove stains and grease with the detergent). As you know from my earlier comments, I use "Shout" fabric stain remover to pre-treat stains - this is all tried and tested and I hope it helps others reading. I think the only time you need to use the "recommended" dose of detergent (or maybe a small bit extra) is for very dirty items, such as muddy clothes, but certainly never the maximum amount recommended on the pack! I believe manufacturers want us to use more than necessary so we buy from them more often. I'm sure people would be happy to have a washing machine that washes properly AND rinses properly. As much as I dislike my Zanussi-Electrolux for not rinsing properly due to so little water being used on short rinse cycles, it does clean very well and I have no complaints about its washing performance. By the time anyone reading this from the start has got this far, I'm sure they will have a pretty good idea on how to get their washing rinsed properly. :) I hope other people can also comment if they perform extra rinses in warm water. I know it works extremely well.
The comment from Soon Loo sounds right. All too often the “recommended” dosage results in over-foaming, even WITHOUT the use of soda crystals (washing soda). Therefore, I now use 2/3 of the recommended detergent for full loads along with soda crystals to soften the hard water. For small loads, you only need 1/3 of the MINIMUM recommended detergent to avoid excessive foam, provided you also use something to soften the water if you live in a “hard water” area (using soda crystals is the cheapest way to soften the main wash water and it also helps to remove stains and grease with the detergent). As you know from my earlier comments, I use “Shout” fabric stain remover to pre-treat stains – this is all tried and tested and I hope it helps others reading.
I think the only time you need to use the “recommended” dose of detergent (or maybe a small bit extra) is for very dirty items, such as muddy clothes, but certainly never the maximum amount recommended on the pack! I believe manufacturers want us to use more than necessary so we buy from them more often.
I’m sure people would be happy to have a washing machine that washes properly AND rinses properly. As much as I dislike my Zanussi-Electrolux for not rinsing properly due to so little water being used on short rinse cycles, it does clean very well and I have no complaints about its washing performance. By the time anyone reading this from the start has got this far, I’m sure they will have a pretty good idea on how to get their washing rinsed properly. :)
I hope other people can also comment if they perform extra rinses in warm water. I know it works extremely well.
0 replies Simon I forgot to mention why I had to reduce the amount of detergent I use AND use soda crystals (aka washing soda) because I live in a "hard water" area. Detergents do foam too much if washing a small load of non-heavily soiled laundry with the recommended dosage. If you find that you need to reduce the amount of detergent below the recommended amount to avoid the foaming problem, this is where limescale damage can be a problem. To prevent limescale, I add one heaped dessert-spoonful of soda crystals to the drum before loading. It's cheaper than the more expensive water softening products and it does the same job. If you live in a "soft water" area, reducing the detergent dosage slightly might be enough to avoid the foaming, but be sure to occasionally run the washing machine empty on the hottest wash with a good cleaner like "Affresh" to avoid nasty gunk and mould forming! Be sure to also wipe the door seal inside and outside thoroughly - you'll be surprised at what ends up in the folds. Full loads of laundry don't seem to create much foam, but anything less than a full load seems to require a lower dosage of detergent than recommended. If the detergent manufacturers added more foam inhibitors, people would use the recommended dose every time - silly really when you think about it!
Simon
I forgot to mention why I had to reduce the amount of detergent I use AND use soda crystals (aka washing soda) because I live in a “hard water” area.
Detergents do foam too much if washing a small load of non-heavily soiled laundry with the recommended dosage. If you find that you need to reduce the amount of detergent below the recommended amount to avoid the foaming problem, this is where limescale damage can be a problem. To prevent limescale, I add one heaped dessert-spoonful of soda crystals to the drum before loading. It’s cheaper than the more expensive water softening products and it does the same job.
If you live in a “soft water” area, reducing the detergent dosage slightly might be enough to avoid the foaming, but be sure to occasionally run the washing machine empty on the hottest wash with a good cleaner like “Affresh” to avoid nasty gunk and mould forming! Be sure to also wipe the door seal inside and outside thoroughly – you’ll be surprised at what ends up in the folds.
Full loads of laundry don’t seem to create much foam, but anything less than a full load seems to require a lower dosage of detergent than recommended. If the detergent manufacturers added more foam inhibitors, people would use the recommended dose every time – silly really when you think about it!
0 replies Detergents do indeed foam too much. Even worse is the nightmare of getting rid of all the deep foam!! As you mentioned soap flakes, you may find the Soda Crystals and washing machines page helpful on this whitegoodshelp site. Please read comments #5 and #7 from this link, it has a recipe for home-made laundry powder which uses soap flakes: It looks interesting. Does it work? If you try this Simon, please let us know if it works for you. Cheers. :)
Detergents do indeed foam too much. Even worse is the nightmare of getting rid of all the deep foam!!
As you mentioned soap flakes, you may find the Soda Crystals and washing machines page helpful on this whitegoodshelp site. Please read comments #5 and #7 from this link, it has a recipe for home-made laundry powder which uses soap flakes:
It looks interesting. Does it work? If you try this Simon, please let us know if it works for you. Cheers. :)
0 replies Oliver in response to-If this warm/hot water rinsing is such a good idea why don't Nikki and WMUser connect the machines to the hot water supply via a TMV valve? I *WANT* a TMV valve, but it’s going to be a *LOT* of aggro having it fitted. The washing machine is in a tight space and pipes need cutting back etc. If it were a 5-minute job, that TMV valve would have been fitted ages ago. I don’t know if Nikki intends to have one fitted, but it could make a difference as the water will be warm in all the rinses, instead of filling directly from the cold supply. With winter approaching, the mains water supply will become much colder, so having it warm to start will help a lot and maybe cut down on running costs? If anyone is reading these comments, I strongly recommend using your washing machine when you have enough time be in and observe how it rinses on different settings etc. I don’t mean stand there and watch it for 2 hours!! I’ve noticed for example that the last rinse when the softener gets added will rinse for about 3 to 4 minutes longer than the previous rinses, so this rinse is a good one to add 1/3 drum of hot water. Secondly, the-quickwash re-rinse I perform, without detergent, I now select 30C and add the hot water, so this 30C main wash’ (without detergent) on the-quickwash now finishes faster compared to selecting 40C. By the time I’ve poured in the extra hot water (which is about 80C) to mix with the cold water in the washing machine, it’s now warmer than 30C, I guess about 40C to 47C? I prefer to be in when the washing machine is on, having read reports on the white goods help site about glass doors breaking, washing machines being recalled and so on. Not only do modern machines rinse badly, they are also dangerous if left totally unattended!! I don’t take any chances. Oliver, if your washing machine was performing them same high-level rinses in WARM or HOT water, you would notice a lot more foam. I’m talking about thick white foam. I don’t know the science, but the warmer water definitely rinses out a hell of a lot more soap.
Oliver in response to-If this warm/hot water rinsing is such a good idea why don’t Nikki and WMUser connect the machines to the hot water supply via a TMV valve?
I *WANT* a TMV valve, but it’s going to be a *LOT* of aggro having it fitted. The washing machine is in a tight space and pipes need cutting back etc. If it were a 5-minute job, that TMV valve would have been fitted ages ago. I don’t know if Nikki intends to have one fitted, but it could make a difference as the water will be warm in all the rinses, instead of filling directly from the cold supply. With winter approaching, the mains water supply will become much colder, so having it warm to start will help a lot and maybe cut down on running costs?
If anyone is reading these comments, I strongly recommend using your washing machine when you have enough time be in and observe how it rinses on different settings etc. I don’t mean stand there and watch it for 2 hours!! I’ve noticed for example that the last rinse when the softener gets added will rinse for about 3 to 4 minutes longer than the previous rinses, so this rinse is a good one to add 1/3 drum of hot water. Secondly, the-quickwash re-rinse I perform, without detergent, I now select 30C and add the hot water, so this 30C main wash’ (without detergent) on the-quickwash now finishes faster compared to selecting 40C. By the time I’ve poured in the extra hot water (which is about 80C) to mix with the cold water in the washing machine, it’s now warmer than 30C, I guess about 40C to 47C?
I prefer to be in when the washing machine is on, having read reports on the white goods help site about glass doors breaking, washing machines being recalled and so on. Not only do modern machines rinse badly, they are also dangerous if left totally unattended!! I don’t take any chances.
Oliver, if your washing machine was performing them same high-level rinses in WARM or HOT water, you would notice a lot more foam. I’m talking about thick white foam. I don’t know the science, but the warmer water definitely rinses out a hell of a lot more soap.
0 replies I seem to notice that a lot of people are affected by laundry detergent, but then say things like-I’ve changed by brand of washing powder or-I have to use non-bio. If it could be rinsed away properly, it wouldn’t matter what detergent is used. Very few people would be prepared to re-rinse and pour hot water into the washing machine. I used to suffer the exact same symptoms described in that link and it says-After washing, rinse your clothes twice so that all traces of detergents are removed from the clothes. Which I’m assuming means: after your washing machine has finished, rinse the clothes all over again (twice)? Washerhelp, thank you for understanding. I read in your comment:-There are organisations dedicated to allergy sufferers which I will try to contact or at least research to get an idea how many people are likely to have a problem with rinsing efficiencies in modern washing machines. If enough people suffer then something should definitely be done and I'd be more than happy to be complicit in trying to achieve this. I don’t think many people are even AWARE that modern 21st century washing machines could be causing their skin allergies. Many times I’ve had red rashes appear on my skin mysteriously and never thought that my washing machine could be causing it until I found this page. After trying lots of different methods and faffing around, I decided to try the hot water trick and seeing is believing the warm water (estimated 40 to 45C) releases a LOT of soapsuds! If customers could be given the OPTION of rinsing in lots of water and warm rinses (e.g. a button labelled-intensive warm rinsing), that would be marvellous. The instructions could carry a warning that running costs will increase. It’s no different to having a temperature control on an oven or heater the more you increase the temperature, the more it costs to run.
I seem to notice that a lot of people are affected by laundry detergent, but then say things like-I’ve changed by brand of washing powder or-I have to use non-bio. If it could be rinsed away properly, it wouldn’t matter what detergent is used. Very few people would be prepared to re-rinse and pour hot water into the washing machine.
I used to suffer the exact same symptoms described in that link and it says-After washing, rinse your clothes twice so that all traces of detergents are removed from the clothes. Which I’m assuming means: after your washing machine has finished, rinse the clothes all over again (twice)?
Washerhelp, thank you for understanding. I read in your comment:-There are organisations dedicated to allergy sufferers which I will try to contact or at least research to get an idea how many people are likely to have a problem with rinsing efficiencies in modern washing machines. If enough people suffer then something should definitely be done and I’d be more than happy to be complicit in trying to achieve this.
I don’t think many people are even AWARE that modern 21st century washing machines could be causing their skin allergies. Many times I’ve had red rashes appear on my skin mysteriously and never thought that my washing machine could be causing it until I found this page. After trying lots of different methods and faffing around, I decided to try the hot water trick and seeing is believing the warm water (estimated 40 to 45C) releases a LOT of soapsuds!
If customers could be given the OPTION of rinsing in lots of water and warm rinses (e.g. a button labelled-intensive warm rinsing), that would be marvellous. The instructions could carry a warning that running costs will increase. It’s no different to having a temperature control on an oven or heater the more you increase the temperature, the more it costs to run.
0 replies Nikki: I don't think me asking for a reasonable level of removal of detergent from my towels is too much to ask. There’s that word,-reasonable again. It’s a tricky little bugger that word because it’s highly subjective. I haven’t said anything which conflicts with that statement Nikki. As far as I’m aware all recent discussion was sparked because a few people objected to my crazy idea that 2 extra rinses might be a-of interest to people following this topic (Washerhelp comment #411). For reasons unknown to me, my comment that a washing machine with an extra rinse option might be of interest seems to have been interpreted as proclaiming a complete cure for anyone with detergent allergies and in need of refuting. We do get a reasonable level of rinsing from lots of washing machines (in cold water too). Your-reasonable is different to most people’s reasonable because as WMUser confirmed in his last comment you appear to have an allergic reaction to detergent ;-) Washerhelp, rinsing is not a problem unless you or someone who comes into contact with your bedding or towels is allergic to laundry detergent, even small amounts of unrinsed detergent. What you require is above average rinsing ability, which of course is reasonable to you, but if most people are happy with the standard rinsing they would say their washing machine already rinses reasonably and they have no need to use more water to rinse in. I’m pretty confident that the vast majority of people would object to washing machines rinsing in hot or warm water because the extra costs involved in not only the extra components but the extra use of heated water would be seen as unnecessary to anyone but the minority of people with skin reactions. My washing machine rinses perfectly reasonably, as do millions of other people’s. The main reason I wrote this article was because in my 30 odd years experience of repairing washing machines and my 10 years of creating and running washerhelp.co.uk I never had any customer complain their washing machine didn’t rinse properly (in cold water) and I was pretty shocked at the Which? tests and reviews of washing machines where they rated most washing machines as poor at rinsing because I wasn’t aware of anyone who had a problem with their laundry. This article has subsequently turned into the second most commented on article, where contributors have eloquently shown that there are people to whom standard rinsing is in no way adequate and highlighted a very real issue. However, although I haven’t gone back and counted, there seems to be only a relatively very small number of people affected who have spoken out. Whilst fully sympathising with these real issues we need to remember that they don’t appear to represent the average consumer, and as far as we know they represent what can only be called a minority of people. Like it or not, products are always designed for the average consumer unless a manufacturer identifies a niche market they can profit from by designing a product for a minority group with enough of them willing to pay a premium price. Manufacturers will usually ignore minority interests and even if they empathise with their issues they cannot afford to alter their products which without doubt will raise their price and raise their running costs because a small minority of people have specific rinsing requirement. It sounds harsh but it’s reality. Having said that, allergic reactions do deserve to be an exception to this rule as long as it can be shown that a significant percentage of their customers have a real issue. It depends on the percentage of sufferers and the degrees of suffering. I would like to know how widespread this issue really is as contrary to how my logical thoughts may come across at times I have a lot of sympathy for people affected I just try to keep the bigger picture in mind. There are organisations dedicated to allergy sufferers which I will try to contact or at least research to get an idea how many people are likely to have a problem with rinsing efficiencies in modern washing machines. If enough people suffer then something should definitely be done and I’d be more than happy to be complicit in trying to achieve this. If it happens to be very rare that consumers have to resort to the kind of steps several of you guys have to take then I would have to say that it is unlikely that manufacturers would change their washing machines to use lots more water, or start rinsing in hot water. I just had a quick look on Google to try and find some appropriate places to start researching this problem more and found this link Detergent Allergy Symptoms and Treatment. If you still maintain you don’t have any skin allergy or allergic reaction to washing machine detergent can you tell us what you do have, as it sounds quite unique ;-)
Nikki:
I don’t think me asking for a reasonable level of removal of detergent from my towels is too much to ask.
There’s that word,-reasonable again. It’s a tricky little bugger that word because it’s highly subjective.
I haven’t said anything which conflicts with that statement Nikki. As far as I’m aware all recent discussion was sparked because a few people objected to my crazy idea that 2 extra rinses might be a-of interest to people following this topic (Washerhelp comment #411).
For reasons unknown to me, my comment that a washing machine with an extra rinse option might be of interest seems to have been interpreted as proclaiming a complete cure for anyone with detergent allergies and in need of refuting.
We do get a reasonable level of rinsing from lots of washing machines (in cold water too). Your-reasonable is different to most people’s reasonable because as WMUser confirmed in his last comment you appear to have an allergic reaction to detergent ;-)
Washerhelp, rinsing is not a problem unless you or someone who comes into contact with your bedding or towels is allergic to laundry detergent, even small amounts of unrinsed detergent.
What you require is above average rinsing ability, which of course is reasonable to you, but if most people are happy with the standard rinsing they would say their washing machine already rinses reasonably and they have no need to use more water to rinse in.
I’m pretty confident that the vast majority of people would object to washing machines rinsing in hot or warm water because the extra costs involved in not only the extra components but the extra use of heated water would be seen as unnecessary to anyone but the minority of people with skin reactions.
My washing machine rinses perfectly reasonably, as do millions of other people’s. The main reason I wrote this article was because in my 30 odd years experience of repairing washing machines and my 10 years of creating and running washerhelp.co.uk I never had any customer complain their washing machine didn’t rinse properly (in cold water) and I was pretty shocked at the Which? tests and reviews of washing machines where they rated most washing machines as poor at rinsing because I wasn’t aware of anyone who had a problem with their laundry.
This article has subsequently turned into the second most commented on article, where contributors have eloquently shown that there are people to whom standard rinsing is in no way adequate and highlighted a very real issue. However, although I haven’t gone back and counted, there seems to be only a relatively very small number of people affected who have spoken out.
Whilst fully sympathising with these real issues we need to remember that they don’t appear to represent the average consumer, and as far as we know they represent what can only be called a minority of people. Like it or not, products are always designed for the average consumer unless a manufacturer identifies a niche market they can profit from by designing a product for a minority group with enough of them willing to pay a premium price.
Manufacturers will usually ignore minority interests and even if they empathise with their issues they cannot afford to alter their products which without doubt will raise their price and raise their running costs because a small minority of people have specific rinsing requirement. It sounds harsh but it’s reality.
Having said that, allergic reactions do deserve to be an exception to this rule as long as it can be shown that a significant percentage of their customers have a real issue. It depends on the percentage of sufferers and the degrees of suffering. I would like to know how widespread this issue really is as contrary to how my logical thoughts may come across at times I have a lot of sympathy for people affected I just try to keep the bigger picture in mind.
There are organisations dedicated to allergy sufferers which I will try to contact or at least research to get an idea how many people are likely to have a problem with rinsing efficiencies in modern washing machines. If enough people suffer then something should definitely be done and I’d be more than happy to be complicit in trying to achieve this. If it happens to be very rare that consumers have to resort to the kind of steps several of you guys have to take then I would have to say that it is unlikely that manufacturers would change their washing machines to use lots more water, or start rinsing in hot water.
I just had a quick look on Google to try and find some appropriate places to start researching this problem more and found this link Detergent Allergy Symptoms and Treatment. If you still maintain you don’t have any skin allergy or allergic reaction to washing machine detergent can you tell us what you do have, as it sounds quite unique ;-)
0 replies I agree with you Nikki. I also like my clothes rinsed properly and I don't see why my skin should suffer with these chemicals in my towels, clothes, bedding etc rubbing against my skin, be it enzymes or any other chemicals which cause my skin to suffer. I manage to get my towels rinsed well enough with hot water added to the washing machine during the re-rinse "quickwash" programme, but it does require a lot of hot water - that's just using 1/3 up the door twice!! Who cares about the slight extra cost of the water and heating it? Since re-rinsing with lots of warm water, my skin is now cured, I no longer suffer eczema or skin rashes. Washerhelp, rinsing is not a problem unless you - or someone who comes into contact with your bedding or towels - is allergic to laundry detergent, even small amounts of unrinsed detergent. That explains why the JLWD1609 rinses acceptably in your home. I think the public are gullible and refuse to believe that their modern washing machine can cause unexplained skin allergies and asthma. It's so sad and extremely annoying that I have to rewash everything without detergent and then add jug after jug of hot water, but at least it works and doesn't take up much valuable time. I don't care how much extra it costs in water bills (I have a water meter) and energy needed to heat this hot water; it's a small price to pay compared to skin reactions! I would be happy if the "extra rinse" option used that same large volume of water and filled the washing machine with HOT water for cottons, especially towels. If these daft EU/EEC regulations insist that washing machine manufacturers cannot use lots of water (and hot water rinsing) by default, then the "extra rinse" option would not be the "default" and people - like me - would be happy to have gallons of extra water and hot water rinsing on cotton cycles. That could be a "loophole" to work around this ECC and "environmentally friendly" nonsense?
I agree with you Nikki. I also like my clothes rinsed properly and I don’t see why my skin should suffer with these chemicals in my towels, clothes, bedding etc rubbing against my skin, be it enzymes or any other chemicals which cause my skin to suffer. I manage to get my towels rinsed well enough with hot water added to the washing machine during the re-rinse “quickwash” programme, but it does require a lot of hot water – that’s just using 1/3 up the door twice!! Who cares about the slight extra cost of the water and heating it? Since re-rinsing with lots of warm water, my skin is now cured, I no longer suffer eczema or skin rashes.
Washerhelp, rinsing is not a problem unless you – or someone who comes into contact with your bedding or towels – is allergic to laundry detergent, even small amounts of unrinsed detergent. That explains why the JLWD1609 rinses acceptably in your home.
I think the public are gullible and refuse to believe that their modern washing machine can cause unexplained skin allergies and asthma. It’s so sad and extremely annoying that I have to rewash everything without detergent and then add jug after jug of hot water, but at least it works and doesn’t take up much valuable time. I don’t care how much extra it costs in water bills (I have a water meter) and energy needed to heat this hot water; it’s a small price to pay compared to skin reactions! I would be happy if the “extra rinse” option used that same large volume of water and filled the washing machine with HOT water for cottons, especially towels. If these daft EU/EEC regulations insist that washing machine manufacturers cannot use lots of water (and hot water rinsing) by default, then the “extra rinse” option would not be the “default” and people – like me – would be happy to have gallons of extra water and hot water rinsing on cotton cycles. That could be a “loophole” to work around this ECC and “environmentally friendly” nonsense?
0 replies I really want that LG washing machine ... when my Miele eventually gives up the ghost, that is what I shall buy, even though it is extremely expensive! Washerhelp: I don't think me asking for a reasonable level of removal of detergent from my towels is too much to ask ... I am not a fussy woman at all ... but I dislike rubbing my body with enzymes, which will digest my skin and leave me sore!! And no, I do NOT have skin allergies before you start off on that one again!! All I ask for is a decent amount of water in my washing machine, and a rinse that is not stone cold. I can have neither, thanks to this ridiculous EEC nonsense. WMUser: if I have a lot of towels, and a decent amount of hot water in the tank, I will fill up the bath and rinse the towels in the bath, and then just spin them out in the machine. Sometimes though this uses up a whole tank of hot water, and still the towels are soapy, but I am finding that the new biolgical Ecover is very good for rinsing - rinses out much better than anything else I have tried. I usually find now that just putting the towels through twice ... once with soap, and then the following night without soap ... gets most of the soap out. I am not asking for perfection here, just a reasonable rinsing performance such that my towels are not stiff like boards and my skin is not itching.
I really want that LG washing machine … when my Miele eventually gives up the ghost, that is what I shall buy, even though it is extremely expensive!
Washerhelp: I don’t think me asking for a reasonable level of removal of detergent from my towels is too much to ask … I am not a fussy woman at all … but I dislike rubbing my body with enzymes, which will digest my skin and leave me sore!! And no, I do NOT have skin allergies before you start off on that one again!! All I ask for is a decent amount of water in my washing machine, and a rinse that is not stone cold. I can have neither, thanks to this ridiculous EEC nonsense.
WMUser: if I have a lot of towels, and a decent amount of hot water in the tank, I will fill up the bath and rinse the towels in the bath, and then just spin them out in the machine. Sometimes though this uses up a whole tank of hot water, and still the towels are soapy, but I am finding that the new biolgical Ecover is very good for rinsing – rinses out much better than anything else I have tried. I usually find now that just putting the towels through twice … once with soap, and then the following night without soap … gets most of the soap out. I am not asking for perfection here, just a reasonable rinsing performance such that my towels are not stiff like boards and my skin is not itching.
0 replies I jolly well can ... and I will say it again !! It doesn't matter how many times you rinse thick cotton towels in cold water, you willl not remove the soap residue left behind. You need hot water to do that !! WM User : your thanks are accepted mate, glad I could be of help. It is a real eye opener isn't it, when you plunge your seemingly well-rinsed towels into a sinkful of hot water, and the water is thick with white detergent!! When those towels are dry, you are then going to rub that dried detergent onto your skin ... no wonder so many people suffer from skin allergies, it is hardly surprising!
I jolly well can … and I will say it again !! It doesn’t matter how many times you rinse thick cotton towels in cold water, you willl not remove the soap residue left behind. You need hot water to do that !!
WM User : your thanks are accepted mate, glad I could be of help. It is a real eye opener isn’t it, when you plunge your seemingly well-rinsed towels into a sinkful of hot water, and the water is thick with white detergent!! When those towels are dry, you are then going to rub that dried detergent onto your skin … no wonder so many people suffer from skin allergies, it is hardly surprising!
0 replies 2 extra rinses in very little water will not magically solve the problem of rinsing out the soapsuds properly. People may think that the extra rinse will rinse "properly" compared to not using extra rinse, but sadly it does not work that way. I'm sure water meters will become compulsory one day and it's a trade-off between how much someone is willing to pay to use extra water versus sensitivity to detergents left behind in clothing, bedding, towels etc. Those who are sensitive or have a family member who's sensitive to detergents will have to pay more for the extra water required, regardless of it being cold or hot. Nikki, I have you to thank for the hot water rinsing. :) I never knew that warm or hot water would make such a difference, you can really see the soapsuds on the first warm rinse after 3 previous cold rinses in very little water! I'm still only using a maximum of 1/3 up the door when adding jugfuls of hot water to 2 of the re-rinses, I don't want to go higher and wear-out the bearings prematurely. It only takes a moment to add jugs of hot water to the washing machine and it does rinse PROPERLY, without wasting much valuable time. Until 21st century science can come up with a way of cleaning fabrics without water, detergent, rinses and the allergy problems, the only way to rinse properly is to use a large volume of water, combined with fast interim spins without sudslocking. Warm or hot water rinses for cotton and linen, lukewarm rinsing for easy care and cold rinsing for very delicate items. Anything less won't work and an "extra rinse" on a modern washing machine will NOT rinse things much better - only about 8% better.
2 extra rinses in very little water will not magically solve the problem of rinsing out the soapsuds properly. People may think that the extra rinse will rinse “properly” compared to not using extra rinse, but sadly it does not work that way.
I’m sure water meters will become compulsory one day and it’s a trade-off between how much someone is willing to pay to use extra water versus sensitivity to detergents left behind in clothing, bedding, towels etc. Those who are sensitive or have a family member who’s sensitive to detergents will have to pay more for the extra water required, regardless of it being cold or hot.
Nikki, I have you to thank for the hot water rinsing. :) I never knew that warm or hot water would make such a difference, you can really see the soapsuds on the first warm rinse after 3 previous cold rinses in very little water! I’m still only using a maximum of 1/3 up the door when adding jugfuls of hot water to 2 of the re-rinses, I don’t want to go higher and wear-out the bearings prematurely. It only takes a moment to add jugs of hot water to the washing machine and it does rinse PROPERLY, without wasting much valuable time.
Until 21st century science can come up with a way of cleaning fabrics without water, detergent, rinses and the allergy problems, the only way to rinse properly is to use a large volume of water, combined with fast interim spins without sudslocking. Warm or hot water rinses for cotton and linen, lukewarm rinsing for easy care and cold rinsing for very delicate items. Anything less won’t work and an “extra rinse” on a modern washing machine will NOT rinse things much better – only about 8% better.
0 replies Nikki: Your comment refers to rinsing in hot water, but my comment was about extra standard rinses in cold. You can't say extra cold rinses won't make any difference because hot rinses are better, it makes no sense. It's like saying a motorbike isn't a better form of transport than bicycle because a car is even better. Just because something might be more efficient it doesn't mean the thing it's better than can't perform better than it previously did.
Nikki: Your comment refers to rinsing in hot water, but my comment was about extra standard rinses in cold. You can’t say extra cold rinses won’t make any difference because hot rinses are better, it makes no sense. It’s like saying a motorbike isn’t a better form of transport than bicycle because a car is even better. Just because something might be more efficient it doesn’t mean the thing it’s better than can’t perform better than it previously did.
0 replies At the risk of starting a semantics argument I disagree that an option giving 2 extra rinses will not rinse-more thoroughly. It might still fall short of certain required standards but 2 extra rinses will definitely rinse more thoroughly than using the same washing machine without the extra rinses employed. :-) If washing machines rinsed properly in the first place, they would not need an extra rinse setting. I know what you are saying but not everyone needs extra rinsing. Of course the default rinses need to be to a reasonable standard but it does make sense to have a standard rinse, which the majority of people without any sensitivity to detergents are likely to be content with, and have the ability to use extra rinses if required. In the old days when no one paid for the actual amount of water they used, and no one was concerned about the environmental issues washing machines used as much water as they wanted. But things are different now so it makes good sense to have 2 levels of rinsing efficiency as long as the base level does a job most people are content with, which is the debatable part of course.
At the risk of starting a semantics argument I disagree that an option giving 2 extra rinses will not rinse-more thoroughly. It might still fall short of certain required standards but 2 extra rinses will definitely rinse more thoroughly than using the same washing machine without the extra rinses employed. :-)
If washing machines rinsed properly in the first place, they would not need an extra rinse setting.
I know what you are saying but not everyone needs extra rinsing. Of course the default rinses need to be to a reasonable standard but it does make sense to have a standard rinse, which the majority of people without any sensitivity to detergents are likely to be content with, and have the ability to use extra rinses if required.
In the old days when no one paid for the actual amount of water they used, and no one was concerned about the environmental issues washing machines used as much water as they wanted. But things are different now so it makes good sense to have 2 levels of rinsing efficiency as long as the base level does a job most people are content with, which is the debatable part of course.
0 replies I agree with Oliver's comment #412 based on my experience of the Zanussi-Electrolux. I'm pretty sure the John Lewis is made by Electrolux and will suffer the same problem, as I expect they are all exactly the same inside - just different looks on the outside. If washing machines rinsed properly in the first place, they would not need an "extra rinse" setting. If you would like your washing rinsed properly, there are plenty of tips above - which are thoroughly tried and tested. The "extra rinse" alone does NOT rinse more thoroughly. You need to use warm water 1/3 up the door on at least 2 of the re-rinses, so you get the benefit of fast interim spins and more rinses than just the 2 extra - with barely any water - when the "extra rinse" option is enabled. Washerhelp, please don't think that the "extra rinse" makes any noticeable difference - trust me, it does NOT. Hope that helps.
I agree with Oliver’s comment #412 based on my experience of the Zanussi-Electrolux. I’m pretty sure the John Lewis is made by Electrolux and will suffer the same problem, as I expect they are all exactly the same inside – just different looks on the outside.
If washing machines rinsed properly in the first place, they would not need an “extra rinse” setting.
If you would like your washing rinsed properly, there are plenty of tips above – which are thoroughly tried and tested. The “extra rinse” alone does NOT rinse more thoroughly. You need to use warm water 1/3 up the door on at least 2 of the re-rinses, so you get the benefit of fast interim spins and more rinses than just the 2 extra – with barely any water – when the “extra rinse” option is enabled.
Washerhelp, please don’t think that the “extra rinse” makes any noticeable difference – trust me, it does NOT.
Hope that helps.
0 replies I'm currently working on a new washing machine review and reading the instruction book of this John Lewis (JLWD1609) washer dryer the following words related to rinsing struck me as being of interest to people following this topic - Extra Rinse Option: This option adds 2 rinses to cotton wash and 1 extra rinse for synthetics & delicates. This option is recommended for people who are allergic to detergents, and areas where the water is soft"
I’m currently working on a new washing machine review and reading the instruction book of this John Lewis (JLWD1609) washer dryer the following words related to rinsing struck me as being of interest to people following this topic –
Extra Rinse Option: This option adds 2 rinses to cotton wash and 1 extra rinse for synthetics & delicates. This option is recommended for people who are allergic to detergents, and areas where the water is soft”
0 replies Thank you the info on bearings Washerhelp. I won't be taking any chances and I feel it's safer to use just 1/3 warm water then another rinse with 1/3 warm water. It seems to be rinsing fine and the porthole door glass feels slightly warm at the bottom. Remember, I'm adding very hot water, as it's mixing with cold water already in the bottom of the drum. I understand Nikki Jenkins being worried about the bearings, but I have found this method is working fine and the bearings won't be under water. I don't have to rinse my clothes in a sink or bath with hot water. The only catch is the water being poured into the washing machine when re-rinsing must be very hot i.e. around 80C. If it's any cooler, it won't have much effect as it has to mix with the cold water already there. Since cotton items and towels are so much harder to rinse, warm water rinsing is ideal and it should not damage cotton or linen and polyester should be ok too. I've not had anything damaged by rinsing in warm water, but I've never tried this on something fragile like silk!!
Thank you the info on bearings Washerhelp. I won’t be taking any chances and I feel it’s safer to use just 1/3 warm water then another rinse with 1/3 warm water. It seems to be rinsing fine and the porthole door glass feels slightly warm at the bottom. Remember, I’m adding very hot water, as it’s mixing with cold water already in the bottom of the drum.
I understand Nikki Jenkins being worried about the bearings, but I have found this method is working fine and the bearings won’t be under water. I don’t have to rinse my clothes in a sink or bath with hot water. The only catch is the water being poured into the washing machine when re-rinsing must be very hot i.e. around 80C. If it’s any cooler, it won’t have much effect as it has to mix with the cold water already there. Since cotton items and towels are so much harder to rinse, warm water rinsing is ideal and it should not damage cotton or linen and polyester should be ok too. I’ve not had anything damaged by rinsing in warm water, but I’ve never tried this on something fragile like silk!!
0 replies Regarding bearings and higher water levels, in theory the level of water shouldn't matter as the drum bearings are protected from water by the drum bearing seal. Water is thrown around this seal during the wash and especially on spin and it should be totally water tight. Having said that if a seal is wearing it's possible higher water levels could cause more water to ingress past but only if the seal is already allowing water past through to the bearings. Oliver: Are you in a soft water area, or do you use any water softening agents? The amount of excessive foam you report is very unusual indeed. Are other people in your area similarly affected?
Regarding bearings and higher water levels, in theory the level of water shouldn’t matter as the drum bearings are protected from water by the drum bearing seal. Water is thrown around this seal during the wash and especially on spin and it should be totally water tight. Having said that if a seal is wearing it’s possible higher water levels could cause more water to ingress past but only if the seal is already allowing water past through to the bearings.
Oliver: Are you in a soft water area, or do you use any water softening agents? The amount of excessive foam you report is very unusual indeed. Are other people in your area similarly affected?
0 replies That's what I like to see - respect :-) Oliver, I know we've gone over this before but I've never come across any washing machine suds locking unless there is a partial blockage somewhere or it's being asked to pump water over too long a distance or up too high. Especially a Miele. Do your machines pump out into the connector on the u-bend under the sink or do you have them connected to a drain hose extension or into a stand pipe that's higher than recommended? I just don't understand your on going problem with foam and suds locking on more than one machine.
That’s what I like to see – respect :-)
Oliver, I know we’ve gone over this before but I’ve never come across any washing machine suds locking unless there is a partial blockage somewhere or it’s being asked to pump water over too long a distance or up too high. Especially a Miele. Do your machines pump out into the connector on the u-bend under the sink or do you have them connected to a drain hose extension or into a stand pipe that’s higher than recommended?
I just don’t understand your on going problem with foam and suds locking on more than one machine.
0 replies My friend told me about the magnetic ball today. It looks like it works. She had a mechanic in not long ago and he told her that there is no limescale in her washing machine at all. She does not use anything else. The only problem with her washing machine was that she did not clean the filter for the whole 10 years :) Regarding hot water for rinsing, it is a fact that warm water rinses better than cold. The washing instructions on some of my baby clothes recommend rinsing in warm water. I remember that old washing machines used to be connected to both hot and cold water. I think they used to use warm water for rinsing too. The new washing machines are connected only to the cold water. When it comes to hard water or soft water, the logic tells me that if you need to use more washing powder with hard water then hard water does not wash as effectivelly as soft water. The same may be true for rinsing.
My friend told me about the magnetic ball today. It looks like it works. She had a mechanic in not long ago and he told her that there is no limescale in her washing machine at all. She does not use anything else. The only problem with her washing machine was that she did not clean the filter for the whole 10 years :)
Regarding hot water for rinsing, it is a fact that warm water rinses better than cold. The washing instructions on some of my baby clothes recommend rinsing in warm water. I remember that old washing machines used to be connected to both hot and cold water. I think they used to use warm water for rinsing too. The new washing machines are connected only to the cold water.
When it comes to hard water or soft water, the logic tells me that if you need to use more washing powder with hard water then hard water does not wash as effectivelly as soft water. The same may be true for rinsing.
0 replies hi all. I have now fixed my washing problem, the cause being washing powder which has changed to a stronger mix because it now has to wash at low temps but no longer rinses out as to the lack of water used in a new machine about 45lt in a normal wash and you now have to add water softener when you did not have to before. So after about a year of doing tests , i have found that washing powder and liquids no longer do what they did before thats (wash and rinse out without manual intervention by adding extra water ;eg rewash) With my new washing machine i have found that you must now add extra water or do a rewash , which is the case now. The new type of washing machines are no good now as people are finding out now as the water used is not right amount to do the job ; (wash and rinse the dirt ,lime or limescale which ever you want to call it from your clothes. I now believe that new washing machines and washing powder / liquid is no longer fit to do the job as before . As for washer help comment in 364 please read what you wrote then have a look at my first comment 335 on this site , i did give the levels of washing powder i was using etc ,and also i wrote that new washing machines would not wash and rinse only using 45lt of water , i did think you would know from this that i had a new washing machine!!! .so did not read my comment then? that is not aggression just a fact. When you write in a comment that you have done everything i did think that people would know what i was doing , thats not over loading, correct amount of washing powder and using washing machine in a normal way ,stupid me? and i was having a problem after my powder had been changed to concentrated . There are many products manufactured which do not work and they have cost a great deal of money and marketed as a good product ,so yes a product can be for sale and it does not do the job it was made to do. By the way makers will swear until they are blue in the face that the product they make is good ,and it is only on sites like this that you find out about products which are no good . BECAUSE WE TEST THEM IN NORMAL USE !. ADY.
hi all.
I have now fixed my washing problem, the cause being washing powder which has changed to a stronger mix because it now has to wash at low temps but no longer rinses out as to the lack of water used in a new machine about 45lt in a normal wash and you now have to add water softener when you did not have to before.
So after about a year of doing tests , i have found that washing powder and liquids no longer do what they did before thats (wash and rinse out without manual intervention by adding extra water ;eg rewash) With my new washing machine i have found that you must now add extra water or do a rewash , which is the case now.
The new type of washing machines are no good now as people are finding out now as the water used is not right amount to do the job ; (wash and rinse the dirt ,lime or limescale which ever you want to call it from your clothes.
I now believe that new washing machines and washing powder / liquid is no longer fit to do the job as before .
As for washer help comment in 364 please read what you wrote then have a look at my first comment 335 on this site , i did give the levels of washing powder i was using etc ,and also i wrote that new washing machines would not wash and rinse only using 45lt of water , i did think you would know from this that i had a new washing machine!!! .so did not read my comment then? that is not aggression just a fact.
When you write in a comment that you have done everything i did think that people would know what i was doing , thats not over loading, correct amount of washing powder and using washing machine in a normal way ,stupid me? and i was having a problem after my powder had been changed to concentrated .
There are many products manufactured which do not work and they have cost a great deal of money and marketed as a good product ,so yes a product can be for sale and it does not do the job it was made to do.
By the way makers will swear until they are blue in the face that the product they make is good ,and it is only on sites like this that you find out about products which are no good .
BECAUSE WE TEST THEM IN NORMAL USE !.
ADY.
0 replies Regarding your last paragraph WMUser, I agree, and I've said the same to Which? and await their reply. I cannot understand how any washing machine that is not very good at rinsing could possibly be a Best Buy. Maybe they don't think rinsing is a big issue, but if so why single it out as a category to be marked? Maybe they think if a washing machine is not very good at rinsing there aren't any real consequences, but many comments on this article show that there are very real consequences, at least for some.
Regarding your last paragraph WMUser, I agree, and I’ve said the same to Which? and await their reply. I cannot understand how any washing machine that is not very good at rinsing could possibly be a Best Buy. Maybe they don’t think rinsing is a big issue, but if so why single it out as a category to be marked?
Maybe they think if a washing machine is not very good at rinsing there aren’t any real consequences, but many comments on this article show that there are very real consequences, at least for some.
0 replies I wash everything I wear or sleep on in hot water, with a warm water rinse. Then, after the wash cycle is over, I run the machine again with the same load, but without putting in detergent. I have a small sign that I made to remind me whether a particular load is due for a rinse cycle, or is ready to put into the dryer. I have quite severe problems with any new clothing or sheets. If something has no apparent chemical odor, it is washed three times in a row. If it has an apparent chemical odor (especially as it is damp after a wash cycle), then it gets washed until the chemical odor is gone. I have sometimes washed items three dozen times without being able to remove the chemical odor. The biggest problems appear to be with any clothing item that is marked "wash in cold water." From my research, it appears that anything destined for a cold water wash has been treated with an anti-microbial surface finish. The anti-microbial finish reacts with body debris (sweat, skin particles) and prevents them from causing odors. However, some lucky people have this coating react with their skin, causing rashes and irritation. I have tried using milk, bleach, ammonia, washing soda, and vinegar (not at the same time) to remove this finish from clothes. Nothing seems to work. Well, OK, the bleach made some t-shirts look like they been tie-dyed. They still itch when I wear them, though. Modern life was supposed to lift us up above the savages groveling in the dirt and muck. Our political correctness (cold water, less water, shorter machine cycles to save energy) have just thrown us back into the dirt and muck.
I wash everything I wear or sleep on in hot water, with a warm water rinse. Then, after the wash cycle is over, I run the machine again with the same load, but without putting in detergent. I have a small sign that I made to remind me whether a particular load is due for a rinse cycle, or is ready to put into the dryer.
I have quite severe problems with any new clothing or sheets. If something has no apparent chemical odor, it is washed three times in a row. If it has an apparent chemical odor (especially as it is damp after a wash cycle), then it gets washed until the chemical odor is gone. I have sometimes washed items three dozen times without being able to remove the chemical odor.
The biggest problems appear to be with any clothing item that is marked “wash in cold water.” From my research, it appears that anything destined for a cold water wash has been treated with an anti-microbial surface finish. The anti-microbial finish reacts with body debris (sweat, skin particles) and prevents them from causing odors. However, some lucky people have this coating react with their skin, causing rashes and irritation.
I have tried using milk, bleach, ammonia, washing soda, and vinegar (not at the same time) to remove this finish from clothes. Nothing seems to work. Well, OK, the bleach made some t-shirts look like they been tie-dyed. They still itch when I wear them, though.
Modern life was supposed to lift us up above the savages groveling in the dirt and muck. Our political correctness (cold water, less water, shorter machine cycles to save energy) have just thrown us back into the dirt and muck.
0 replies WMUser Quote: @Washerhelp I strongly recommend you contact Which? and ask them what's going on. Do Which? know about this blog topic (that's still going strong after nearly 3 years)? I’ve since realised that a lot of Which? reviews still do criticise washing machines for rinse abilities and mention in the cons summary that they aren’t very good at rinsing or even poor. Unfortunately their 5 star rating system doesn’t reflect their observations properly at times and I can see many washing machines rated with rinsing abilities ranging from, average, decent, to great, and excellent, but they all have the same 4 stars. That’s not to say they are all wrongly marked, but quite a few are. I’ve emailed a contact I have there pointing out that something has gone wrong with the rinsing ratings. Hopefully someone will review it and sort it out.
WMUser Quote:
@Washerhelp I strongly recommend you contact Which? and ask them what’s going on. Do Which? know about this blog topic (that’s still going strong after nearly 3 years)?
I’ve since realised that a lot of Which? reviews still do criticise washing machines for rinse abilities and mention in the cons summary that they aren’t very good at rinsing or even poor. Unfortunately their 5 star rating system doesn’t reflect their observations properly at times and I can see many washing machines rated with rinsing abilities ranging from, average, decent, to great, and excellent, but they all have the same 4 stars. That’s not to say they are all wrongly marked, but quite a few are.
I’ve emailed a contact I have there pointing out that something has gone wrong with the rinsing ratings. Hopefully someone will review it and sort it out.
0 replies wm user, After the tip about ecover from simon i think that my problem is fixed ????? i hope, and when i say that i done every thing that is what i have done , like other people with washing problems ( try this and that) but when the problem starts and you dont know why because the washing you done the day before is ok and today its not ,then you find out the washing powder has changed ,so then you try more washing products and find that they are no good . Then to add to the problem you find out that new eco washing machines no longer rinse ;after many tests . Then add that, fabric conditioner has changed as well (all of them!) you dont know whats going on, but then you look on sites like this and hey your not the only one . IT IS THE PRODUCT WHICH IS THE PROBLEM as i did not change the levels of washing powder/fabric conditioner i was using to mess up my washing and as for my washing machine ,a CANDY CWB 110 TOTAL WASTE OF SPACE with its wet and bash wash cycles , having watched it for hours finding out that it only has one wash cycle what works if you can call it that ? THEN YOU GOT THE WATER ! in my area which is hard that does not help and also the chance that CHLORAMINE is being put in the water ,i am going to check to see if it is used in my area . I Believe it is lime stuck to my clothes not detergent as i have rewashed with no washing powder or fabric conditioner and extra rinses and at higher temps and the lime was still on my clothes , so that is because the washing powder/ liquid has not done its job and by the way it is not the suds what has caused my problem. ADY. p.s Washing powder/ liquid makers add a suds agent because we like to see suds/foam here in the uk and i dont think it is the detergent you are rinsing out , just suds agent!. I DO HOPE THE ABOVE IS A HELP.
wm user,
After the tip about ecover from simon i think
that my problem is fixed ????? i hope, and when i say that
i done every thing that is what i have done , like other
people with washing problems ( try this and that)
but when the problem starts and you dont know why
because the washing you done the day before is ok
and today its not ,then you find out the washing
powder has changed ,so then you try more washing
products and find that they are no good .
Then to add to the problem you find out that new
eco washing machines no longer rinse ;after many
tests .
Then add that, fabric conditioner has changed as well
(all of them!) you dont know whats going on, but
then you look on sites like this and hey your not the
only one .
IT IS THE PRODUCT WHICH IS THE PROBLEM as i did not
change the levels of washing powder/fabric conditioner
i was using to mess up my washing and as for my washing
machine ,a CANDY CWB 110 TOTAL WASTE OF SPACE
with its wet and bash wash cycles , having watched
it for hours finding out that it only has one wash cycle
what works if you can call it that ?
THEN YOU GOT THE WATER ! in my area which is
hard that does not help and also the chance that
CHLORAMINE is being put in the water ,i am going to
check to see if it is used in my area .
I Believe it is lime stuck to my clothes not detergent
as i have rewashed with no washing powder or
fabric conditioner and extra rinses and at higher temps
and the lime was still on my clothes , so that is because
the washing powder/ liquid has not done its job and
by the way it is not the suds what has caused my problem.
ADY.
p.s Washing powder/ liquid makers add a suds agent because
we like to see suds/foam here in the uk and i dont think
it is the detergent you are rinsing out , just suds agent!.
I DO HOPE THE ABOVE IS A HELP.
0 replies Reading comments #356 to #358 inclusive, I've not heard about the chloramine issue, however if you wish to eliminate laundry detergent being an issue, it's important to make sure that PLENTY of warm or hot water is added when re-rinsing. The water level should be high enough (up to 1/2 way up the door) and the porthole door glass should feel slightly warm. You'll be amazed at how much detergent is released from clothes you thought were rinsed properly!! I've got my hot water set at 70C, so this higher temperature takes into account that the water cools down as you pour it into the soap drawer and it trickles down into the drum and hits the cold water already there. Eventually, as the volume of warm water increases, the final temperature for rinsing is about 40 - 45C, safe for cottons. For limescale issues, this is why I always use one spoonful of soda crystals as this guarantees that the hard water doesn't cause any problems, however I see you use Sainsbury's water softener. Yes I know using the correct dosage of detergent is supposed to combat limescale, but sometimes you have to use less, i.e. when washing towels or smaller loads, otherwise you get too much foaming. If foaming wasn't an issue, I'm sure people would be using the right amount of detergent every time. For some reason, modern washing machines don't seem to be much good at flushing out foam like they used to?? If after several months of proper rinsing you're still having skin problems, maybe it could be the chloramine, but it could be fabric conditioner, even if you're using Surcare, you may wish to eliminate that. One tip for everyone reading: you won't get very good results if you wash below 40C, regardless of what the detergent manufacturers say! The only time I believe it's necessary to wash at 30C is for very delicate fabrics like silk or net curtains, otherwise it's 40C or higher for best results.
Reading comments #356 to #358 inclusive, I’ve not heard about the chloramine issue, however if you wish to eliminate laundry detergent being an issue, it’s important to make sure that PLENTY of warm or hot water is added when re-rinsing. The water level should be high enough (up to 1/2 way up the door) and the porthole door glass should feel slightly warm. You’ll be amazed at how much detergent is released from clothes you thought were rinsed properly!! I’ve got my hot water set at 70C, so this higher temperature takes into account that the water cools down as you pour it into the soap drawer and it trickles down into the drum and hits the cold water already there. Eventually, as the volume of warm water increases, the final temperature for rinsing is about 40 – 45C, safe for cottons.
For limescale issues, this is why I always use one spoonful of soda crystals as this guarantees that the hard water doesn’t cause any problems, however I see you use Sainsbury’s water softener. Yes I know using the correct dosage of detergent is supposed to combat limescale, but sometimes you have to use less, i.e. when washing towels or smaller loads, otherwise you get too much foaming. If foaming wasn’t an issue, I’m sure people would be using the right amount of detergent every time. For some reason, modern washing machines don’t seem to be much good at flushing out foam like they used to??
If after several months of proper rinsing you’re still having skin problems, maybe it could be the chloramine, but it could be fabric conditioner, even if you’re using Surcare, you may wish to eliminate that.
One tip for everyone reading: you won’t get very good results if you wash below 40C, regardless of what the detergent manufacturers say! The only time I believe it’s necessary to wash at 30C is for very delicate fabrics like silk or net curtains, otherwise it’s 40C or higher for best results.
0 replies hi all, Let me just say i have done every thing to try and sort out my washing problem and i mean every thing so i do hope that is clear to every one . This is a two product fault 1st you have a washing machine which only uses about 45lt in a wash if you are lucky! . But what my problem is caused by the new type of washing powder and liquids when it is mixed with hard water when doing washing ,the makers have changed it to work at lower temps but has caused a problem in that the lime now bonds to the clothes but also with some thing from the washing powder or liquid which is the 2nd problem and this will not rinse out because it has bonded to the clothes ,so is that now clear?. So the new washing machines are not as good as before , but you can add more water , by pipe or jug etc a problem in itself ! (got the T SHIRT now!). So this itch and pins problem (read my other comments) use ECOVER LIQUID ONE CAP FULL , SAINSBURY WATER SOFTENER ONE TABLESPOON , THIS SHOULD BREAK THE BOND ON A 30 TEMP WASH ONLY ,BUT NOT ON A WET AND BASH WASH AS NEW WASHING MACHINES NOW DO ,ONE THIRD UP THE DOOR WITH WATER , THEN EXTRA RINSE AND SURCARE CONDITIONER 25ML- 35ML PER LOAD 2-3 KGS HAVE FUN AND GOOD LUCK?. ADY.
hi all,
Let me just say i have done every thing to try and sort
out my washing problem and i mean every thing so i do hope that is clear to every one .
This is a two product fault 1st you have a washing machine
which only uses about 45lt in a wash if you are lucky! .
But what my problem is caused by the new type of washing
powder and liquids when it is mixed with hard water when
doing washing ,the makers have changed it to work at lower
temps but has caused a problem in that the lime now bonds
to the clothes but also with some thing from the washing
powder or liquid which is the 2nd problem and this will
not rinse out because it has bonded to the clothes ,so is
that now clear?.
So the new washing machines are not as good as before ,
but you can add more water , by pipe or jug etc a problem
in itself ! (got the T SHIRT now!).
So this itch and pins problem (read my other comments) use
ECOVER LIQUID ONE CAP FULL , SAINSBURY WATER SOFTENER
ONE TABLESPOON , THIS SHOULD BREAK THE BOND ON A 30
TEMP WASH ONLY ,BUT NOT ON A WET AND BASH WASH
AS NEW WASHING MACHINES NOW DO ,ONE THIRD UP THE
DOOR WITH WATER , THEN EXTRA RINSE AND SURCARE
CONDITIONER 25ML- 35ML PER LOAD 2-3 KGS
HAVE FUN AND GOOD LUCK?.
ADY.
0 replies As far as I've been aware, white distilled vinegar is supposed to help get rid of smells in washing machines rather than limescale although I've heard people say it gets rid of limescale around taps and shower heads etc, which is a less demanding ask than from inside a washing machine when the vinegar would be diluted so much.
As far as I’ve been aware, white distilled vinegar is supposed to help get rid of smells in washing machines rather than limescale although I’ve heard people say it gets rid of limescale around taps and shower heads etc, which is a less demanding ask than from inside a washing machine when the vinegar would be diluted so much.
0 replies ady: I've not heard of this problem, are you using the recommended amount of detergent for the hardness of your water? One of the jobs of detergent is to combat hard water and limescale by softening the water.
ady: I’ve not heard of this problem, are you using the recommended amount of detergent for the hardness of your water? One of the jobs of detergent is to combat hard water and limescale by softening the water.
0 replies It's not just the fact that they use a lot less water to rinse now, they also rinse for less time, which compounds the problem. As wash times have increased extensively to get away with using lower temperatures they've had to reduce the time spent rinsing at the other end to compensate. So they now rinse with a lot less water for less time.
It’s not just the fact that they use a lot less water to rinse now, they also rinse for less time, which compounds the problem. As wash times have increased extensively to get away with using lower temperatures they’ve had to reduce the time spent rinsing at the other end to compensate. So they now rinse with a lot less water for less time.
0 replies Re: comment #334. I did the washing and made sure I was around for the last 25 minutes to pause the washing machine and add 7 jugfuls of COLD water to rinse 3 of 3 then resumed the cycle. At the 40C re-rinsing stage, I added the same amount of WARM water, making sure the water level was the same as the cold. As usual, the warm water produced more foam after about 20 minutes. From that observation, I'm assuming that once the water is fully heated to 40C, it does rinse differently to cold water. Think about warm water and detergents. You can't wash dirty clothing properly in cold water (I don't believe the claims with modern detergents being able to clean at 30C or 15C!!). When it comes to rinsing, with each rinse the detergent gets diluted more, but the detergent stuck in the clothes fibres probably gets dissolved or activated differently in warm water. Perhaps it gets "dissolved"? I have read the link in my comment #334 several times.
Re: comment #334. I did the washing and made sure I was around for the last 25 minutes to pause the washing machine and add 7 jugfuls of COLD water to rinse 3 of 3 then resumed the cycle.
At the 40C re-rinsing stage, I added the same amount of WARM water, making sure the water level was the same as the cold. As usual, the warm water produced more foam after about 20 minutes. From that observation, I’m assuming that once the water is fully heated to 40C, it does rinse differently to cold water.
Think about warm water and detergents. You can’t wash dirty clothing properly in cold water (I don’t believe the claims with modern detergents being able to clean at 30C or 15C!!). When it comes to rinsing, with each rinse the detergent gets diluted more, but the detergent stuck in the clothes fibres probably gets dissolved or activated differently in warm water. Perhaps it gets “dissolved”? I have read the link in my comment #334 several times.
0 replies Also Nikki, Which? who inspired this article with their test results which marked most washing machines with just 1 or 2 stars for rinsing and said they were "poor" at rinsing have recently given 5 stars to the Indesit WIXE127 and said, "This washing machine is one of the cheapest to buy, yet it's one of the best at rinsing, so if residual detergent irritates your sensitive skin, this model is good choice." People with priority for rinsing may be interested in this model and I've mentioned it on my article (above) although I would recommend it only if rinsing is the primary and paramount concern. However, it rinses in cold water and Which? laboratory tests say it is very good at rinsing.
Also Nikki, Which? who inspired this article with their test results which marked most washing machines with just 1 or 2 stars for rinsing and said they were “poor” at rinsing have recently given 5 stars to the Indesit WIXE127 and said, “This washing machine is one of the cheapest to buy, yet it’s one of the best at rinsing, so if residual detergent irritates your sensitive skin, this model is good choice.”
People with priority for rinsing may be interested in this model and I’ve mentioned it on my article (above) although I would recommend it only if rinsing is the primary and paramount concern. However, it rinses in cold water and Which? laboratory tests say it is very good at rinsing.
0 replies Oliver: no, I did not, I was being heavily sarcastic! Also I refer to CLOTHES ... not heavy cotton towels. Towels you cannot rinse in cold water, end of. I actually say that the clothes are still soapy, but nowhere near as soapy as they used to be. I do not want my clothes to be soapy, neither do I want my towels to be soapy. When I dry my body off after a bath or a shower, I do not want to rub biological washing powder into my skin, which is what I am doing effectively.
Oliver: no, I did not, I was being heavily sarcastic! Also I refer to CLOTHES … not heavy cotton towels. Towels you cannot rinse in cold water, end of. I actually say that the clothes are still soapy, but nowhere near as soapy as they used to be.
I do not want my clothes to be soapy, neither do I want my towels to be soapy. When I dry my body off after a bath or a shower, I do not want to rub biological washing powder into my skin, which is what I am doing effectively.
0 replies I agree with Nikki Jenkins and I know that proper rinsing can only be achieved with WARM water at a temperature of AT LEAST 40C. I believe that PLENTY of cold water can rinse away most (but NOT all) of the detergent and its chemical ingredients out of fabric fibres, BUT some of it will be left behind. Maybe 20 years ago most people could tolerate the tiny amount left behind because washing machines rinsed with high water levels using cold water. The epidemic of asthma and and other skin allergies is almost certainly caused by modern washing machines using so little water to rinse out only some of the detergent. Warm rinsing does indeed work. I can attest to the fact that my washing is rinsed properly since using just one warm rinse and adding 7 10 big jugfuls of water from the hot tap into my machine which only takes a few minutes and I have no choice anyway, otherwise my eczema would come back. If you use UN-perfumed fabric conditioner like Surcare or don’t use fabric conditioner at all, the washing should pass the sniff test and not smell of the tiniest trace of detergent. If it smells even slightly then it is NOT rinsed properly. As for washing machine manufacturers, they don’t listen to customers’ wishes and the silly PC environmental rules mean that they can’t heat the water up in each rinse as it would use too much energy, just as the same silly rules stop the washing machine manufacturers using too much cold water. Thanks to these silly rules, we have more people with allergies today than ever before!! I’m sure by now, in the 21st century with all this modern technology, they can invent a washing machine that rinses cottons in warm water (40C minimum) by means of a heat exchanger and holding the heat, which can warm the incoming water until it is sufficiently warm. They could use a hot water inlet valve and make the bold claim of being environmentally friendly by claiming that users of solar heated water can save energy, then use this to hot water valve for warm rinsing, using the cold one too if the incoming water is too hot. I don’t know the science, but it could be that warm water helps dissolve the detergent and open the clothing fibres, similar to ironing clothes i.e. heat flattens the creased areas. You wouldn’t be able to iron clothes without heat, for the same reason that you can’t rinse clothes as good in cold water, especially in the winter when the incoming water supply is extremely cold. If you don’t believe me, then take freshly rinsed cottons that have been rinsed in cold water and NO fabric conditioner and rinse them in plenty of warm or very warm water. Provided no fabric conditioner was used (which disguises foam), you will see foam appear from clothes you thought were rinsed acceptably. This is especially true for towels. Try it! Sorry this message is so long and sounds authoritative, but people need to know the true facts and this blog could make a positive difference to people who are suffering skin complaints.
I agree with Nikki Jenkins and I know that proper rinsing can only be achieved with WARM water at a temperature of AT LEAST 40C. I believe that PLENTY of cold water can rinse away most (but NOT all) of the detergent and its chemical ingredients out of fabric fibres, BUT some of it will be left behind. Maybe 20 years ago most people could tolerate the tiny amount left behind because washing machines rinsed with high water levels using cold water. The epidemic of asthma and and other skin allergies is almost certainly caused by modern washing machines using so little water to rinse out only some of the detergent.
Warm rinsing does indeed work. I can attest to the fact that my washing is rinsed properly since using just one warm rinse and adding 7 10 big jugfuls of water from the hot tap into my machine which only takes a few minutes and I have no choice anyway, otherwise my eczema would come back. If you use UN-perfumed fabric conditioner like Surcare or don’t use fabric conditioner at all, the washing should pass the sniff test and not smell of the tiniest trace of detergent. If it smells even slightly then it is NOT rinsed properly.
As for washing machine manufacturers, they don’t listen to customers’ wishes and the silly PC environmental rules mean that they can’t heat the water up in each rinse as it would use too much energy, just as the same silly rules stop the washing machine manufacturers using too much cold water. Thanks to these silly rules, we have more people with allergies today than ever before!!
I’m sure by now, in the 21st century with all this modern technology, they can invent a washing machine that rinses cottons in warm water (40C minimum) by means of a heat exchanger and holding the heat, which can warm the incoming water until it is sufficiently warm. They could use a hot water inlet valve and make the bold claim of being environmentally friendly by claiming that users of solar heated water can save energy, then use this to hot water valve for warm rinsing, using the cold one too if the incoming water is too hot.
I don’t know the science, but it could be that warm water helps dissolve the detergent and open the clothing fibres, similar to ironing clothes i.e. heat flattens the creased areas. You wouldn’t be able to iron clothes without heat, for the same reason that you can’t rinse clothes as good in cold water, especially in the winter when the incoming water supply is extremely cold.
If you don’t believe me, then take freshly rinsed cottons that have been rinsed in cold water and NO fabric conditioner and rinse them in plenty of warm or very warm water. Provided no fabric conditioner was used (which disguises foam), you will see foam appear from clothes you thought were rinsed acceptably. This is especially true for towels. Try it! Sorry this message is so long and sounds authoritative, but people need to know the true facts and this blog could make a positive difference to people who are suffering skin complaints.
0 replies Nikki: It was a bit blunt, there's no need for insults in intelligent debate. Your last paragraph even agrees with me - "the vast majority of people may be perfectly happy with their laundry rinsed in cold water". This applies to all the washing machine manufacturers too. I also acknowledged that I'm sure people like yourselves would prefer warm water rinsing so I don't see anything in my comment that could be rubbish other than it doesn't agree with your view. Washing machines, like any other product are designed for the masses, and minority preferences - or even needs - are not always commercially viable for big manufacturers. All I've said is that despite agreeing it may be possible that warm water rinsing removes more detergent it probably doesn't have a big enough effect for the majority of people to make it viable to make all washing machines rinse in warm water because it would increase their cost considerably as well as their running costs. If most people are content with cold water rinsing - and have been for many decades, they aren't going to want to pay more for their washing machines and increase their running costs.
Nikki: It was a bit blunt, there’s no need for insults in intelligent debate. Your last paragraph even agrees with me – “the vast majority of people may be perfectly happy with their laundry rinsed in cold water”. This applies to all the washing machine manufacturers too.
I also acknowledged that I’m sure people like yourselves would prefer warm water rinsing so I don’t see anything in my comment that could be rubbish other than it doesn’t agree with your view.
Washing machines, like any other product are designed for the masses, and minority preferences – or even needs – are not always commercially viable for big manufacturers. All I’ve said is that despite agreeing it may be possible that warm water rinsing removes more detergent it probably doesn’t have a big enough effect for the majority of people to make it viable to make all washing machines rinse in warm water because it would increase their cost considerably as well as their running costs. If most people are content with cold water rinsing – and have been for many decades, they aren’t going to want to pay more for their washing machines and increase their running costs.
0 replies I used to repair washers of all variations and cannot recall ever seeing a front loader with an option for warm rinses, I know most USA top loaders do but then they only do a spray rinse followed by one deep one so maybe thats why???
I used to repair washers of all variations and cannot recall ever seeing a front loader with an option for warm rinses, I know most USA top loaders do but then they only do a spray rinse followed by one deep one so maybe thats why???
0 replies Washerhelp: I am sorry to be so blunt, but you are talking an absolute load of rubbish! Once and for all, I repeat ... YOU CANNOT RINSE PROPERLY IN COLD WATER. It is scientifically impossible to completely break down such that it can be rinsed away detergent from heavy items such as towels and jeans. Washing machine manufacturers are just plain WRONG !! They have to abide by EEC rules and conform to the ridiculous standards laid down by that bureaucratic pile of pc nonsense. Until fairly recently you could buy washing machines that had hot and cold fill, with the option of warm or hot water rinses. Washing machines throughout history HAVE rinsed adequately ... until the recent EEC legislation. I do not suffer from skin allergies, I do not suffer from exczema ... EXCEPT WHEN DETERGENT IS LEFT BEHIND IN MY CLOTHING. I use bio, so if the detergent is not rinsed properly, then I have enzymes on my skin breaking it down and "digesting" it. Frankly, I do not want to be eaten by detergent, so I prefer to have properly rinsed clothing. I will continue to fill up my machine with warm water and run separate wash cycles without soap in an attempt to remove at least some of the massive soap build up I have in my clothes, particularly the heavy cottons and towels. I detest man made fibres, I like cotton, I like linen, I like natural fibres, and these are the ones that hold the detergent the most and need warm or hot water and plenty of it to rinse the detergent away. The vast majority of people maybe perfectly happy with their laundry rinsed in cold water ... partly because the vast majority of people use man made fibres maybe? Also, they live in ignorance. They have no idea that their modern washing machine does not rinse properly, and pour in unnecessary fabric conditioner in order to make their towels less stiff and board-like. I prefer not to use fabric conditioner, or a tumble dryer (which will also soften up towels stiff with detergent), but to actually have properly rinsed clothes thank you very much.
Washerhelp: I am sorry to be so blunt, but you are talking an absolute load of rubbish! Once and for all, I repeat … YOU CANNOT RINSE PROPERLY IN COLD WATER. It is scientifically impossible to completely break down such that it can be rinsed away detergent from heavy items such as towels and jeans.
Washing machine manufacturers are just plain WRONG !! They have to abide by EEC rules and conform to the ridiculous standards laid down by that bureaucratic pile of pc nonsense. Until fairly recently you could buy washing machines that had hot and cold fill, with the option of warm or hot water rinses. Washing machines throughout history HAVE rinsed adequately … until the recent EEC legislation.
I do not suffer from skin allergies, I do not suffer from exczema … EXCEPT WHEN DETERGENT IS LEFT BEHIND IN MY CLOTHING. I use bio, so if the detergent is not rinsed properly, then I have enzymes on my skin breaking it down and “digesting” it. Frankly, I do not want to be eaten by detergent, so I prefer to have properly rinsed clothing. I will continue to fill up my machine with warm water and run separate wash cycles without soap in an attempt to remove at least some of the massive soap build up I have in my clothes, particularly the heavy cottons and towels. I detest man made fibres, I like cotton, I like linen, I like natural fibres, and these are the ones that hold the detergent the most and need warm or hot water and plenty of it to rinse the detergent away.
The vast majority of people maybe perfectly happy with their laundry rinsed in cold water … partly because the vast majority of people use man made fibres maybe? Also, they live in ignorance. They have no idea that their modern washing machine does not rinse properly, and pour in unnecessary fabric conditioner in order to make their towels less stiff and board-like. I prefer not to use fabric conditioner, or a tumble dryer (which will also soften up towels stiff with detergent), but to actually have properly rinsed clothes thank you very much.
0 replies WMUSER & NiKKI: I don't say that warm water rinsing isn't better on some level, but I have said I'm not convinced it's so much better that it's worth the extra costs in using warm water for rinsing for most people - though I'm sure it would be for people like yourselves. And washing machine manufacturers throughout history also appear to not think it's worth it or it would have developed long before now and taken off big style. Competition is so fierce that if rinsing in warm water could be shown to be substantially better it's hard to believe no manufacturer has got ahead of their competition by doing it. I just don't see any logic in saying that rinsing in cold water is impossible and cannot work. That would mean washing machines throughout history have never rinsed adequately yet the vast majority of people are perfectly happy with their laundry rinsed in cold water.
WMUSER & NiKKI: I don’t say that warm water rinsing isn’t better on some level, but I have said I’m not convinced it’s so much better that it’s worth the extra costs in using warm water for rinsing for most people – though I’m sure it would be for people like yourselves. And washing machine manufacturers throughout history also appear to not think it’s worth it or it would have developed long before now and taken off big style. Competition is so fierce that if rinsing in warm water could be shown to be substantially better it’s hard to believe no manufacturer has got ahead of their competition by doing it.
I just don’t see any logic in saying that rinsing in cold water is impossible and cannot work. That would mean washing machines throughout history have never rinsed adequately yet the vast majority of people are perfectly happy with their laundry rinsed in cold water.
0 replies WM User: delighted to hear about your success story ! It is absolutely scientifically impossible to rinse soap, detergent, surfactant, whatever you want to call it - it's all the same - out of laundry, particularly heavy cotton items such as jeans and towels - without the use of warm or hot water. We are being conned by washing machine manufacturers who say otherwise. Your tests - as mine - have proved this to be so. Well done you.
WM User: delighted to hear about your success story ! It is absolutely scientifically impossible to rinse soap, detergent, surfactant, whatever you want to call it – it’s all the same – out of laundry, particularly heavy cotton items such as jeans and towels – without the use of warm or hot water. We are being conned by washing machine manufacturers who say otherwise.
Your tests – as mine – have proved this to be so. Well done you.
0 replies CONFIRMED - after numerous washes - warm rinsing with a temperature of AT LEAST 40C rids the cotton fibres of the soapsuds much better than cold water or lukewarm water. After doing a normal cottons cycle, the "quickwash", "rapid", "superquick" or whatever each manufacturer calls it, at 40C without detergent, gives you a warm rinse followed by the ordinary rinses performed during the quick cycle. Then the final spin. If you can add jugfuls of warm water from the hot tap into the washing machine via the soap drawer, this extra quantity of water works a treat. If you can't add extra water, at least the clothes are getting rinsed better compared to just pressing "extra rinse" or doing nothing. Having done this re-rinsing with lots of warm water and then adding un-perfumed fabric conditioner, my clothes are coming out clean without *any* smell of detergent or perfumes, not even a slight smell! The clothes feel really soft, softer now than they've ever been. This works for me and I'm sure it will work for everyone else who wants their laundry rinsed properly. I never knew warm water could make such an enormous difference to rinsing until I discovered this blog. I'm very pleased. :)
CONFIRMED – after numerous washes – warm rinsing with a temperature of AT LEAST 40C rids the cotton fibres of the soapsuds much better than cold water or lukewarm water.
After doing a normal cottons cycle, the “quickwash”, “rapid”, “superquick” or whatever each manufacturer calls it, at 40C without detergent, gives you a warm rinse followed by the ordinary rinses performed during the quick cycle. Then the final spin. If you can add jugfuls of warm water from the hot tap into the washing machine via the soap drawer, this extra quantity of water works a treat. If you can’t add extra water, at least the clothes are getting rinsed better compared to just pressing “extra rinse” or doing nothing.
Having done this re-rinsing with lots of warm water and then adding un-perfumed fabric conditioner, my clothes are coming out clean without *any* smell of detergent or perfumes, not even a slight smell! The clothes feel really soft, softer now than they’ve ever been.
This works for me and I’m sure it will work for everyone else who wants their laundry rinsed properly. I never knew warm water could make such an enormous difference to rinsing until I discovered this blog. I’m very pleased. :)
0 replies Has anyone else tried rinsing clothes in warm water and noticed a difference? I still follow my method on comment #287 as it's quicker than all the other methods I've tried. For those of you who leave the washing machine unattended and come back to it later on in the day, following the idea on comment #287 should help. In some situations, you can't add extra water e.g. owners of some washing machines like certain newer Hotpoints that have the soap drawer concealed behind the big door when its closed or if the washing machine is in a garage, away from a tap. Until consumers demand washing machines that rinse PROPERLY instead of demanding cheap washing machines that are no good, we will be putting up with partially rinsed clothes and major skin allergies for a very long time!!
Has anyone else tried rinsing clothes in warm water and noticed a difference? I still follow my method on comment #287 as it’s quicker than all the other methods I’ve tried. For those of you who leave the washing machine unattended and come back to it later on in the day, following the idea on comment #287 should help.
In some situations, you can’t add extra water e.g. owners of some washing machines like certain newer Hotpoints that have the soap drawer concealed behind the big door when its closed or if the washing machine is in a garage, away from a tap.
Until consumers demand washing machines that rinse PROPERLY instead of demanding cheap washing machines that are no good, we will be putting up with partially rinsed clothes and major skin allergies for a very long time!!
0 replies I think Oliver & WMUser made the following points about soda crystals - Soda crystals say you can use them in washing machine, all machines have the aluminium drum spider fitted, whether or not it will corrode it quicker than using detergent alone will only be a guess. My personal view is the could harm the machine" If soda crystals are known to cause damage to drum spiders, the makers of soda crystals should be contacted immediately!!" I contacted the makers of soda crystals in the UK a few years back and they told me that it can cause pitting on aluminium, which is what their warning relates to, and assured me it can't harm the aluminium drum spider on a washing machine. I think if they were used for example on aluminium saucepans they could cause unsightly pitting, which would cause a complaint, but it wouldn't structurally damage the aluminium.
I think Oliver & WMUser made the following points about soda crystals –
Soda crystals say you can use them in washing machine, all machines have the aluminium drum spider fitted, whether or not it will corrode it quicker than using detergent alone will only be a guess. My personal view is the could harm the machine”
If soda crystals are known to cause damage to drum spiders, the makers of soda crystals should be contacted immediately!!”
I contacted the makers of soda crystals in the UK a few years back and they told me that it can cause pitting on aluminium, which is what their warning relates to, and assured me it can’t harm the aluminium drum spider on a washing machine. I think if they were used for example on aluminium saucepans they could cause unsightly pitting, which would cause a complaint, but it wouldn’t structurally damage the aluminium.
0 replies Here's what I believe is a major flaw with washing machines which hampers rinsing: foam gets trapped between the drum and the outer tub. After each interim spin during the rinsing cycles, I'm sure the foam is not being cleared away. On older washing machines I remember the water inlet valve would switch on immediately when the interim spin switched off and was slowing down, which probably helped to flush the foam away. Here's what I think they should do: blast the water around the outside of the drum and inside the outer tub to clear the foam away when the interim spin slows down, then pump away the foam. Also flush water over the inside of the door glass to clear foam away from it and the inside door seal. Remember also that warm water rinsing helps MUCH better than cold rinsing.
Here’s what I believe is a major flaw with washing machines which hampers rinsing: foam gets trapped between the drum and the outer tub. After each interim spin during the rinsing cycles, I’m sure the foam is not being cleared away. On older washing machines I remember the water inlet valve would switch on immediately when the interim spin switched off and was slowing down, which probably helped to flush the foam away.
Here’s what I think they should do: blast the water around the outside of the drum and inside the outer tub to clear the foam away when the interim spin slows down, then pump away the foam. Also flush water over the inside of the door glass to clear foam away from it and the inside door seal.
Remember also that warm water rinsing helps MUCH better than cold rinsing.
0 replies Warm water rinsing is the ONLY way to remove detergent completely ... I for one do not want detergent left in my laundry, so I have to resort to rinsing my clothes by hand in my sink in warm water as a cheaper option than doing hot washes in the Miele without detergent. It is terrifying how much soap is left behind in laundry washed in modern front loaders. I am convinced that this is at least partially responsible for the rise in asthma and skin conditions such as excema. Like you WMUser, I have resorted to adding hot water to the washing machine on occasions when I have some "free" hot water in my tank that has been heated by our Coalbrookdale wood burner.
Warm water rinsing is the ONLY way to remove detergent completely … I for one do not want detergent left in my laundry, so I have to resort to rinsing my clothes by hand in my sink in warm water as a cheaper option than doing hot washes in the Miele without detergent. It is terrifying how much soap is left behind in laundry washed in modern front loaders. I am convinced that this is at least partially responsible for the rise in asthma and skin conditions such as excema.
Like you WMUser, I have resorted to adding hot water to the washing machine on occasions when I have some “free” hot water in my tank that has been heated by our Coalbrookdale wood burner.
0 replies Here’s an idea that seems to be working for me and could work for anyone who would like proper rinsing with less fuss. This works on cottons: Use the washing machine as normal, but don’t add the softener yet. When the washing machine has finished, use the-quick-wash cycle (if you have one) without detergent and set it at 40C. When the machine stops adding water, use a large jug or a kettle, fill with water from the hot tap and pour this into the soap drawer about 7 times until you see the clothes tumbling into plenty of water. Obviously you don’t want to use water that’s too hot. Now add your softener if you use it. Using this approach, I find the-quick-wash programme for cottons has good agitation during its main wash and 2 rinses and I can set the final spin to 1600 rpm on the quick-wash. It’s also very quick at 45 minutes from start to finish. The other advantage is you can run your quick-wash programme later on, which is great if you need to go out or run the washing machine totally unattended and come back to it later. I’m not saying this will work for everyone, but it may help most readers. :) The only downside is it could cost a bit more in electricity? Is that a price worth paying if you cure the skin allergies? It does seem that warm rinsing helps enormously. Thank you Nikki Jenkins for suggesting warm rinsing - I get shocked every time I see the amount of foam released from supposedly rinsed laundry during the 40 deg C quick-wash cycle!
Here’s an idea that seems to be working for me and could work for anyone who would like proper rinsing with less fuss. This works on cottons:
Use the washing machine as normal, but don’t add the softener yet.
When the washing machine has finished, use the-quick-wash cycle (if you have one) without detergent and set it at 40C. When the machine stops adding water, use a large jug or a kettle, fill with water from the hot tap and pour this into the soap drawer about 7 times until you see the clothes tumbling into plenty of water. Obviously you don’t want to use water that’s too hot.
Now add your softener if you use it.
Using this approach, I find the-quick-wash programme for cottons has good agitation during its main wash and 2 rinses and I can set the final spin to 1600 rpm on the quick-wash. It’s also very quick at 45 minutes from start to finish. The other advantage is you can run your quick-wash programme later on, which is great if you need to go out or run the washing machine totally unattended and come back to it later.
I’m not saying this will work for everyone, but it may help most readers. :)
The only downside is it could cost a bit more in electricity? Is that a price worth paying if you cure the skin allergies?
It does seem that warm rinsing helps enormously. Thank you Nikki Jenkins for suggesting warm rinsing – I get shocked every time I see the amount of foam released from supposedly rinsed laundry during the 40 deg C quick-wash cycle!
0 replies My Hotpoint is the WMA30 range but the programme dial does not turn at all. All computer operated. It is a 'Proper' Hotpoint though not the Merloni ones now. Was either made in 1997 or 1998 and bought from Powerhouse so shows how long ago that was. To be honest I never have liked powders or tablets and as I don't have white clothes not an issue. I keep a small pack for maintenance washes. Liquids are better for me as i find they do rinse easier. Out of all the mainstream detergents I think Persil Small and Mighty is best for my machine as it doe not produce much foam. I can use Daz regular liquid but not concentrated as it foams loads. Surf, Ariel and Bold are no go as do not clean well in my machine and again foam too much. Have emailed customer care but are totally unhelpful and useless and only tell me what i already know. I assume the concentrated liquids don't have the foam inhibitors in whereas the regular ones do. Have found Sainsburys own brand excellent and good stain removal. Currently using Amway Sa8 which gets most stains out most of the time and its 3x concentrated as Persil and Ariel. 10ml is enough for lightly soiled stains and 20 ml heavy soil. No foam at all and rinses completely clean. Highly recommend. Simon
My Hotpoint is the WMA30 range but the programme dial does not turn at all. All computer operated. It is a ‘Proper’ Hotpoint though not the Merloni ones now. Was either made in 1997 or 1998 and bought from Powerhouse so shows how long ago that was.
To be honest I never have liked powders or tablets and as I don’t have white clothes not an issue. I keep a small pack for maintenance washes. Liquids are better for me as i find they do rinse easier.
Out of all the mainstream detergents I think Persil Small and Mighty is best for my machine as it doe not produce much foam. I can use Daz regular liquid but not concentrated as it foams loads.
Surf, Ariel and Bold are no go as do not clean well in my machine and again foam too much. Have emailed customer care but are totally unhelpful and useless and only tell me what i already know.
I assume the concentrated liquids don’t have the foam inhibitors in whereas the regular ones do.
Have found Sainsburys own brand excellent and good stain removal.
Currently using Amway Sa8 which gets most stains out most of the time and its 3x concentrated as Persil and Ariel. 10ml is enough for lightly soiled stains and 20 ml heavy soil. No foam at all and rinses completely clean.
Highly recommend.
Simon
0 replies Ok Oliver will bare it mind. I have found someone in East Anglia where i live with same Bosch as you so hopefully might buy it. It looks good. Simon
Ok Oliver will bare it mind. I have found someone in East Anglia where i live with same Bosch as you so hopefully might buy it. It looks good. Simon
0 replies Just been looking on Ariel and Persil ingredient list and shocked to see they put some 'fillers' in their liquid detergents. I always thought liquids did not contain filler material other than water. I know Sodium Sulfate is a filler but can anyone tell me the other chemical names for fillers in powder and in liquids so that i can get a proper truly concentrated product. Cheers
Just been looking on Ariel and Persil ingredient list and shocked to see they put some ‘fillers’ in their liquid detergents. I always thought liquids did not contain filler material other than water. I know Sodium Sulfate is a filler but can anyone tell me the other chemical names for fillers in powder and in liquids so that i can get a proper truly concentrated product. Cheers
0 replies Ian : this is how I first discovered that modern washing machines don't rinse properly - my towels were drying as stiff as boards. It is the detergent residue left in them that is causing them to be stiff and horrid. If you plunge one of your stiff towels into a sink full of hot water, you will discover that the water becomes white with detergent residue from the towel. Tumble drying does indeed fluff the towels up, and will remove some of the detergent too I guess, but the best way to have lovely soft fluffy towels is to rinse them by hand in lots of lovely hot water - and then perhaps tumble dry them as well. I am at last getting rid of the detergent residue left in my towels - I rinse them in the bath (we have "free" hot water in the winter courtesy of our Coalbrookdale multi-fuel stove which heats the hot water as well as the sitting room) and spin them out in the washing machine, hang them up to dry and then put them in the tumble dryer for a few minutes when almost dry to fluff them up nicely.
Ian : this is how I first discovered that modern washing machines don’t rinse properly – my towels were drying as stiff as boards. It is the detergent residue left in them that is causing them to be stiff and horrid. If you plunge one of your stiff towels into a sink full of hot water, you will discover that the water becomes white with detergent residue from the towel.
Tumble drying does indeed fluff the towels up, and will remove some of the detergent too I guess, but the best way to have lovely soft fluffy towels is to rinse them by hand in lots of lovely hot water – and then perhaps tumble dry them as well. I am at last getting rid of the detergent residue left in my towels – I rinse them in the bath (we have “free” hot water in the winter courtesy of our Coalbrookdale multi-fuel stove which heats the hot water as well as the sitting room) and spin them out in the washing machine, hang them up to dry and then put them in the tumble dryer for a few minutes when almost dry to fluff them up nicely.
0 replies Ian: Don't use fabric conditioner on towels as it coats them with a waxy substance which makes them less absorbent. Stiff towels can be caused by over drying including leaving them on the line for too long. If you dry them in a tumble dryer they should come out pretty soft unless you over dry them. If you dry them some other way, 10 mins in a dryer can soften them up nicely.
Ian: Don’t use fabric conditioner on towels as it coats them with a waxy substance which makes them less absorbent. Stiff towels can be caused by over drying including leaving them on the line for too long.
If you dry them in a tumble dryer they should come out pretty soft unless you over dry them. If you dry them some other way, 10 mins in a dryer can soften them up nicely.
0 replies Soft water and less detergent... If you live in a "hard water" area, I think soda crystals are your best option and the packet says it can be used in washing machines. It will soften hard water and if you can use the amount of detergent recommended for "soft" water, you could possibly help with the rinsing as there's less detergent in the first place? If you notice lots of foam the first few times, you could use a bit less detergent than recommended until you only see a few bubbles instead of too many. Has anyone had success with warm or hot rinses?
Soft water and less detergent… If you live in a “hard water” area, I think soda crystals are your best option and the packet says it can be used in washing machines. It will soften hard water and if you can use the amount of detergent recommended for “soft” water, you could possibly help with the rinsing as there’s less detergent in the first place? If you notice lots of foam the first few times, you could use a bit less detergent than recommended until you only see a few bubbles instead of too many.
Has anyone had success with warm or hot rinses?
0 replies Ceejay108: Detergent manufacturers deliberately add a perfume to their detergent which is meant to survive rinsing somehow and leave the laundry smelling (as they like to think) pleasant. I don't know how it survives rinsing but if you don't like it I would try to find some unperfumed detergent.
Ceejay108: Detergent manufacturers deliberately add a perfume to their detergent which is meant to survive rinsing somehow and leave the laundry smelling (as they like to think) pleasant. I don’t know how it survives rinsing but if you don’t like it I would try to find some unperfumed detergent.
0 replies I recently bought a new Bosch Classixx washing machine and it is causing me so much stress. When my clothes are drying the whole room smells of the washing powder I use, it's extremely strong and disgusting. I have tried using several different brands of washing powder, with the same outcome. I have had an engineer out and he said it was working perfectly!! I often wash one load of washing 3 times, but I can still smell the detergent. When I wear my clothes I can still smell the detergent and unfortunately it's not a particulary fresh smell, so making me a bit paranoid now!! I live in Scotland, so have soft water. I have read this thread with interest and will try running a pre-wash to see if that helps. Any other advice would be gratefully received.
I recently bought a new Bosch Classixx washing machine and it is causing me so much stress. When my clothes are drying the whole room smells of the washing powder I use, it’s extremely strong and disgusting. I have tried using several different brands of washing powder, with the same outcome. I have had an engineer out and he said it was working perfectly!! I often wash one load of washing 3 times, but I can still smell the detergent. When I wear my clothes I can still smell the detergent and unfortunately it’s not a particulary fresh smell, so making me a bit paranoid now!!
I live in Scotland, so have soft water.
I have read this thread with interest and will try running a pre-wash to see if that helps. Any other advice would be gratefully received.
0 replies You shouldn't need Calgon if you use the right amount of detergent as detergent should soften hard water perfectly adequately, it's part of its job to soften hard water.
You shouldn’t need Calgon if you use the right amount of detergent as detergent should soften hard water perfectly adequately, it’s part of its job to soften hard water.
0 replies Regarding the different types of detergent and colour friendly detergent verses detergent using bleach I have an article on this subject here You don't just use one detergent do you? Basically bleach makes whites whiter but also fades coloureds. Colour friendly detergent doesn't fade colours but eventually leads to dingy looking whites.
Regarding the different types of detergent and colour friendly detergent verses detergent using bleach I have an article on this subject here You don’t just use one detergent do you?
Basically bleach makes whites whiter but also fades coloureds. Colour friendly detergent doesn’t fade colours but eventually leads to dingy looking whites.
0 replies WMUser: Would rinsing improve if detergent is added directly to the drum and not the soap drawer? I'm wondering because bits of detergent often get left behind in the soap drawer and maybe end up being flushed down during the rinses? What's the point in using the soap drawer when it ends up in the drum anyway? Yes it would for some, if they have low water pressure. It’s a known issue that with low water pressure not all the detergent is flushed into the drum on the wash. Then on the rinse cycle it’s possible for small amounts of detergent to get into the rinse water.
WMUser:
Would rinsing improve if detergent is added directly to the drum and not the soap drawer? I’m wondering because bits of detergent often get left behind in the soap drawer and maybe end up being flushed down during the rinses? What’s the point in using the soap drawer when it ends up in the drum anyway?
Yes it would for some, if they have low water pressure. It’s a known issue that with low water pressure not all the detergent is flushed into the drum on the wash. Then on the rinse cycle it’s possible for small amounts of detergent to get into the rinse water.
0 replies Thanks for the info Oliver. Think I will go back to using a bleach containing powder for all washing then. Much simpler and will save money too. Simon
Thanks for the info Oliver. Think I will go back to using a bleach containing powder for all washing then. Much simpler and will save money too.
Simon
0 replies It seems that the Nordic countries, and in particular Sweden, where I live, have traditionally demanded better rinsing. Test-winning machines here often have one or several programmes with extra rinsing cycles. Yours, F
It seems that the Nordic countries, and in particular Sweden, where I live, have traditionally demanded better rinsing. Test-winning machines here often have one or several programmes with extra rinsing cycles.
Yours,
F
0 replies Nikki: I think that rinsing is mainly about dissolving the remaining detergent." I hope you don't think I'm arguing with you :-) but I think rinsing is about removing the detergent. Dissolving it may or may not assist in that process, I don't profess to be an expert at that level, I'm just not sure it's essential to dissolve detergent to remove it from laundry during rinsing. Undissolved detergent is just like a bit of grit which should be removed by flushing with water. Detergent has to be dissolved to activate and do its job of washing, but when that's all done and rinses are being done if there's any undissolved detergent it shouldn't need dissolving in order to flush it out with a proper amount of cold water. I would have thought that agitation, and water being forced through the fabric should dislodge any undissolved detergent into the water solution to be pumped away as long as there's enough water being used. People on this thread have remarked that if they have a cold feed on their detergent draw it progressively clogs up. Thats because cold water doesnt dissolve the detergent properly. You can imagine that if detergent sticks firmly to a smooth plastic surface it wont be possible to remove the stuff from being tied up in the fibres of a towel." Detergent in the dispenser drawer doesn't need to be dissolved in order to be moved from one place to another. Detergent clogs up in dispenser drawers when the cold water pressure isn't good enough to flush it all into the drum. The same thing used to happen when detergent was placed in the hot water side of hot and cold fill washing machines if the hot water pressure wasn't strong enough. Detergent gets wetted and pushed to the front and sides of the dispenser where it later dries and becomes firmly attached. During the washing process detergent in laundry won't behave in the same way because it doesn't dry out. I have demonstrated to myself that It doesnt seem to matter how many times you do a cold machine rinse a warm manual rinse will release loads of undissolved detergent." If there is any detergent left in fabrics then hot water is likely to exaggerate this presence by making it foam up more, whereas cold water won't. Foaming up any residue detergent still present in the fabric with hot or warm water doesn't necessarily prove it's getting the detergent out of the laundry better than cold would, it could be just highlighting it's presence in a way that cold water doesn't. You may be right, I'm not saying I know one way or the other which is best for rinsing but virtually all washing machines have rinsed in cold water since they were invented and it's only now that they are being accused of not rinsing properly since they drastically reduced the amount of water they use during the process. The fact that a few manufacturers produced washing machines with warm rinses doesn't convince me that warm rinsing is better because manufacturers have a long track record of conning the public with pseudo science and all sorts of claims. I think if any manufacturer comes up with anything that's genuinely better then all other manufacturers follow suit and it becomes standard. I still think it's possible warm water rinsing may offer some benefits but using a lot more hot water during the wash process is the polar opposite of what most manufacturers and customers currently want, and if warm water rinsing is substantially better than cold water rinsing it's amazing that after nearly 100 years of washing machine advancement and one-upmanship amongst competing manufacturers they virtually all stuck with cold water rinsing.
Nikki:
I think that rinsing is mainly about dissolving the remaining detergent.”
I hope you don’t think I’m arguing with you :-) but I think rinsing is about removing the detergent. Dissolving it may or may not assist in that process, I don’t profess to be an expert at that level, I’m just not sure it’s essential to dissolve detergent to remove it from laundry during rinsing. Undissolved detergent is just like a bit of grit which should be removed by flushing with water.
Detergent has to be dissolved to activate and do its job of washing, but when that’s all done and rinses are being done if there’s any undissolved detergent it shouldn’t need dissolving in order to flush it out with a proper amount of cold water. I would have thought that agitation, and water being forced through the fabric should dislodge any undissolved detergent into the water solution to be pumped away as long as there’s enough water being used.
People on this thread have remarked that if they have a cold feed on their detergent draw it progressively clogs up. Thats because cold water doesnt dissolve the detergent properly. You can imagine that if detergent sticks firmly to a smooth plastic surface it wont be possible to remove the stuff from being tied up in the fibres of a towel.”
Detergent in the dispenser drawer doesn’t need to be dissolved in order to be moved from one place to another. Detergent clogs up in dispenser drawers when the cold water pressure isn’t good enough to flush it all into the drum. The same thing used to happen when detergent was placed in the hot water side of hot and cold fill washing machines if the hot water pressure wasn’t strong enough. Detergent gets wetted and pushed to the front and sides of the dispenser where it later dries and becomes firmly attached.
During the washing process detergent in laundry won’t behave in the same way because it doesn’t dry out.
I have demonstrated to myself that It doesnt seem to matter how many times you do a cold machine rinse a warm manual rinse will release loads of undissolved detergent.”
If there is any detergent left in fabrics then hot water is likely to exaggerate this presence by making it foam up more, whereas cold water won’t. Foaming up any residue detergent still present in the fabric with hot or warm water doesn’t necessarily prove it’s getting the detergent out of the laundry better than cold would, it could be just highlighting it’s presence in a way that cold water doesn’t.
You may be right, I’m not saying I know one way or the other which is best for rinsing but virtually all washing machines have rinsed in cold water since they were invented and it’s only now that they are being accused of not rinsing properly since they drastically reduced the amount of water they use during the process.
The fact that a few manufacturers produced washing machines with warm rinses doesn’t convince me that warm rinsing is better because manufacturers have a long track record of conning the public with pseudo science and all sorts of claims. I think if any manufacturer comes up with anything that’s genuinely better then all other manufacturers follow suit and it becomes standard.
I still think it’s possible warm water rinsing may offer some benefits but using a lot more hot water during the wash process is the polar opposite of what most manufacturers and customers currently want, and if warm water rinsing is substantially better than cold water rinsing it’s amazing that after nearly 100 years of washing machine advancement and one-upmanship amongst competing manufacturers they virtually all stuck with cold water rinsing.
0 replies Interestingly, newer LG machines offer not only a Rinse+ and Rinse++ option, but also a Medic Rinse, which is an extra, deep level rinse heated to 40*C. "Medic Rinse Washes away detergent residue with an extra, 40-degree rinse at the end of the cycle, making it ideal for a baby's sensitive skin." I still have no problems rinsing in cold water, but perhaps this LG machine would be good for those who would prefer the option. Certainly saves a lot of hassle. Jon
Interestingly, newer LG machines offer not only a Rinse+ and Rinse++ option, but also a Medic Rinse, which is an extra, deep level rinse heated to 40*C.
“Medic Rinse
Washes away detergent residue with an extra, 40-degree rinse at the end of the cycle, making it ideal for a baby’s sensitive skin.”
I still have no problems rinsing in cold water, but perhaps this LG machine would be good for those who would prefer the option. Certainly saves a lot of hassle.
Jon
0 replies Apart from connecting your washing machine to the hot water supply alone (risky on delicates), the only to achieve more than one warm rinse is as follows: 1. Pre-wash (only washes at 30 or 40 degrees) 2. Main Wash (30 degrees or higher) 3. Spin after main wash 4. Run an entire programme without detergent, the main 'wash' being a warm rinse. Which effectively means that 2 and 4 above are your warm rinses, which only gives you 2 warm rinses out of the total number. I remember on some old washing machines, the first cycle on the list was a pre-wash followed by a boil wash ~95 degrees. Not what your delicates need! I don't think many people would turn their hot water down to 30 degrees and connect the washing machine to the hot water supply only. I certainly would not. How much extra electricity and time would it take enable warm rinses with plenty of water? Probably too much, so that's why warm or hot rinses are not used on washing machines, even if it does rinse much better than cold water, especially in the winter when cold water from the mains supply is much colder. I'm sure they could invent a method to enable warm rinses on domestic washing machines without using too much electricity or waiting 3 hours or longer??
Apart from connecting your washing machine to the hot water supply alone (risky on delicates), the only to achieve more than one warm rinse is as follows:
1. Pre-wash (only washes at 30 or 40 degrees)
2. Main Wash (30 degrees or higher)
3. Spin after main wash
4. Run an entire programme without detergent, the main ‘wash’ being a warm rinse.
Which effectively means that 2 and 4 above are your warm rinses, which only gives you 2 warm rinses out of the total number.
I remember on some old washing machines, the first cycle on the list was a pre-wash followed by a boil wash ~95 degrees. Not what your delicates need!
I don’t think many people would turn their hot water down to 30 degrees and connect the washing machine to the hot water supply only. I certainly would not. How much extra electricity and time would it take enable warm rinses with plenty of water? Probably too much, so that’s why warm or hot rinses are not used on washing machines, even if it does rinse much better than cold water, especially in the winter when cold water from the mains supply is much colder. I’m sure they could invent a method to enable warm rinses on domestic washing machines without using too much electricity or waiting 3 hours or longer??
0 replies To anyone interested, I have adjusted the pressure switch on the IAR Siltal and it now takes in a sensible amount of water to both wash and rinse. I did not want to adjust the wash, but had no choice as level 2 is made up of level 1 and a timed 20 second fill. So for wash it fills up to the bottom edge of the door glass and about 2" up the door on rinses and wool wash. Towels are not hard, and although it does not rinse quite as well as my 16 year old Bosch, it is not bad at all. My Mum and Dad are very pleased with my little "adjustment", they have both remarked that it also washes better and the rinsing is 1000 times better. If I had known about this when the machine was new it would have been changed then. The rinse used to be 3-4" in the bottom of the drum, hardly enough to properly wet the load let alone remove detergent and muck very well. It has been increased by over 150% and the difference is amazing. It has 2 adjusters, one for level one and the other tells it when to start distrubting and when to reduce spin speed due to sudslocking etc. I assumed one would be level 1 and the other level 2. It took me an hour and a half to get it just right, I even had it filling half way up the door at one point, but that was too high for wash, so had to strike a balance, which I think I did. I still sudslocks some times but is a hell of alot less than before, more clear evedence modern washing machines use too little water to rinse, and wash in this case as well. The only down side is increased water and power consumption, but at least it now works properly. I however would not recommend attempting this if you are unsure as it would be VERY easy to flood the house or damage the machine, also would invalidate any warranty your machine may have. The IAR Siltal is nearly 9 years old now so I was fine. This weekend we shall be replacing the bearings, brushes and belt as well. It has done way over 5500 loads since new, a fair few of which have been overloaded as well. They have been told off for that as well!! Oliver.
To anyone interested,
I have adjusted the pressure switch on the IAR Siltal and it now takes in a sensible amount of water to both wash and rinse. I did not want to adjust the wash, but had no choice as level 2 is made up of level 1 and a timed 20 second fill. So for wash it fills up to the bottom edge of the door glass and about 2″ up the door on rinses and wool wash.
Towels are not hard, and although it does not rinse quite as well as my 16 year old Bosch, it is not bad at all. My Mum and Dad are very pleased with my little “adjustment”, they have both remarked that it also washes better and the rinsing is 1000 times better. If I had known about this when the machine was new it would have been changed then. The rinse used to be 3-4″ in the bottom of the drum, hardly enough to properly wet the load let alone remove detergent and muck very well. It has been increased by over 150% and the difference is amazing.
It has 2 adjusters, one for level one and the other tells it when to start distrubting and when to reduce spin speed due to sudslocking etc. I assumed one would be level 1 and the other level 2. It took me an hour and a half to get it just right, I even had it filling half way up the door at one point, but that was too high for wash, so had to strike a balance, which I think I did.
I still sudslocks some times but is a hell of alot less than before, more clear evedence modern washing machines use too little water to rinse, and wash in this case as well. The only down side is increased water and power consumption, but at least it now works properly.
I however would not recommend attempting this if you are unsure as it would be VERY easy to flood the house or damage the machine, also would invalidate any warranty your machine may have. The IAR Siltal is nearly 9 years old now so I was fine. This weekend we shall be replacing the bearings, brushes and belt as well. It has done way over 5500 loads since new, a fair few of which have been overloaded as well. They have been told off for that as well!!
Oliver.
0 replies I can't see rinse hold helping because even if suspending them in water somehow removed more detergent from the laundry as soon as you start up the machine and the drum turns the laundry will swish around in the mucky water. If a particular machine just drains the water when you advance it on though and doesn't turn the drum until the water has drained away this wouldn't be an issue. However, I'm not sure how just soaking would remove anything as rinsing is presumably effected by forcing clean water through the fabric. Maybe if they were soaking in a large amount of water but not the small amounts currently used.
I can’t see rinse hold helping because even if suspending them in water somehow removed more detergent from the laundry as soon as you start up the machine and the drum turns the laundry will swish around in the mucky water.
If a particular machine just drains the water when you advance it on though and doesn’t turn the drum until the water has drained away this wouldn’t be an issue. However, I’m not sure how just soaking would remove anything as rinsing is presumably effected by forcing clean water through the fabric. Maybe if they were soaking in a large amount of water but not the small amounts currently used.
0 replies I SAY BRING BACK THE TWIN TUBS . I HAVE JUST GOT A HOTPOINT TWIN TUB FROM THE HEART FOUNDATION. AND GET ALL THE WASHING DONE IN ONE DAY. AND RINSE IN HOT WATER. AND BOIL ALL THE WHITES..
I SAY BRING BACK THE TWIN TUBS . I HAVE JUST GOT A HOTPOINT TWIN TUB FROM THE HEART FOUNDATION. AND GET ALL THE WASHING DONE IN ONE DAY. AND RINSE IN HOT WATER.
AND BOIL ALL THE WHITES..
0 replies Fabric conditioner reduces the absorbency of towels and is also unnecessary if tumble drying Environmental tip: Save on fabric conditioner
Fabric conditioner reduces the absorbency of towels and is also unnecessary if tumble drying Environmental tip: Save on fabric conditioner
0 replies As you say half loads usually require less detergent. You should only need to use the recommended amount according to the size of the load and the soiling and the hardness of your water. Do you use fabric conditioner on towels btw?
As you say half loads usually require less detergent. You should only need to use the recommended amount according to the size of the load and the soiling and the hardness of your water. Do you use fabric conditioner on towels btw?
0 replies Hi. There are no problems with detergent being taken in during the rinses. The problem with too much foam always happens if I'm washing towels alone or if I must wash a small load of other items. It can sometimes happen if the items are so-called "lightly soiled". Washing a FULL load of mixed items is fine, with no excess foam created. I believe you must use just under half the recommended amount of detergent if washing a small load or about half a drum of towels. I could wash a full drum of towels, but the washing machine has trouble rinsing them all, as the water gets absorbed by the towels and the stupid thing won't add any more water, even if I run cycles without detergent. Today's "eco friendly" and "water saving" washing machines don't compensate for "real world" conditions. For example, wash a full load of towels and the washing machine still uses the bare minimum amount of water during washing and rinsing cycles. Towels need more water in order to rinse properly, not just soak it all up until you have barely an inch of rinsing water in the drum. I've seen it myself - a few drum rotations and the water disappears into the towels! The other problem is about today's laundry detergents. They don't use enough foam inhibiting ingredients. If they invented a laundry detergent that was "suds free" and it was marketed as non-foaming, I'm sure the public would be happier never too see masses of white foam again! Does anyone else have this excessive foaming problem that hampers rinsing? Does this happen more often in areas of the UK where the water is soft?
Hi. There are no problems with detergent being taken in during the rinses.
The problem with too much foam always happens if I’m washing towels alone or if I must wash a small load of other items. It can sometimes happen if the items are so-called “lightly soiled”.
Washing a FULL load of mixed items is fine, with no excess foam created.
I believe you must use just under half the recommended amount of detergent if washing a small load or about half a drum of towels. I could wash a full drum of towels, but the washing machine has trouble rinsing them all, as the water gets absorbed by the towels and the stupid thing won’t add any more water, even if I run cycles without detergent.
Today’s “eco friendly” and “water saving” washing machines don’t compensate for “real world” conditions. For example, wash a full load of towels and the washing machine still uses the bare minimum amount of water during washing and rinsing cycles. Towels need more water in order to rinse properly, not just soak it all up until you have barely an inch of rinsing water in the drum. I’ve seen it myself – a few drum rotations and the water disappears into the towels!
The other problem is about today’s laundry detergents. They don’t use enough foam inhibiting ingredients. If they invented a laundry detergent that was “suds free” and it was marketed as non-foaming, I’m sure the public would be happier never too see masses of white foam again!
Does anyone else have this excessive foaming problem that hampers rinsing? Does this happen more often in areas of the UK where the water is soft?
0 replies I'm STILL having problems with excess foaming when washing towels or small loads and it's driving me mad!! Even adding the detergent to the pre-wash only (no extra detergent added for the main wash) DOESN'T solve the problem. It's a nightmare to rinse off the foam!! From now on, when I have to wash small loads or towels, I will be using just under HALF the recommended amount of detergent, contrary to the advice about less detergent being bad for washing machines. I will only use the recommended amount for full loads. Any stains I will pre-treat with a stain remover spray. I've tried several detergents and I can now conclude that modern laundry detergents create too much foam, even when the correct measure is used. As mentioned further up on comment #59, dishwasher detergents don't create excessive foam (or if they do, it's very rare and I've never had that problem), so why don't they use the same anti-foaming ingredients in laundry detergent? I know that net curtains are a pain for creating too much foam. I think I will use something else when washing the nets next time, not any kind of laundry detergent. Maybe soak them in a bucket of lukewarm water with a few denture cleaning tablets, at least there won't be masses of foam to deal with.
I’m STILL having problems with excess foaming when washing towels or small loads and it’s driving me mad!! Even adding the detergent to the pre-wash only (no extra detergent added for the main wash) DOESN’T solve the problem. It’s a nightmare to rinse off the foam!!
From now on, when I have to wash small loads or towels, I will be using just under HALF the recommended amount of detergent, contrary to the advice about less detergent being bad for washing machines. I will only use the recommended amount for full loads. Any stains I will pre-treat with a stain remover spray.
I’ve tried several detergents and I can now conclude that modern laundry detergents create too much foam, even when the correct measure is used. As mentioned further up on comment #59, dishwasher detergents don’t create excessive foam (or if they do, it’s very rare and I’ve never had that problem), so why don’t they use the same anti-foaming ingredients in laundry detergent?
I know that net curtains are a pain for creating too much foam. I think I will use something else when washing the nets next time, not any kind of laundry detergent. Maybe soak them in a bucket of lukewarm water with a few denture cleaning tablets, at least there won’t be masses of foam to deal with.
0 replies Thanks for the links guys. The spare parts site is easier to use than the one I was looking at. I have yet to ask a Bosch engineer to look at my machine, which I suppose I should do before giving up with it. I've been putting it off because I'm worried they won't take my concerns very seriously. However I read somewhere recently that Bosch are going to use induction motors in their new washers, so maybe other customers have objected to the whistling noise as well. I don't know if any manufacturers are re-thinking their attitude to rinsing yet though. I've realised that I can live with any replacement washer having a brushed motor as long as it also has a timer so I can run it overnight. I run this one overnight and I don't hear it. I would prefer to be able to use it anytime, but I can manage with just running it overnight. As long as it rinses better, it will still be an improvement, and at the end of the day it's the quality of the washing and rinsing that matters most. Michelle
Thanks for the links guys. The spare parts site is easier to use than the one I was looking at.
I have yet to ask a Bosch engineer to look at my machine, which I suppose I should do before giving up with it. I’ve been putting it off because I’m worried they won’t take my concerns very seriously. However I read somewhere recently that Bosch are going to use induction motors in their new washers, so maybe other customers have objected to the whistling noise as well. I don’t know if any manufacturers are re-thinking their attitude to rinsing yet though.
I’ve realised that I can live with any replacement washer having a brushed motor as long as it also has a timer so I can run it overnight. I run this one overnight and I don’t hear it. I would prefer to be able to use it anytime, but I can manage with just running it overnight. As long as it rinses better, it will still be an improvement, and at the end of the day it’s the quality of the washing and rinsing that matters most.
Michelle
0 replies I can understand the frustration from hlking. Re-running programmes without detergent does take longer and now I've got used to doing this without thinking about it (and getting on with 101 things that need doing everyday, whilst leaving the washing machine running). I wish you good luck in getting a Which? recommended washing machine that washes and rinses properly. Fortunately, Which? tell you BEFORE buying whether a washing machine washes and rinses properly. Maybe the washing machines that Which? say are "good" at rinsing have an "extra rinsing" feature to enhance rinsing that bit more? I'm hoping the next serious of Watchdog will cover this topic and make the manufacturer's wake up to the problem. Watchdog: https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b006mg74
I can understand the frustration from hlking. Re-running programmes without detergent does take longer and now I’ve got used to doing this without thinking about it (and getting on with 101 things that need doing everyday, whilst leaving the washing machine running).
I wish you good luck in getting a Which? recommended washing machine that washes and rinses properly. Fortunately, Which? tell you BEFORE buying whether a washing machine washes and rinses properly. Maybe the washing machines that Which? say are “good” at rinsing have an “extra rinsing” feature to enhance rinsing that bit more?
I’m hoping the next serious of Watchdog will cover this topic and make the manufacturer’s wake up to the problem.
0 replies Thanks for that Oliver. I can confirm that as Oliver says, a motor with carbon brushes doesn't have to be noisy, even Miele washing machines sometimes have brushes and are very quiet. Cheap motors are more likely to be noisy though and Bosch are unfortunately quite cheap these days .
Thanks for that Oliver. I can confirm that as Oliver says, a motor with carbon brushes doesn’t have to be noisy, even Miele washing machines sometimes have brushes and are very quiet. Cheap motors are more likely to be noisy though and Bosch are unfortunately quite cheap these days .
0 replies I have read through this thread with great dismay. As a busy mum of 11 month old triplets I need a relaible machine that is good at EVERYTHING you would expect of a washing machine - and to me that includes the fundamentals of washing and rinsing!! And with the volume of washing that I'm now doing, it must be reliable. One of the kids is starting to show signs of developing eczema so I'm even more interested in rinse capability (I have always used non-bio gel). I'm currently used liquitabs as my drawer no longer empties - I have given it a good scrubbing on several occasions to no avail. We inherited the machine with the house so I have no idea how old it is (am even unsure as to model as it's integrated and just has a stylised 'A' on the front). In addition to the drawer problems one of the progams is now also broken, so I think it's just slowly disintegrating under the strain! I don't have the time to do many of the suggestions listed above, and feel quite indignant that I should have to - but is the consensus that these are the only options? I'm a subscriber to Which so started my search there, but in view of the above, I'm now not going to spend neary 700 quid on the bosch. Looks like I may have to get ripped off with the nearly as expensive AEG Electrolux or Neff. Depending on how I get on, I won't hesitate to try and raise the profile of this via Watchdog. In the meantime, fingers crossed. Wish me luck with my purchase....
I have read through this thread with great dismay. As a busy mum of 11 month old triplets I need a relaible machine that is good at EVERYTHING you would expect of a washing machine – and to me that includes the fundamentals of washing and rinsing!! And with the volume of washing that I’m now doing, it must be reliable.
One of the kids is starting to show signs of developing eczema so I’m even more interested in rinse capability (I have always used non-bio gel).
I’m currently used liquitabs as my drawer no longer empties – I have given it a good scrubbing on several occasions to no avail.
We inherited the machine with the house so I have no idea how old it is (am even unsure as to model as it’s integrated and just has a stylised ‘A’ on the front). In addition to the drawer problems one of the progams is now also broken, so I think it’s just slowly disintegrating under the strain!
I don’t have the time to do many of the suggestions listed above, and feel quite indignant that I should have to – but is the consensus that these are the only options?
I’m a subscriber to Which so started my search there, but in view of the above, I’m now not going to spend neary 700 quid on the bosch. Looks like I may have to get ripped off with the nearly as expensive AEG Electrolux or Neff.
Depending on how I get on, I won’t hesitate to try and raise the profile of this via Watchdog.
In the meantime, fingers crossed. Wish me luck with my purchase….
0 replies This didn't happen before these eco/green stipulationsIn came about. Why have manufacturers sacrificed performance in order to meet this criteria - thus making machines unfit for purpose, and then blatantly denying this by making comments like "All things coming out of a Washing Machine have to be ironed" Well how does one iron a ribbed jumper with deep seated creases which was washed following manufacturers instructions. Incidentally this garment which has had many perfect crease free washes in my previous machine is now ruined and the makers still insist there is no problem. How does one get redress?
This didn’t happen before these eco/green stipulationsIn came about. Why have manufacturers sacrificed performance in order to meet this criteria – thus making machines unfit for purpose, and then blatantly denying this by making comments like “All things coming out of a Washing Machine have to be ironed” Well how does one iron a ribbed jumper with deep seated creases which was washed following manufacturers instructions. Incidentally this garment which has had many perfect crease free washes in my previous machine is now ruined and the makers still insist there is no problem. How does one get redress?
0 replies A reply to Oliver's comment #176 and for anyone trying to re-run programmes without detergent... Re-running programmes/cycles without detergent or re-running rinses (if the washing machine has a separate rinse-only programme) is a matter of trial and error. In my case, re-running a water guzzling cycle without detergent after the first spin works fine. It spins between rinses, uses extra water and only takes about 1 hour and 30 minutes. The only thing I have to do after this second programme is select the "Spin" cycle with the highest spin speed, as the second programme without detergent doesn't spin fast enough at the end. Provided the delicate programmes spin between rinses, use more water than the standard cotton programme and don't take too long, re-running cycles without detergent may (or may not) work for everyone. You have to try several methods until you find what method works best on your washing machine. I think gentler agitation is an advantage when rinsing, as too vigorous agitation will create more foam. Finally, I think I will try the pre-wash idea (that is, adding detergent for the pre-wash only and none for the main wash) if I'm washing a small load or towels, as this may prevent or reduce the excessive foaming. It will mean waiting even longer for the washing machine to finish!!
A reply to Oliver’s comment #176 and for anyone trying to re-run programmes without detergent…
Re-running programmes/cycles without detergent or re-running rinses (if the washing machine has a separate rinse-only programme) is a matter of trial and error. In my case, re-running a water guzzling cycle without detergent after the first spin works fine. It spins between rinses, uses extra water and only takes about 1 hour and 30 minutes. The only thing I have to do after this second programme is select the “Spin” cycle with the highest spin speed, as the second programme without detergent doesn’t spin fast enough at the end.
Provided the delicate programmes spin between rinses, use more water than the standard cotton programme and don’t take too long, re-running cycles without detergent may (or may not) work for everyone. You have to try several methods until you find what method works best on your washing machine.
I think gentler agitation is an advantage when rinsing, as too vigorous agitation will create more foam.
Finally, I think I will try the pre-wash idea (that is, adding detergent for the pre-wash only and none for the main wash) if I’m washing a small load or towels, as this may prevent or reduce the excessive foaming. It will mean waiting even longer for the washing machine to finish!!
0 replies My Hotpoint is an Aquarius WML540G (hotpoint parts) There are some videos on YouTube at HooverAC110, this will help show the model
My Hotpoint is an Aquarius WML540G (hotpoint parts)
There are some videos on YouTube at HooverAC110, this will help show the model
0 replies Don't keep it to your self Gary. What model is your Hotpoint?
Don’t keep it to your self Gary. What model is your Hotpoint?
0 replies Hi again, I think that my Hotpoint is brilliant the way is rinses the laundry, especially with the 1000rpm intermediate spin in between EVERY rinse (even with Extra Rinse which I use nearly all the time) I just hate the fact people put Hotpoint down all the time, when I couldn't care as it washes, rinses and spins just fine :D
Hi again,
I think that my Hotpoint is brilliant the way is rinses the laundry, especially with the 1000rpm intermediate spin in between EVERY rinse (even with Extra Rinse which I use nearly all the time) I just hate the fact people put Hotpoint down all the time, when I couldn’t care as it washes, rinses and spins just fine :D
0 replies Hi all, is me again, I feel so rude about forgetting about this whole thread, just found it again after sorting out my Hotmail! I still have to say that, despite being a water efficient machine, our Miele rinses superbly compared to our other older machines - we very rarely use water plus or the extra rinse as often I'm far too much in a rush to wait an extra 15 minutes. We use Ariel or Persil (whichever is on offer really), and we have no skin problems even though 3 of us, myself included, have severe eczema, which can be heavily aggravated by perfumed shower gels, softeners etc. However, my sister suffers from extreme eczema, yet she uses Fairy in a modern Zanussi Essential. Curiously, I noticed the other day when she had the Extra Rinse option selected, that even though adding 2 or 3 rinses, it won't spin after the rinse cycles AT ALL (this is on cottons 40, which should spin after each rinse), and only does a brief, very slow spin before the softener rinse, before doing the normal 1200rpm spin at the end - thus, giving no better results than if she didn't press extra rinse, as this would mean at least the washer will spin between rinses to get excess detergent out. I think I mentioned before, but I'll say it again, and I firmly believe it's not just the water level which is a major factor during rinsing, but the interim spins too. One of the reasons why I personally think our Miele rinses so well is that it spins at 1000rpm for about 3 or 4 minutes after the wash (yes, I've been sad enough to fiddle with the spin selector mid cycle to see how fast it spins at!), and will spin at 1000rpm between the first rinse and the softener rinse. It makes sense if you think about it that most of the detergent is being spun out after the wash, hence less water and rinses being needed. I've noticed with Hotpoints and our old Bosch Exxcel in operation that the spins are quite brief and slow between the wash and the rinses - the Hotpoints/Indesits I've seen just do a series of bursts and a short spin rather than a full on spin after the wash - which in turn would hinder rinsing as more sudsy water is remaining in the load by the time the rinse cycle has started - this being even more exagerrated in my sisters Zanussi with the extra rinse being selected, as excess detergent and suds aren't being removed at all before the rinse phase begins. I think if more machines did a decent, long, fast spin after the wash and between the rinses, like our Miele, then the lower water levels wouldn't matter, however it seems some manufacturers like Hotpoint, Indesit and Zanussi have cut down the water level, but not altered the interim spins accordingly. Simon - we've used Sainsbury's and Asda's own before, and they are fair. However, we've always noticed that if we've been using own brand stuff and switch back to the main 3, i.e. Persil/Ariel/Bold, that stuff seems so much cleaner and whiter! BTW using liquid all the time will result in dingy whites, as optical brighteners alone don't do as good a job as when they are in tandem with oxygen bleach in powders and tablets. Jon
Hi all, is me again, I feel so rude about forgetting about this whole thread, just found it again after sorting out my Hotmail!
I still have to say that, despite being a water efficient machine, our Miele rinses superbly compared to our other older machines – we very rarely use water plus or the extra rinse as often I’m far too much in a rush to wait an extra 15 minutes. We use Ariel or Persil (whichever is on offer really), and we have no skin problems even though 3 of us, myself included, have severe eczema, which can be heavily aggravated by perfumed shower gels, softeners etc. However, my sister suffers from extreme eczema, yet she uses Fairy in a modern Zanussi Essential. Curiously, I noticed the other day when she had the Extra Rinse option selected, that even though adding 2 or 3 rinses, it won’t spin after the rinse cycles AT ALL (this is on cottons 40, which should spin after each rinse), and only does a brief, very slow spin before the softener rinse, before doing the normal 1200rpm spin at the end – thus, giving no better results than if she didn’t press extra rinse, as this would mean at least the washer will spin between rinses to get excess detergent out.
I think I mentioned before, but I’ll say it again, and I firmly believe it’s not just the water level which is a major factor during rinsing, but the interim spins too. One of the reasons why I personally think our Miele rinses so well is that it spins at 1000rpm for about 3 or 4 minutes after the wash (yes, I’ve been sad enough to fiddle with the spin selector mid cycle to see how fast it spins at!), and will spin at 1000rpm between the first rinse and the softener rinse. It makes sense if you think about it that most of the detergent is being spun out after the wash, hence less water and rinses being needed. I’ve noticed with Hotpoints and our old Bosch Exxcel in operation that the spins are quite brief and slow between the wash and the rinses – the Hotpoints/Indesits I’ve seen just do a series of bursts and a short spin rather than a full on spin after the wash – which in turn would hinder rinsing as more sudsy water is remaining in the load by the time the rinse cycle has started – this being even more exagerrated in my sisters Zanussi with the extra rinse being selected, as excess detergent and suds aren’t being removed at all before the rinse phase begins.
I think if more machines did a decent, long, fast spin after the wash and between the rinses, like our Miele, then the lower water levels wouldn’t matter, however it seems some manufacturers like Hotpoint, Indesit and Zanussi have cut down the water level, but not altered the interim spins accordingly.
Simon – we’ve used Sainsbury’s and Asda’s own before, and they are fair. However, we’ve always noticed that if we’ve been using own brand stuff and switch back to the main 3, i.e. Persil/Ariel/Bold, that stuff seems so much cleaner and whiter! BTW using liquid all the time will result in dingy whites, as optical brighteners alone don’t do as good a job as when they are in tandem with oxygen bleach in powders and tablets.
Jon
0 replies Warm or hot water is required to rinse clothes effectively. My husband explained it to me in a scientific way, which tbh I can't remember exactly what he said, but it was something about the molecules in the water when heated up become agitated and start jiggling about, thus rinsing in warm or hot water is far far more effective than rinsing in cold. You don't have to take my word for it. You can try it for yourself. Take a cotton tea towel, wash it by hand in the correct amount of detergent, then rinse it in cold water and keep rinsing until the water runs completely clear - it will take you some time because the water is cold. Then plunge that tea towel, well rung out, into a bowl of hot water, and you will see for yourself what is scientific fact !! These days you cannot find a washing machine, except a very old second hand, that will rinse in hot water. The only way to do this is to run your machine for a second time on a warm or hot wash with no detergent. But if you are on Economy 7, as I am, this is impractical. However, it is what I am going to have to do once my husband has repaired my Miele - he has taken the drum out, and bits are lying all over my kitchen floor whilst we wait for some bearing or other to be delivered!
Warm or hot water is required to rinse clothes effectively. My husband explained it to me in a scientific way, which tbh I can’t remember exactly what he said, but it was something about the molecules in the water when heated up become agitated and start jiggling about, thus rinsing in warm or hot water is far far more effective than rinsing in cold.
You don’t have to take my word for it. You can try it for yourself. Take a cotton tea towel, wash it by hand in the correct amount of detergent, then rinse it in cold water and keep rinsing until the water runs completely clear – it will take you some time because the water is cold. Then plunge that tea towel, well rung out, into a bowl of hot water, and you will see for yourself what is scientific fact !!
These days you cannot find a washing machine, except a very old second hand, that will rinse in hot water. The only way to do this is to run your machine for a second time on a warm or hot wash with no detergent. But if you are on Economy 7, as I am, this is impractical. However, it is what I am going to have to do once my husband has repaired my Miele – he has taken the drum out, and bits are lying all over my kitchen floor whilst we wait for some bearing or other to be delivered!
0 replies Why do modern detergents create so much foam if you use a little bit too much for the load size? If I use the recommended amount and I don't have a full load, my washing machine will create lots of foam in the last 20 - 30 minutes of the main wash programme. This is particularly a problem if I'm washing towels and also a major problem if I wash hotter than 40 degrees. The hotter water does in fact create more foam, maybe that explains why Nikki Jenkins can see more foam when warmer water is used (comment #166)? Why don't the manufacturers install a foam sensor in every washing machine, so if excess foaming occurs then the appropriate action can be taken? Excess foaming is solved by allowing the suds to slowly settle for about 30 minutes, then spinning the laundry and starting again. I live in a hard water area; I can imagine people living in soft water areas have a major problem with foaming? I'm sure too much foam seriously impairs rinsing?
Why do modern detergents create so much foam if you use a little bit too much for the load size? If I use the recommended amount and I don’t have a full load, my washing machine will create lots of foam in the last 20 – 30 minutes of the main wash programme. This is particularly a problem if I’m washing towels and also a major problem if I wash hotter than 40 degrees. The hotter water does in fact create more foam, maybe that explains why Nikki Jenkins can see more foam when warmer water is used (comment #166)?
Why don’t the manufacturers install a foam sensor in every washing machine, so if excess foaming occurs then the appropriate action can be taken? Excess foaming is solved by allowing the suds to slowly settle for about 30 minutes, then spinning the laundry and starting again.
I live in a hard water area; I can imagine people living in soft water areas have a major problem with foaming? I’m sure too much foam seriously impairs rinsing?
0 replies I expect all these new machines have a small microprocessor to control the washing cycle and water level etc. Mine has a USB plug at the back for communicating with it. It cannot be beyond the wit of some of the very clever people out there to modify the program. If I knew how to do it I would throw out a challenge to the hackers of the world to hack into these things and write a program to make them to wash properly with plenty of water. Any suggestions anyone? --- After all if they can do it with cars, why not washing machines?
I expect all these new machines have a small microprocessor to control the washing cycle
and water level etc. Mine has a USB plug at the back for communicating with it. It cannot
be beyond the wit of some of the very clever people out there to modify the program.
If I knew how to do it I would throw out a challenge to the hackers of the world to hack
into these things and write a program to make them to wash properly with plenty of water.
Any suggestions anyone? — After all if they can do it with cars, why not washing machines?
0 replies I would have thought water is water regarding flushing detergent out of laundry. I would guess laundry is rinsed by flushing away anything loosely attatched and I'm not sure how the temperature of the water affects it significantly. It's the physical action of the water pushing through the laundry and the dilution effect that presumably does the rinsing. If the water is hot or warm it's more likely to create suds by activating the remaining detergent, which may give the impression it's getting more detergent out. It's possible that cold water is just as effective but it doesn't cause excessive sudsing so you don't get the "evidence" of detergent being removed, it's just quietly removed. All I can say is in the UK I'm not aware of any washing machine ever using anything but cold water to rinse and find it hard to imagine that if warm water was better we would have had nearly 70 years of washing machines all rinsing in cold water without at least one of the major manufacturers claiming their washing machine is better at rinsing than all the others because it rinses in warm water. I know if I wash my hands with liquid soap and then rinse it off with warm water it throths up more and seems harder to remove yet if I rinse under cold water it seems to be more effective. However, I've no way of testing if either method is actually more effective.
I would have thought water is water regarding flushing detergent out of laundry. I would guess laundry is rinsed by flushing away anything loosely attatched and I’m not sure how the temperature of the water affects it significantly. It’s the physical action of the water pushing through the laundry and the dilution effect that presumably does the rinsing.
If the water is hot or warm it’s more likely to create suds by activating the remaining detergent, which may give the impression it’s getting more detergent out. It’s possible that cold water is just as effective but it doesn’t cause excessive sudsing so you don’t get the “evidence” of detergent being removed, it’s just quietly removed.
All I can say is in the UK I’m not aware of any washing machine ever using anything but cold water to rinse and find it hard to imagine that if warm water was better we would have had nearly 70 years of washing machines all rinsing in cold water without at least one of the major manufacturers claiming their washing machine is better at rinsing than all the others because it rinses in warm water.
I know if I wash my hands with liquid soap and then rinse it off with warm water it throths up more and seems harder to remove yet if I rinse under cold water it seems to be more effective. However, I’ve no way of testing if either method is actually more effective.
0 replies I don't give a fig what anyone says ... you cannot rinse properly with cold water. This is a basic scientific fact. You need at least warm water to rinse effectively, end of. In the old days, washing machines rinsed properly. ALL the machines I have ever had had a hot and cold rinse ... from memory, you could choose. I think that was an Indesit I had that you could choose hot or cold rinse. I will not ever in a million years accept that you can rinse clothes effectively with cold water. Try it for yourself - plunge a soapy cotton garment into cold water, rinse it until the water runs clear. Then plunge that same garment into hot water - it will be soapy.
I don’t give a fig what anyone says … you cannot rinse properly with cold water. This is a basic scientific fact. You need at least warm water to rinse effectively, end of.
In the old days, washing machines rinsed properly. ALL the machines I have ever had had a hot and cold rinse … from memory, you could choose. I think that was an Indesit I had that you could choose hot or cold rinse.
I will not ever in a million years accept that you can rinse clothes effectively with cold water. Try it for yourself – plunge a soapy cotton garment into cold water, rinse it until the water runs clear. Then plunge that same garment into hot water – it will be soapy.
0 replies I have to say for me buying a 15 year old machine was the only solution I could think of at the time and am still none the wiser today. I do have to disagree and say there are plenty of parts still available for my Bosch, even though some at a price, £256.00 for a motor for example. But can you put a price on your health? Plus my Bosch can do a 60oC cotton wash in about 1 hour 15 minutes, it takes a modern machine anywhere between 2-3 hours to do a 60oC and then all the extra re-rinsing of the load and extra final spin, this could take you up to 4 hours, I haven’t the time or inclination to put up with stupid wash times like that, and some will still not rinse properly. Also could damage your clothing. To Nikki Jenkins, my Bosch uses cold water to rinse (4 rinses 1/3 up the door) and does rinse properly. I suffer from servere dermatitis and eczema and react to the smallest amount of detergent residue. However there could be something in the hot rinsing theory, my dishwasher is on a hot water supply so does rinse in hot water and the pots do not smell of detergent but when it was on a cold supply the pots smelt very strongly, so it does rinse better in hot water. Personally I would feel rinsing in hot water in a washing machine could cause the soap to sud back up, whereas cold water seems to kill it more, I could be wrong, it is my own theory. What about connecting your washing machine to a hot only supply so it rinses in hot water? This would only be acceptable if your water temperature is not above 35/40oC though, or it could damage your laundry or possibly the machine. Plus you would not be able to do low temperature washes if the incoming supply is too hot, again could be wrong only my own thoughts. Also never heard of a high water level damaging bearings, overloading may do as you also have the weight of the extra water to damage the water seal. All the best, Oliver.
I have to say for me buying a 15 year old machine was the only solution I could think of at the time and am still none the wiser today. I do have to disagree and say there are plenty of parts still available for my Bosch, even though some at a price, £256.00 for a motor for example. But can you put a price on your health?
Plus my Bosch can do a 60oC cotton wash in about 1 hour 15 minutes, it takes a modern machine anywhere between 2-3 hours to do a 60oC and then all the extra re-rinsing of the load and extra final spin, this could take you up to 4 hours, I haven’t the time or inclination to put up with stupid wash times like that, and some will still not rinse properly. Also could damage your clothing.
To Nikki Jenkins, my Bosch uses cold water to rinse (4 rinses 1/3 up the door) and does rinse properly. I suffer from servere dermatitis and eczema and react to the smallest amount of detergent residue. However there could be something in the hot rinsing theory, my dishwasher is on a hot water supply so does rinse in hot water and the pots do not smell of detergent but when it was on a cold supply the pots smelt very strongly, so it does rinse better in hot water. Personally I would feel rinsing in hot water in a washing machine could cause the soap to sud back up, whereas cold water seems to kill it more, I could be wrong, it is my own theory. What about connecting your washing machine to a hot only supply so it rinses in hot water? This would only be acceptable if your water temperature is not above 35/40oC though, or it could damage your laundry or possibly the machine. Plus you would not be able to do low temperature washes if the incoming supply is too hot, again could be wrong only my own thoughts.
Also never heard of a high water level damaging bearings, overloading may do as you also have the weight of the extra water to damage the water seal.
All the best,
Oliver.
0 replies Oh dear, if buying an old washing machine is not the long term answer, we're stuck with new ones that use too little water for rinsing. Until the public complain like mad to the washing machine manufacturers, BBC Watchdog etc. then rinsing will never improve and people's health will continue to suffer as a result!! Simply pressing the "extra rinse" or similar button every time does not work on its own. I've tried that. Please don't put up with bad rinsing, do something about it.
Oh dear, if buying an old washing machine is not the long term answer, we’re stuck with new ones that use too little water for rinsing.
Until the public complain like mad to the washing machine manufacturers, BBC Watchdog etc. then rinsing will never improve and people’s health will continue to suffer as a result!!
Simply pressing the “extra rinse” or similar button every time does not work on its own. I’ve tried that.
Please don’t put up with bad rinsing, do something about it.
0 replies Quote from Nikki Jenkins Our machine is a Miele and the engineer modified it to allow higher water levels. I think he made the tube longer to allow higher water levels. Miele washing machines can be reprogrammed by Miele engineers to take in more water. They are designed so that their engineers can modify the software running the machines in response to changing requirements. Firstly this did not help because you need warm or hot water to rinse effectively not just more water. Someone said warm water may be better for rinsing but virtually all washing machines rinse in cold water and always have even back in the days when they rinsed much better. Secondly because the water level was often up to the centre of the drum over time it seems water got into the bearings destroying them making the machine uneconomic to repair. The bearings are protected by a special seal and the Miele seal should be one of the best. No water should be able to get past the seal even if the water level was up to the top of the door. Having said that clearly these seals can still fail, especially when old, and the lower the water level the less pressure would be put on the seal.
Quote from Nikki Jenkins
Our machine is a Miele and the engineer modified it to allow higher water levels. I think he made the tube longer to allow higher water levels.
Miele washing machines can be reprogrammed by Miele engineers to take in more water. They are designed so that their engineers can modify the software running the machines in response to changing requirements.
Firstly this did not help because you need warm or hot water to rinse effectively not just more water.
Someone said warm water may be better for rinsing but virtually all washing machines rinse in cold water and always have even back in the days when they rinsed much better.
Secondly because the water level was often up to the centre of the drum over time it seems water got into the bearings destroying them making the machine uneconomic to repair.
The bearings are protected by a special seal and the Miele seal should be one of the best. No water should be able to get past the seal even if the water level was up to the top of the door. Having said that clearly these seals can still fail, especially when old, and the lower the water level the less pressure would be put on the seal.
0 replies Washing machines in the 90s used more water on rinses than today so might still be better at rinsing but by then they'd started reducing water levels. The 70s and early to mid 80s were the days when they filled half way up the door glass. I just think buying a 15 year old washing machine to get better rinsing will only ever be a very temporary solution as you just wont be able to keep one running long. Parts will be obsolete.
Washing machines in the 90s used more water on rinses than today so might still be better at rinsing but by then they’d started reducing water levels. The 70s and early to mid 80s were the days when they filled half way up the door glass.
I just think buying a 15 year old washing machine to get better rinsing will only ever be a very temporary solution as you just wont be able to keep one running long. Parts will be obsolete.
0 replies Well actually some machines made during the last 20 years did work pretty well. My Indesit 1263 worked from April 96 till Oct 09. and gave a satisfactory wash and rinsed well. We only scrapped it because the bearings were noisy. Oh how I wish I had them replaced or even done them myself!
Well actually some machines made during the last 20 years did work pretty well. My Indesit 1263 worked from April 96 till Oct 09. and gave a satisfactory wash and rinsed well. We only scrapped it because the bearings were noisy. Oh how I wish I had them replaced or even done them myself!
0 replies Quote from Rod Fryatt: I want to try and buy an older machine that uses plenty of water to rinse properly. Can anyone please tell me when the new generation of water rationed machines came on the market? In other words, how old does a machine have to be to wash properly with plenty of water? Too old. There can hardly be any still running. It was the early 80s I think when washing machines filled half way up the door glass on rinses and a third of they way up on wash. It's just not a viable answer. I have a new Indesit IWC6165 which gives a very poor wash.. Which? have tested and reviewed this machine and it's one of the many that's not good enough at rinsing (at least according to Which?) However, they were happy with it's cottons wash results. They said the drum is on the small side though so make sure you aren't overloading it which would degrade wash (and rinse) performance)
Quote from Rod Fryatt:
I want to try and buy an older machine that uses plenty of water to rinse properly. Can anyone please tell me when the new generation of water rationed machines came on the market? In other words, how old does a machine have to be to wash properly with plenty of water?
Too old. There can hardly be any still running. It was the early 80s I think when washing machines filled half way up the door glass on rinses and a third of they way up on wash. It’s just not a viable answer.
I have a new Indesit IWC6165 which gives a very poor wash..
Which? have tested and reviewed this machine and it’s one of the many that’s not good enough at rinsing (at least according to Which?) However, they were happy with it’s cottons wash results. They said the drum is on the small side though so make sure you aren’t overloading it which would degrade wash (and rinse) performance)
0 replies The repair men are given a stock set of answers to regurgitate in response to rinsing complaints so dont expect much. Our machine is a Miele and the engineer modified it to allow higher water levels. I am told that the level sensor works in this way: As the water level rises it compresses air in a tube. A pressure sensor at the end of the tube (above the drum) is then activated. I think he made the tube longer to allow higher water levels. Firstly this did not help because you need warm or hot water to rinse effectively - not just more water. Secondly because the water level was often up to the centre of the drum over time it seems water got into the bearings destroying them making the machine uneconomic to repair.
The repair men are given a stock set of answers to regurgitate in response to rinsing complaints so dont expect much. Our machine is a Miele and the engineer modified it to allow higher water levels. I am told that the level sensor works in this way: As the water level rises it compresses air in a tube. A pressure sensor at the end of the tube (above the drum) is then activated. I think he made the tube longer to allow higher water levels.
Firstly this did not help because you need warm or hot water to rinse effectively – not just more water. Secondly because the water level was often up to the centre of the drum over time it seems water got into the bearings destroying them making the machine uneconomic to repair.
0 replies If it is any help to anyone. I have a new Indesit IWC6165 which gives a very poor wash. I have found that adding 4 or 5 litres of hot water with the washing does help. Of course it does nothing to help the rinsing. Hotpoint and the retailer deny any problem with the rinsing of course. I have emailed BBC R4 "You & Yours" as well as the Watchdog programme, and would urge others to do the same. No reply as yet. My repeated emails to Hotpoint may have got through to someone as they have just telephoned me to say they are sending an engineer for a third visit. Hope he is not like the others ----- just programmed to say "No problem no problem" !
If it is any help to anyone. I have a new Indesit IWC6165 which gives a very poor wash. I have found that adding 4 or 5 litres of hot water with the washing does help. Of course it does nothing to help the rinsing. Hotpoint and the retailer deny any problem with the rinsing of course.
I have emailed BBC R4 “You & Yours” as well as the Watchdog programme, and would urge others to do the same. No reply as yet.
My repeated emails to Hotpoint may have got through to someone as they have just telephoned me to say they are sending an engineer for a third visit. Hope he is not like the others —– just programmed to say “No problem no problem” !
0 replies If a modern washing machine kicks the bucket, you really are better off replacing it with an old washing machine that looks at least 20 years old. If it's been repaired, it will rinse properly and these old washing machines were made to be repairable. If you're waiting for your modern washing machine to self destruct, you could make it work harder - and rinse better - by running a water guzzling cycle without detergent, once the first spin after the main wash finishes. Alternatively, re-run the machine's rinses when it's finished. Use clear vinegar if necessary. Hope that helps you Rod Fryatt and other readers too.
If a modern washing machine kicks the bucket, you really are better off replacing it with an old washing machine that looks at least 20 years old. If it’s been repaired, it will rinse properly and these old washing machines were made to be repairable.
If you’re waiting for your modern washing machine to self destruct, you could make it work harder – and rinse better – by running a water guzzling cycle without detergent, once the first spin after the main wash finishes. Alternatively, re-run the machine’s rinses when it’s finished. Use clear vinegar if necessary.
Hope that helps you Rod Fryatt and other readers too.
0 replies My husband is a retired medical scientist and makes the following point: recent decades have seen a meteoric rise in the incidence of asthma which the scientists have struggled to explain. Naturally if clothes contain washing powder (including the additives such as enzymes) not only can this affect the skin by direct contact but also the wearer is constantly breathing in the powder into the lungs. Bed clothes contaminated with washing powder would of course have a similar effect. If you disturb dry, partially rinsed clothes in a shaft of sunlight you will see for yourself what you are breathing in. How do we know that this problem does not at least partly underpin the asthma epidemic? Washing powder enzymes are known to cause asthma. See here: An outbreak of asthma in a modern detergent factory DrP Cullinan MDa, , , JM Harris MSca, ProfAJ Newman Taylor FRCPa, AM Holea, M Jones PhDa, F Barnes PhDa and G Jolliffe MRCGPa Department of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, Imperial College School of Medicine, London SW3 6LR, UK Summary The striking decrease in the occurrence of protease-induced occupational asthma in the detergent industry has been attributed to enzyme encapsulation. We report an outbreak of asthma, at least equal in size to those reported in the 1960s, in a modem European factory which has exclusively used encapsulated enzymes. A survey revealed that enzyme sensitisation and work-related respiratory symptoms were positively correlated with airborne enzyme exposure. We suggest that encapsulation alone is insufficient to prevent enzyme-induced allergy and asthma. It would be ironic if the environmental do-gooders have contributed to one of the biggest health issues in the world?
My husband is a retired medical scientist and makes the following point: recent decades have seen a meteoric rise in the incidence of asthma which the scientists have struggled to explain. Naturally if clothes contain washing powder (including the additives such as enzymes) not only can this affect the skin by direct contact but also the wearer is constantly breathing in the powder into the lungs. Bed clothes contaminated with washing powder would of course have a similar effect. If you disturb dry, partially rinsed clothes in a shaft of sunlight you will see for yourself what you are breathing in. How do we know that this problem does not at least partly underpin the asthma epidemic? Washing powder enzymes are known to cause asthma. See here:
An outbreak of asthma in a modern detergent factory
DrP Cullinan MDa, , , JM Harris MSca, ProfAJ Newman Taylor FRCPa, AM Holea, M Jones PhDa, F Barnes PhDa and G Jolliffe MRCGPa
Department of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, Imperial College School of Medicine, London SW3 6LR, UK
Summary
The striking decrease in the occurrence of protease-induced occupational asthma in the detergent industry has been attributed to enzyme encapsulation. We report an outbreak of asthma, at least equal in size to those reported in the 1960s, in a modem European factory which has exclusively used encapsulated enzymes. A survey revealed that enzyme sensitisation and work-related respiratory symptoms were positively correlated with airborne enzyme exposure. We suggest that encapsulation alone is insufficient to prevent enzyme-induced allergy and asthma.
It would be ironic if the environmental do-gooders have contributed to one of the biggest health issues in the world?
0 replies Thanks for your comment Oliver. I’m going to look at a Bosch this morning. Don’t know which model it is yet. I’m currently in the middle of acrimonious communication with Hotpoint about my new Indesit. They keep denying that there is a problem. I have taken the liberty of referring to your communication with them last May. Saying I bet they will have-no record of it. Hope you don’t mind. Having just spent £330 on a new Indesit I am in the position of having to go out and buy an old machine to get a proper wash and will be considerably out of pocket. I have had so many conflicting replies and visits from Hotpoint that I would be interested to hear what dealing you have had with them. Any contact names etc.
Thanks for your comment Oliver. I’m going to look at a Bosch this morning. Don’t know which model it is yet.
I’m currently in the middle of acrimonious communication with Hotpoint about my new Indesit. They keep denying that there is a problem. I have taken the liberty of referring to your communication with them last May. Saying I bet they will have-no record of it. Hope you don’t mind.
Having just spent £330 on a new Indesit I am in the position of having to go out and buy an old machine to get a proper wash and will be considerably out of pocket. I have had so many conflicting replies and visits from Hotpoint that I would be interested to hear what dealing you have had with them. Any contact names etc.
0 replies The Zanussi Jet system is old now, I think they were one of the first to introduce the idea, which was to use less water in the drum but compensate for it by showering the laundry with water pumped into the top of the drum. I don't think it improved wash or rinse efficiency so much as allowed the washing machine to use less water. However, it also added extra hoses and another pump which were extra things to go wrong.
The Zanussi Jet system is old now, I think they were one of the first to introduce the idea, which was to use less water in the drum but compensate for it by showering the laundry with water pumped into the top of the drum.
I don’t think it improved wash or rinse efficiency so much as allowed the washing machine to use less water. However, it also added extra hoses and another pump which were extra things to go wrong.
0 replies I dont know if it's relevant or not,but i just have to add praise for Zanussi. i have had a Zanussi washer for sixteen years and have never had any trouble with it, i have never had cause to have it repaired or anything. The washing machine i had before that was also a Zanussi, which i had for eighteen years, also with no trouble and no repairs.Then last week i had to call out the fire brigade as my machine caught fire, the machine has done a very good job, and owes me nothing, now i have the problem of buying another machine,I want another Zanussi, but i am wondering about the jet system.Can anyone comment on the jet system,if they are any good.
I dont know if it’s relevant or not,but i just have to add praise for Zanussi. i have had a Zanussi washer for sixteen years and have never had any trouble with it, i have never had cause to have it repaired or anything. The washing machine i had before that was also a Zanussi, which i had for eighteen years, also with no trouble and no repairs.Then last week i had to call out the fire brigade as my machine caught fire, the machine has done a very good job, and owes me nothing, now i have the problem of buying another machine,I want another Zanussi, but i am wondering about the jet system.Can anyone comment on the jet system,if they are any good.
0 replies WELL DONE! I think we've managed to achieve something - better rinsing by NOT using the default settings alone (or just adding lots of extra rinsing water) and using clear vinegar in the last rinse if necessary - for towels I use it. I think if enough people complained to BBC Watchdog during its next series, if enough people wrote letters of complaint to all washing machine manufacturers and so on, this rinsing problem could be permanently resolved. If just one manufacturer markets their washing machine as being capable of "proper rinsing" compared its competitors, the other manufacturers will follow suit.
WELL DONE! I think we’ve managed to achieve something – better rinsing by NOT using the default settings alone (or just adding lots of extra rinsing water) and using clear vinegar in the last rinse if necessary – for towels I use it.
I think if enough people complained to BBC Watchdog during its next series, if enough people wrote letters of complaint to all washing machine manufacturers and so on, this rinsing problem could be permanently resolved. If just one manufacturer markets their washing machine as being capable of “proper rinsing” compared its competitors, the other manufacturers will follow suit.
0 replies Since I commented on this blog in October, I now have a Hotpoint Aqualtis AQ9F 49 U (9 Kg capacity) and the good news is that the 'Bed & Bath' cycle seems to work a treat - when using either 1 Persil capsule or 1 Tesco Colours tab! (Haven't tried it with 2 or 3 capsules or tabs.) No soap left in the washed & rinsed laundry AND no sneezing when using the clothes or bedding when it's dry. Also, the 'Shirts' cycle is good - and again no soap left in the clothes after they are washed & rinsed. SO ... I'm going to use one of these cyles for most things. I'm sure both cycles are water guzzling, but that's fine by me if the cycles rinse the clothes thoroughly! Well done to Hotpoint for getting it right with at least 2 of their cycle options on this washing machine!
Since I commented on this blog in October, I now have a Hotpoint Aqualtis AQ9F 49 U (9 Kg capacity) and the good news is that the ‘Bed & Bath’ cycle seems to work a treat – when using either 1 Persil capsule or 1 Tesco Colours tab! (Haven’t tried it with 2 or 3 capsules or tabs.) No soap left in the washed & rinsed laundry AND no sneezing when using the clothes or bedding when it’s dry. Also, the ‘Shirts’ cycle is good – and again no soap left in the clothes after they are washed & rinsed. SO … I’m going to use one of these cyles for most things. I’m sure both cycles are water guzzling, but that’s fine by me if the cycles rinse the clothes thoroughly!
Well done to Hotpoint for getting it right with at least 2 of their cycle options on this washing machine!
0 replies Reading your comment Nikki, I know that re-running "water-guzzling" cycles without detergent is not practical for everyone, however the first 'wash' on the second cycle you run will act as a warm rinse, if you can turn up the temperature high enough - that's safe for the clothes, I hope that works. Comment #47 from Oliver, who bought an older washing machine that uses lots of water, that seems to be the only permanent solution and what I'm considering doing when my washing machine dies one day. For readers who run their washing machines on Economy 7, maybe running the main wash during Economy 7 hours and leaving the washing machine on rinse-hold could help, especially if washing hotter than 40 degrees. Then during the day, re-run a water-guzzling cycle without detergent (but not hotter than 30 or 40 degrees if you're trying to save money). Hope that helps. :) PS I wonder if these "A" ratings only apply to the water-SAVING cycles, since most washing machines have a water-guzzling cycle e.g. "wool", "duvet" etc.?
Reading your comment Nikki, I know that re-running “water-guzzling” cycles without detergent is not practical for everyone, however the first ‘wash’ on the second cycle you run will act as a warm rinse, if you can turn up the temperature high enough – that’s safe for the clothes, I hope that works.
Comment #47 from Oliver, who bought an older washing machine that uses lots of water, that seems to be the only permanent solution and what I’m considering doing when my washing machine dies one day.
For readers who run their washing machines on Economy 7, maybe running the main wash during Economy 7 hours and leaving the washing machine on rinse-hold could help, especially if washing hotter than 40 degrees. Then during the day, re-run a water-guzzling cycle without detergent (but not hotter than 30 or 40 degrees if you’re trying to save money).
Hope that helps. :)
PS I wonder if these “A” ratings only apply to the water-SAVING cycles, since most washing machines have a water-guzzling cycle e.g. “wool”, “duvet” etc.?
0 replies I have tried the "water guzzling" methods, I have tried absolutely everything and have formed the opinion that you cannot rinse properly in cold water. You need hot water to dissolve the detergent, surfactant, whatever you want to call it. I have tried washing the clothes through a complete cycle, just not adding any soap, but that is still not as effective as just simply having a washing machine that rinses with hot water. The rinse action is a very special action in any washing machine, it is designed to rinse not wash, but is not effective unless you use hot water. You can (as you have described) "fool" the machine by a judicious twiddling of knobs at the right time, such that the machine is rinsing with hot water ... this will work actually ... but we are on Economy 7, and so the washing machine has to run during the night when electricity is cheaper. I am not prepared to wake up in the middle of the night to twiddle a few knobs !! So ... I am left with the white vinegar option, which is a brilliant one if I were a millionaire! I have searched everywhere for bulk white vinegar - Aldi, Lidl, the internet - and you can only get malt (brown) vinegar in bulk, except on the internet, and then the delivery charges are prohibitive. The most water guzzling cycle on my machine is the Wool setting by the way. Thanks for your helpful suggestions. It is a shame that we are on Economy 7, although I suppose with the problem items like towels I could just wash these during the day and knob twiddle ... hang the expense!
I have tried the “water guzzling” methods, I have tried absolutely everything and have formed the opinion that you cannot rinse properly in cold water. You need hot water to dissolve the detergent, surfactant, whatever you want to call it. I have tried washing the clothes through a complete cycle, just not adding any soap, but that is still not as effective as just simply having a washing machine that rinses with hot water. The rinse action is a very special action in any washing machine, it is designed to rinse not wash, but is not effective unless you use hot water. You can (as you have described) “fool” the machine by a judicious twiddling of knobs at the right time, such that the machine is rinsing with hot water … this will work actually … but we are on Economy 7, and so the washing machine has to run during the night when electricity is cheaper. I am not prepared to wake up in the middle of the night to twiddle a few knobs !!
So … I am left with the white vinegar option, which is a brilliant one if I were a millionaire! I have searched everywhere for bulk white vinegar – Aldi, Lidl, the internet – and you can only get malt (brown) vinegar in bulk, except on the internet, and then the delivery charges are prohibitive.
The most water guzzling cycle on my machine is the Wool setting by the way.
Thanks for your helpful suggestions. It is a shame that we are on Economy 7, although I suppose with the problem items like towels I could just wash these during the day and knob twiddle … hang the expense!
0 replies I used to praise Which? for their product testing, but now I'm not so happy with Which? I've noticed they are cutting corners on testing products and seem to be handing out "Best Buy" awards like sweets! For example, they test dishwashers on the "normal" programme for cleaning, drying etc., but (according to their website) Which? no longer tests the "economy" programme on dishwashers. However, Which? are quick to point the finger at a dishwasher model that has "poor energy efficiency"! I thought we were all being told to use less electricity, water and resources, hence use the "economy" programme more often? To be fair on Which? you are less likely to waste your money on something, provided you read their review very carefully and also read the opinions of customers who've bought the product you're interested in. Yes I agree with you Oliver, Dysons are the worst cleaners you can buy - and the same goes for all bagless vacuums. Like poor rinsing, if you're an allergy sufferer, you need a vacuum that does the job well. Why buy a bagless vacuum, then empty the dust container into a rubbish bin or carrier bag and release a cloud of dust everywhere? Most of the Which? Best Buys are bagged models. Back to the rinsing topic, any method to improve rinsing on today's machines involves faffing around and observing - you can't just switch on the machine, walk away and come back later to perfectly rinsed laundry! Like comment #110, a slightly quicker way could be to switch off the machine after the main wash programme has pumped out the soapy water, select another programme that you know uses lots of water and run it without detergent, just use the fabric conditioner compartment. If the final spin is slower on this second programme and you need a faster spin e.g. for tumble drying, you will need to switch off and select the faster spin. I know the previous paragraph sounds like a lot of fuss, but you soon get used to manually selecting extra cycles and I don't think about it, I just follow this method and let the washing machine do the hard work. :)
I used to praise Which? for their product testing, but now I’m not so happy with Which? I’ve noticed they are cutting corners on testing products and seem to be handing out “Best Buy” awards like sweets! For example, they test dishwashers on the “normal” programme for cleaning, drying etc., but (according to their website) Which? no longer tests the “economy” programme on dishwashers. However, Which? are quick to point the finger at a dishwasher model that has “poor energy efficiency”! I thought we were all being told to use less electricity, water and resources, hence use the “economy” programme more often?
To be fair on Which? you are less likely to waste your money on something, provided you read their review very carefully and also read the opinions of customers who’ve bought the product you’re interested in.
Yes I agree with you Oliver, Dysons are the worst cleaners you can buy – and the same goes for all bagless vacuums. Like poor rinsing, if you’re an allergy sufferer, you need a vacuum that does the job well. Why buy a bagless vacuum, then empty the dust container into a rubbish bin or carrier bag and release a cloud of dust everywhere? Most of the Which? Best Buys are bagged models.
Back to the rinsing topic, any method to improve rinsing on today’s machines involves faffing around and observing – you can’t just switch on the machine, walk away and come back later to perfectly rinsed laundry! Like comment #110, a slightly quicker way could be to switch off the machine after the main wash programme has pumped out the soapy water, select another programme that you know uses lots of water and run it without detergent, just use the fabric conditioner compartment. If the final spin is slower on this second programme and you need a faster spin e.g. for tumble drying, you will need to switch off and select the faster spin.
I know the previous paragraph sounds like a lot of fuss, but you soon get used to manually selecting extra cycles and I don’t think about it, I just follow this method and let the washing machine do the hard work. :)
0 replies I chose the new name WMUser as the name WhatMatters sounds a bit harsh, but I was really annoyed at the time I created that name. It is really annoying that today' washing machines don't rinse properly and it's yet another annoying part of everyday life (I won't make a long list of everyday annoyances, it would be miles long lol). I agree with what you say Washerhelp: I can't understand why such a washing machine is a Best Buy. I think all Which? members should complain to Which? and insist that only washing machines with Good rinsing or better should be awarded a Best Buy. That could force the washing machine manufacturers to improve rinsing, as they strive to achieve the Best Buy award.
I chose the new name WMUser as the name WhatMatters sounds a bit harsh, but I was really annoyed at the time I created that name. It is really annoying that today’ washing machines don’t rinse properly and it’s yet another annoying part of everyday life (I won’t make a long list of everyday annoyances, it would be miles long lol).
I agree with what you say Washerhelp: I can’t understand why such a washing machine is a Best Buy. I think all Which? members should complain to Which? and insist that only washing machines with Good rinsing or better should be awarded a Best Buy. That could force the washing machine manufacturers to improve rinsing, as they strive to achieve the Best Buy award.
0 replies WMUser: (I wonder what happened to WhatMatters?) Yes, I wrote to Which? at least a year ago pointing out the issue you describe. I couldn't understand how anyone could describe a washing machine that they think is very poor, or even just poor at rinsing as a Best Buy. I said in my opinion it undermines the credibility of the reviews. Maybe the washing machine is still the best of the ones available but if it was me, I would just say we can't nominate any washing machine as a best buy if it doesn't rinse to a high enough standard, and if that means there aren't any washing machines deserving a Which? Best Buy award where's the problem with that? Which? would get even more respect if they advised that they didn't think any washing machine could justifiably get the award and they would probably influence manufacturers to address the problem. The only way it makes sense is if Best Buy simply means it's just the best tested - warts and all. To be fair, if all washing machines don't rinse well you can still argue that one or more of them are much better than the others and deserve being pointed out. However, according to Which? themselves the Best Buy "was launched to recognise excellence."
WMUser: (I wonder what happened to WhatMatters?) Yes, I wrote to Which? at least a year ago pointing out the issue you describe. I couldn’t understand how anyone could describe a washing machine that they think is very poor, or even just poor at rinsing as a Best Buy. I said in my opinion it undermines the credibility of the reviews.
Maybe the washing machine is still the best of the ones available but if it was me, I would just say we can’t nominate any washing machine as a best buy if it doesn’t rinse to a high enough standard, and if that means there aren’t any washing machines deserving a Which? Best Buy award where’s the problem with that?
Which? would get even more respect if they advised that they didn’t think any washing machine could justifiably get the award and they would probably influence manufacturers to address the problem.
The only way it makes sense is if Best Buy simply means it’s just the best tested – warts and all. To be fair, if all washing machines don’t rinse well you can still argue that one or more of them are much better than the others and deserve being pointed out.
However, according to Which? themselves the Best Buy “was launched to recognise excellence.”
0 replies Even Which? Online don't seem to have tested Amway products. I don't know much about them to be honest except I have an impression they are expensive because of the way they are marketed by agents visiting homes individually, but probably decent stuff or the whole concept couldn't survive.
Even Which? Online don’t seem to have tested Amway products. I don’t know much about them to be honest except I have an impression they are expensive because of the way they are marketed by agents visiting homes individually, but probably decent stuff or the whole concept couldn’t survive.
0 replies Has anyone tried Amway laundry detergents? How do you rate the cleaning performance compared with Ariel or Persil?
Has anyone tried Amway laundry detergents? How do you rate the cleaning performance compared with Ariel or Persil?
0 replies One thing that is being overlooked is old detergent being left behind in the washing machine and the build up of grease, mould and bad smells. If you run the washing machine with no laundry and see some soap bubbles, then it's a good idea to clean out the washing machine to remove the old detergent. I reckon bad rinsing is also leaving behind detergent in the washing machine itself, not just in your clothes! There's plenty of advice about cleaning out washing machines. It's probably best to start off by pulling out the soap drawer and giving that a clean and also clean the recess where the drawer goes into (it can get very dirty in there!). Then clean the pump filter before we clean out the empty washing machine on a boil wash with vinegar or a suitable washing machine cleaner (before anyone recommends using a washing powder with bleaching properties, we're trying to remove existing detergent and not add to it). Having done all that, hopefully you can be one step closer to better rinsing by trying out the ideas mentioned earlier, like re-rinsing etc.
One thing that is being overlooked is old detergent being left behind in the washing machine and the build up of grease, mould and bad smells. If you run the washing machine with no laundry and see some soap bubbles, then it’s a good idea to clean out the washing machine to remove the old detergent. I reckon bad rinsing is also leaving behind detergent in the washing machine itself, not just in your clothes!
There’s plenty of advice about cleaning out washing machines. It’s probably best to start off by pulling out the soap drawer and giving that a clean and also clean the recess where the drawer goes into (it can get very dirty in there!). Then clean the pump filter before we clean out the empty washing machine on a boil wash with vinegar or a suitable washing machine cleaner (before anyone recommends using a washing powder with bleaching properties, we’re trying to remove existing detergent and not add to it).
Having done all that, hopefully you can be one step closer to better rinsing by trying out the ideas mentioned earlier, like re-rinsing etc.
0 replies It is sad that Zanussi no longer do the version of Jetsystem that they made back in the late 80's as that was the best washer in its day. I bought after having a 2nd baby as our Servis Quartz died after so much use. The jetsystem was ace as it only used cold water and was economical and it did 3 deep rinses with water level going half way up the door, a great machine in my eyes. I bought another one years later it did not do the spin on wash but did during the rinse I have to say I have never used the extra rinse cycle as never needed it and I too have excema but use good powder like Ariel as cannot abide mucky whites... I guess its caused progress but like most on this forum agree the rinse is crap nowadays on modern machines. Pity really as its the rinsing that cleans the laundry. Just my 2 pennyworth. Austin
It is sad that Zanussi no longer do the version of Jetsystem that they made back in the late 80’s as that was the best washer in its day. I bought after having a 2nd baby as our Servis Quartz died after so much use. The jetsystem was ace as it only used cold water and was economical and it did 3 deep rinses with water level going half way up the door, a great machine in my eyes. I bought another one years later it did not do the spin on wash but did during the rinse I have to say I have never used the extra rinse cycle as never needed it and I too have excema but use good powder like Ariel as cannot abide mucky whites… I guess its caused progress but like most on this forum agree the rinse is crap nowadays on modern machines. Pity really as its the rinsing that cleans the laundry. Just my 2 pennyworth.
Austin
0 replies I tried the clear vinegar trick by putting vinegar in the compartment for fabric conditioner, to the "max" mark. Then on the rinse-hold, turned off the machine and added my "sensitive" fabric conditioner and turned the dial to "rinse" (in order to run the rinse cycles again), with the final spin speed set at 1600 rpm. Clear vinegar seems to have done something... emptied the drum and had a job to smell *any* sort of fragrance. 3 towels that I included in the load felt much softer when they dried. I hope this solution works and alleviates allergies after a few months. Please remember not to overload the drum and to only use clear vinegar, not brown vinegar or any other colour. Re-rinse and good luck :) I don't know exactly why vinegar improves rinsing, it could be that detergent is alkaline and vinegar is acidic, the vinegar probably lowers the alkali pH nearer to neutral (pH 7 I think?). Maybe the vinegar works in other ways when used in rinsing? I've seen plenty of tips on websites about using vinegar on fabrics for other purposes e.g. stain removal. Hope it helps. :D
I tried the clear vinegar trick by putting vinegar in the compartment for fabric conditioner, to the “max” mark. Then on the rinse-hold, turned off the machine and added my “sensitive” fabric conditioner and turned the dial to “rinse” (in order to run the rinse cycles again), with the final spin speed set at 1600 rpm.
Clear vinegar seems to have done something… emptied the drum and had a job to smell *any* sort of fragrance. 3 towels that I included in the load felt much softer when they dried.
I hope this solution works and alleviates allergies after a few months. Please remember not to overload the drum and to only use clear vinegar, not brown vinegar or any other colour. Re-rinse and good luck :)
I don’t know exactly why vinegar improves rinsing, it could be that detergent is alkaline and vinegar is acidic, the vinegar probably lowers the alkali pH nearer to neutral (pH 7 I think?). Maybe the vinegar works in other ways when used in rinsing? I’ve seen plenty of tips on websites about using vinegar on fabrics for other purposes e.g. stain removal.
Hope it helps. :D
0 replies We have a Miele machine, and I have to say that with it's standard 2 rinse cycle, it is the best rinsing machine that we have ever had since our Hoover many years ago. Before I start with anything else - 4 members of our family including a 1 year old have bad skin, and I can wash everything in biological powder without a single problem. This is before I even consider pressing extra rinse or water plus (our Miele machine has them as seperate options). I had skin problems a couple weeks ago myself, which I thought might be due to detergent - but after trying non bio detergent I found that it was actually linked to having switched fabric softener. I collect washers (read: washer geek), and have used a number of different machines over the years. I used to have an AEG Oko Lavamat washing machine from 2004 (read Zanussi), which would only deliver similar (and not as good) rinsing results using the Sensitive button - 5 rinses halfway up the door, but with no interim spin until after the 3rd rinse, whereas both our Miele machines will do a 4 min spin at 1000rpm after the wash, after gently ramping up over a minute or so to max speed, a medium first rinse level (water anything between from the rim of the drum to 2 or 3 inches up the door, depending on the load's absorbency), followed by another 1000rpm interim spin - this time at 2-3 minutes, then a final rinse of the same level and the final spin. I think what also helps with Miele machines especially is that the slower rinse tumbling plunges the load throuigh the water rather than beating them - which not only allows detegrent to soak out of the load better, but also prevents excessive suds from occuring. Additionally, the machine will also adjust rinsing depending on the size of the load - a heavier load will get longer and/or deeper rinses, and longer interim spins. In terms of the sudslock issue - Miele machines - or at least the ones I have - seem to have a pause between the wash drain, and the interim spin which seems to allow the suds to die down after the wash, before spinning. In the rare occurence of a sudslock - it will slow the drum speed - but keep spinning at a slow speed, until the suds have cleared, and will then speed up again, and also add an extra rinse for preventative measure, as well as tell you to Check detergent once the machine has finished. Our Bosch machine, on the other hand, could do 4 rinses, but only spun at 400-600rpm between the rinses, water never came up the door, and everybody would itch if we didn't use Persil Non Bio. Even Fairy made us itch, go figure. Not just that, but our older Hotpoint machines we had before weren't clever at rinsing either, and were nowhere near as good as either the Miele we have now, or the ancient Hoover Electronic 1100 we used to have that mum and dad bought when they were married - which lasted until 1996 without a single repair, only to be replaced with a (then fashionable) cream washer to match the kitchen. I have a variety of old AEGs in the garage - the ones I frequently use are late 80s/early 90s models which employ "Sensortronic" rinse spinning - where the spin speed increases by what seems to be 100rpm steps until the maximum speed (1000rpm) between each rinse, and then maintaining maximum speed for a couple of minutes, before a rinse with a level about an inch up the window. Again, rinses clear with 3 rinses, and much better than our 2003 model Bosch, or our 90s Hotpoint machines. One thing I do think that doesn't help with rinsing is how a lot of modern washers don't fill as the interim spin slows - as well as deeper rinse levels on older machines, I always felt this saturates the load better before the rinse tumbling even started... it's about the only improvement I could suggest to Miele's school of rinsing! Oliver - my mum's friend has a WFF2000 (this was a major reason as to why we bought our Bosch), and it's still working to this day without a repair. A very different creed of machine from our old Bosch Exxcel! Although, from what I have heard, Bosch are supposed to have improved the rinsing of their machines, with the higher water level button having returned under the guise of "Aqua plus", and also on the top of the range machines with the LCD displays you can choose to have higher water, and to have 1-4 additional rinses. Jon
We have a Miele machine, and I have to say that with it’s standard 2 rinse cycle, it is the best rinsing machine that we have ever had since our Hoover many years ago. Before I start with anything else – 4 members of our family including a 1 year old have bad skin, and I can wash everything in biological powder without a single problem. This is before I even consider pressing extra rinse or water plus (our Miele machine has them as seperate options). I had skin problems a couple weeks ago myself, which I thought might be due to detergent – but after trying non bio detergent I found that it was actually linked to having switched fabric softener.
I collect washers (read: washer geek), and have used a number of different machines over the years. I used to have an AEG Oko Lavamat washing machine from 2004 (read Zanussi), which would only deliver similar (and not as good) rinsing results using the Sensitive button – 5 rinses halfway up the door, but with no interim spin until after the 3rd rinse, whereas both our Miele machines will do a 4 min spin at 1000rpm after the wash, after gently ramping up over a minute or so to max speed, a medium first rinse level (water anything between from the rim of the drum to 2 or 3 inches up the door, depending on the load’s absorbency), followed by another 1000rpm interim spin – this time at 2-3 minutes, then a final rinse of the same level and the final spin. I think what also helps with Miele machines especially is that the slower rinse tumbling plunges the load throuigh the water rather than beating them – which not only allows detegrent to soak out of the load better, but also prevents excessive suds from occuring. Additionally, the machine will also adjust rinsing depending on the size of the load – a heavier load will get longer and/or deeper rinses, and longer interim spins.
In terms of the sudslock issue – Miele machines – or at least the ones I have – seem to have a pause between the wash drain, and the interim spin which seems to allow the suds to die down after the wash, before spinning. In the rare occurence of a sudslock – it will slow the drum speed – but keep spinning at a slow speed, until the suds have cleared, and will then speed up again, and also add an extra rinse for preventative measure, as well as tell you to Check detergent once the machine has finished.
Our Bosch machine, on the other hand, could do 4 rinses, but only spun at 400-600rpm between the rinses, water never came up the door, and everybody would itch if we didn’t use Persil Non Bio. Even Fairy made us itch, go figure. Not just that, but our older Hotpoint machines we had before weren’t clever at rinsing either, and were nowhere near as good as either the Miele we have now, or the ancient Hoover Electronic 1100 we used to have that mum and dad bought when they were married – which lasted until 1996 without a single repair, only to be replaced with a (then fashionable) cream washer to match the kitchen.
I have a variety of old AEGs in the garage – the ones I frequently use are late 80s/early 90s models which employ “Sensortronic” rinse spinning – where the spin speed increases by what seems to be 100rpm steps until the maximum speed (1000rpm) between each rinse, and then maintaining maximum speed for a couple of minutes, before a rinse with a level about an inch up the window. Again, rinses clear with 3 rinses, and much better than our 2003 model Bosch, or our 90s Hotpoint machines.
One thing I do think that doesn’t help with rinsing is how a lot of modern washers don’t fill as the interim spin slows – as well as deeper rinse levels on older machines, I always felt this saturates the load better before the rinse tumbling even started… it’s about the only improvement I could suggest to Miele’s school of rinsing!
Oliver – my mum’s friend has a WFF2000 (this was a major reason as to why we bought our Bosch), and it’s still working to this day without a repair. A very different creed of machine from our old Bosch Exxcel! Although, from what I have heard, Bosch are supposed to have improved the rinsing of their machines, with the higher water level button having returned under the guise of “Aqua plus”, and also on the top of the range machines with the LCD displays you can choose to have higher water, and to have 1-4 additional rinses.
Jon
0 replies Using white (clear/distilled) vinegar before re-rinsing might help. I will try it next time I use the washing machine. I will fill up the fabric conditioner part of the soap drawer with clear vinegar, then on the rinse-hold (i.e. final rinse), refill the fabric conditioner compartment with actual fabric conditioner and then re-rinse. Doing a Google search for "vinegar laundry" (without the speech marks) returns a lot of results about the benefits of using vinegar on fabrics, not just for neutralising detergent, but for stain removal and so on. It might work out cheaper to buy the vinegar in larger bottles or containers, if you use it a lot. Brown (malt) vinegar is likely to stain everything, so not a good idea to use that variety!! This might be the final piece of the jigsaw puzzle, if it really works? I've read that some people actually use clear vinegar as a substitute for fabric conditioner - it's claimed to work just as well. I wonder if it really does?
Using white (clear/distilled) vinegar before re-rinsing might help. I will try it next time I use the washing machine. I will fill up the fabric conditioner part of the soap drawer with clear vinegar, then on the rinse-hold (i.e. final rinse), refill the fabric conditioner compartment with actual fabric conditioner and then re-rinse.
Doing a Google search for “vinegar laundry” (without the speech marks) returns a lot of results about the benefits of using vinegar on fabrics, not just for neutralising detergent, but for stain removal and so on.
It might work out cheaper to buy the vinegar in larger bottles or containers, if you use it a lot. Brown (malt) vinegar is likely to stain everything, so not a good idea to use that variety!!
This might be the final piece of the jigsaw puzzle, if it really works? I’ve read that some people actually use clear vinegar as a substitute for fabric conditioner – it’s claimed to work just as well. I wonder if it really does?
0 replies I too can confirm drum sizes differ. I had a Hotpoint 6KG machine and it was significantly larger than a friends White Knight 6KG machine. The Hotpoint would wash a thin summer duvet, but the White Knight wouldn’t. The Dyson had a bigger than average 7KG machines drum size as it rotated in both directions at the same time, they say so there is more room for the laundry to move. Andy, how well did the Dyson rinse, did it sudslock, how many rinses did it do? Because their vacuums are absolute rubbish, I wondered about their washing machines, wern’t they over £1000? Also heard they were noisy. All the best, Oliver.
I too can confirm drum sizes differ. I had a Hotpoint 6KG machine and it was significantly larger than a friends White Knight 6KG machine. The Hotpoint would wash a thin summer duvet, but the White Knight wouldn’t. The Dyson had a bigger than average 7KG machines drum size as it rotated in both directions at the same time, they say so there is more room for the laundry to move.
Andy, how well did the Dyson rinse, did it sudslock, how many rinses did it do? Because their vacuums are absolute rubbish, I wondered about their washing machines, wern’t they over £1000? Also heard they were noisy.
All the best,
Oliver.
0 replies Quoting WhatMatters: I washed some towels and I did NOT use too much detergent. On the rinse-hold, I could see the water was cloudy and there were still soap bubbles. One of the possible causes of detergent residue being left after washing is actually not using enough detergent. I think it’s worth mentioning after your comment reminded me. I’m not saying it is necessarily relevant in your case but it’s definitely worth mentioning. Detergent residues are left after washing Possible cause:-Insufficient detergent is being used. Prevention:-Some powder detergents react with the minerals in hard water, forming a whitish residue that can be mistaken for undissolved detergent. The film can be avoided by using the recommended amount of detergent. ..It's a 7kg machine but can only just fit a single duvet!! The marketing rubbish didn't mention the words single duvet, it just makes out it can wash a duvet. Your problem with washing a duvet in a 7 kg drum also reminds me of another issue I need to investigate, drum capacity sizes. I remember Miele once told me that their 6 kg drum had a larger capacity to many competitors 6 kg drums because there are different ways of measuring drum capacity and Miele used the more generous method resulting in a larger drum. This has recently been proved to me when I tested a new washing machine for review which has a 6 kg drum. As we are used to using the Miele W3740 washing machine, which also has a 6 kg drum my wife complained that she couldn’t fit as much laundry inside this new washing machine, yet it supposedly had the same 6 kg drum size. It was so much smaller she refused to believe it was a 6 kg drum and I even had to double check in the manual. So I had two washing machines both claiming to have a 6 kg drum, yet the Miele washing machine accepted significantly more laundry inside. Therefore it appears that all drum sizes are not necessarily equal. Some years back I tested and reviewed the Dyson CR01 washing machine which had a 7 kg drum capacity, supposedly the same drum size as your washing machine, yet these pictures show it not only happily washing a double quilt, but with plenty to spare. Dyson 7Kg drum compared with 5Kg drum
Quoting WhatMatters:
I washed some towels and I did NOT use too much detergent. On the rinse-hold, I could see the water was cloudy and there were still soap bubbles.
One of the possible causes of detergent residue being left after washing is actually not using enough detergent. I think it’s worth mentioning after your comment reminded me. I’m not saying it is necessarily relevant in your case but it’s definitely worth mentioning.
Detergent residues are left after washing
Possible cause:-Insufficient detergent is being used.
Prevention:-Some powder detergents react with the minerals in hard water, forming a whitish residue that can be mistaken for undissolved detergent. The film can be avoided by using the recommended amount of detergent.
..It’s a 7kg machine but can only just fit a single duvet!! The marketing rubbish didn’t mention the words single duvet, it just makes out it can wash a duvet.
Your problem with washing a duvet in a 7 kg drum also reminds me of another issue I need to investigate, drum capacity sizes. I remember Miele once told me that their 6 kg drum had a larger capacity to many competitors 6 kg drums because there are different ways of measuring drum capacity and Miele used the more generous method resulting in a larger drum.
This has recently been proved to me when I tested a new washing machine for review which has a 6 kg drum. As we are used to using the Miele W3740 washing machine, which also has a 6 kg drum my wife complained that she couldn’t fit as much laundry inside this new washing machine, yet it supposedly had the same 6 kg drum size. It was so much smaller she refused to believe it was a 6 kg drum and I even had to double check in the manual. So I had two washing machines both claiming to have a 6 kg drum, yet the Miele washing machine accepted significantly more laundry inside.
Therefore it appears that all drum sizes are not necessarily equal.
Some years back I tested and reviewed the Dyson CR01 washing machine which had a 7 kg drum capacity, supposedly the same drum size as your washing machine, yet these pictures show it not only happily washing a double quilt, but with plenty to spare.
0 replies Many thanks,Whatmatters ... my m/c is part way through a laundry wash - using the pre-wash this time - so I'll see how that does and then try your suggestion with the duvet option. It's no wonder that the number of asthma and exzema cases is soaring! Perhaps I'll send a copy of my letter to the washing m/c manufacturers to the asthma/ezema research people .. Marion
Many thanks,Whatmatters … my m/c is part way through a laundry wash – using the pre-wash this time – so I’ll see how that does and then try your suggestion with the duvet option.
It’s no wonder that the number of asthma and exzema cases is soaring!
Perhaps I’ll send a copy of my letter to the washing m/c manufacturers to the asthma/ezema research people ..
Marion
0 replies H. This is a really interesting website and I will try some of the suggestions above! I have just left the following message on thewhitegoodshelp.co.uk (many thanks for your reply,Andy -much appreciated) and it is reassuring to hear that I probably am not totally paranoid about laundry not being rinsed properly and being totally irritated by having to rinse clothes by hand in the sink... "Hi,I hope you can help with possible suggestions as to why my laundry comes out of my washing m/c unrinsed,despite it going through the rinse cycles and even through 'extra' rinse cycles. Over the last 2 years I have had 5 m/cs, 4 of these being brand new. The brands have been Bosch, Whirlpool, Zanussi and now another brand new m/c - Hotpoint - so all good reputable manufacturers. Each has had the same problem: The m/cs all wash well, but despite water going into the m/cs for rinsing and then expelling the water, I have to take the laundry out of the machine, rinse it in the sink 3-4 times (towels are particularly bad) and put it back into the m/c again to spin. (Just in case there was a problem with a possibly blocked outlet down-pipe, I have even put the outlet hose over the sink and the water that pours into the sink is soapy white with bubbles too. Also, the water valve for the inlet hose has been replaced, just in case that was faulty). None of the manufacturers' engineers who have been out to check out the m/cs cant suggest a reason as to why there is this problem. Although I live in a hard water area, there appears to be no furring up of the water pipes in my house, the external water pressure has been measure by my local water company who was if anything the water pressure is above the recommended/average water pressure rather than below. Any suggestions? I don't have the energy to return yet another washing m/c ... but I can't continue rinsing the laundry in the sink after every wash." My next step, if I have any energy left, is to write a similar message in a letter to all the manufacturers whose washing m/cs I have had to return because of this problem. Good luck to all of you ... Marion
H. This is a really interesting website and I will try some of the suggestions above! I have just left the following message on thewhitegoodshelp.co.uk (many thanks for your reply,Andy -much appreciated) and it is reassuring to hear that I probably am not totally paranoid about laundry not being rinsed properly and being totally irritated by having to rinse clothes by hand in the sink…
“Hi,I hope you can help with possible suggestions as to why my laundry comes out of my washing m/c unrinsed,despite it going through the rinse cycles and even through ‘extra’ rinse cycles.
Over the last 2 years I have had 5 m/cs, 4 of these being brand new. The brands have been Bosch, Whirlpool, Zanussi and now another brand new m/c – Hotpoint – so all good reputable manufacturers. Each has had the same problem: The m/cs all wash well, but despite water going into the m/cs for rinsing and then expelling the water, I have to take the laundry out of the machine, rinse it in the sink 3-4 times (towels are particularly bad) and put it back into the m/c again to spin. (Just in case there was a problem with a possibly blocked outlet down-pipe, I have even put the outlet hose over the sink and the water that pours into the sink is soapy white with bubbles too. Also, the water valve for the inlet hose has been replaced, just in case that was faulty).
None of the manufacturers’ engineers who have been out to check out the m/cs cant suggest a reason as to why there is this problem. Although I live in a hard water area, there appears to be no furring up of the water pipes in my house, the external water pressure has been measure by my local water company who was if anything the water pressure is above the recommended/average water pressure rather than below.
Any suggestions? I don’t have the energy to return yet another washing m/c … but I can’t continue rinsing the laundry in the sink after every wash.”
My next step, if I have any energy left, is to write a similar message in a letter to all the manufacturers whose washing m/cs I have had to return because of this problem.
Good luck to all of you …
Marion
0 replies Just a note. Anyone experiencing "suds lock" where the water doesn't pump out fully leaving soapy water inside for the next rinse should check the pump filter isn't partially blocked, or that there isn't a partial blockage inside the drain hose (small button or coin) or a partial blockage in the u-bend connector that the drain hose pumps into. There shouldn't be any water left in the drum after draining at the end of a rinse, and if there is, the number one suspect is that the pump just isn't pumping out the water fast enough. This was extremely common on Hotpoint washing machines where they had a stupid filter inside the sump hose which customers were unaware of and most couldn't deal with even if they knew, which commonly got caked in lint reducing the pump flow rate adversely. Another common cause of this is when a small button or a small piece of broken up bra underwire gets pumped through the drain hose but lodges in the end of the hose or in the tapered connector spiggot that it connects to at the u-bend (if connected to the sink). This traps lint and causes a partial blockage which reduces the water flow from the machine enough to just about cope without causing an error code but severely reducing the rinse efficiency. I'm not saying these things account for poor rinsing, but someone experiencing poor rinsing, particularly if observing soapy water still left in the drum when it starts to fill up for another rinse could have this issue, which could be fixed.
Just a note. Anyone experiencing “suds lock” where the water doesn’t pump out fully leaving soapy water inside for the next rinse should check the pump filter isn’t partially blocked, or that there isn’t a partial blockage inside the drain hose (small button or coin) or a partial blockage in the u-bend connector that the drain hose pumps into.
There shouldn’t be any water left in the drum after draining at the end of a rinse, and if there is, the number one suspect is that the pump just isn’t pumping out the water fast enough.
This was extremely common on Hotpoint washing machines where they had a stupid filter inside the sump hose which customers were unaware of and most couldn’t deal with even if they knew, which commonly got caked in lint reducing the pump flow rate adversely.
Another common cause of this is when a small button or a small piece of broken up bra underwire gets pumped through the drain hose but lodges in the end of the hose or in the tapered connector spiggot that it connects to at the u-bend (if connected to the sink). This traps lint and causes a partial blockage which reduces the water flow from the machine enough to just about cope without causing an error code but severely reducing the rinse efficiency.
I’m not saying these things account for poor rinsing, but someone experiencing poor rinsing, particularly if observing soapy water still left in the drum when it starts to fill up for another rinse could have this issue, which could be fixed.
0 replies The allergy UK website has a tips page which suggests that you re-rinse your clothes when the machine finishes. Look on the page under the section about \"Windows mirrors and glass\" in the last paragraph of that part - yes that *is* typed properly and *is* under \"Windows mirrors and glass\" and it does indeed mention that new washing machines now use a lot less water than the older ones If nobody likes the idea of filling their machine up with extra water or trying other ideas mentioned above such as tampering with the washing machines \"adjustable tuning slug\" whatever that is and so on and so on...... the simplest way is to follow the suggestion and run the rinse cycle a second time. Yes it means waiting longer but worth it!
The allergy UK website has a tips page which suggests that you re-rinse your clothes when the machine finishes. Look on the page under the section about \”Windows mirrors and glass\” in the last paragraph of that part – yes that *is* typed properly and *is* under \”Windows mirrors and glass\” and it does indeed mention that new washing machines now use a lot less water than the older ones
If nobody likes the idea of filling their machine up with extra water or trying other ideas mentioned above such as tampering with the washing machines \”adjustable tuning slug\” whatever that is and so on and so on…… the simplest way is to follow the suggestion and run the rinse cycle a second time. Yes it means waiting longer but worth it!
0 replies Simon: 50 degrees may well shrink some items. It's temperatures that usually shrink things. I've not heard of anything other than too high a temperature shrinking things.
Simon: 50 degrees may well shrink some items. It’s temperatures that usually shrink things. I’ve not heard of anything other than too high a temperature shrinking things.
0 replies Has anyone tried Amway SA8 laundry detergent and if so do they think it is good? I have found you need to wash at 50C to get stains out even stains like mud whereas Persil or Ariel get mus out at 30C or 40C. Also I have noticed some of my clothes have shrunk in the wash lately but I do not why. They have been put on the appropriate programme and spin cycle. Could detergents cause shrinkage?
Has anyone tried Amway SA8 laundry detergent and if so do they think it is good? I have found you need to wash at 50C to get stains out even stains like mud whereas Persil or Ariel get mus out at 30C or 40C.
Also I have noticed some of my clothes have shrunk in the wash lately but I do not why. They have been put on the appropriate programme and spin cycle. Could detergents cause shrinkage?
0 replies That is totally Correct! Oliver.
That is totally Correct!
Oliver.
0 replies I forgot to mention something that's really obvious... over 2/3's of our planet Earth is WATER. In fact, 71% of the Earth's surface is covered by water (look on Wikipedia for water, it currently says 71%). Also the oceans are miles deep! I'm sure many people know about the "water cycle" too. In plain English: water never disappears, it comes back! So why are we being told off for using "too much" water? Really, why? Washing machines need LOTS of water to rinse all of the detergent out of fabrics, which they did fine before the do-gooders told the washing machine manufacturers to use less water. You never heard of so many cases of allergies years ago, nowadays most people are allergic to something! It's obvious there's a correlation - less water in rinsing = more allergies! Okay, the MAIN wash doesn't need as much water because it's being heated, obviously more water being heated uses more electricity. But during the rinse cycles the extra water uses no more energy because it doesn't get heated. I can keep mentioning obvious things forever, but the last one: I don't remember old washing machines having an "extra rinse" button, because they rinsed properly anyway. Am I right in saying that old (1970's and 1980's) washing machines did not have options for rinsing better?
I forgot to mention something that’s really obvious… over 2/3’s of our planet Earth is WATER. In fact, 71% of the Earth’s surface is covered by water (look on Wikipedia for water, it currently says 71%). Also the oceans are miles deep! I’m sure many people know about the “water cycle” too. In plain English: water never disappears, it comes back!
So why are we being told off for using “too much” water? Really, why? Washing machines need LOTS of water to rinse all of the detergent out of fabrics, which they did fine before the do-gooders told the washing machine manufacturers to use less water.
You never heard of so many cases of allergies years ago, nowadays most people are allergic to something! It’s obvious there’s a correlation – less water in rinsing = more allergies!
Okay, the MAIN wash doesn’t need as much water because it’s being heated, obviously more water being heated uses more electricity. But during the rinse cycles the extra water uses no more energy because it doesn’t get heated.
I can keep mentioning obvious things forever, but the last one: I don’t remember old washing machines having an “extra rinse” button, because they rinsed properly anyway. Am I right in saying that old (1970’s and 1980’s) washing machines did not have options for rinsing better?
0 replies Hi Folks, Many of you will have seen my regular posts on the Hot Water Valve boards (both of them) and will know about my LG washer. Not having actually read much on this board until Oliver pointed out to Michelle on the "I want a machine with a hot valve" board that her post on Rinsing should have been on here, I was unaware 3 days ago, when I fiddled with my LG's pressure switch, of the post a bit further up this board about the "adjustable tuning slugs". That aside, I have made 2 interesting discoveries about my LG WM1444TDS washer, which may be of use to anyone else with thai machine and infuriated by it's diabolical rinsing. Discovery number 1 was that the "Duvet" cycle, which I always use to fill the machine up as it uses the pressure switch not the stupid and useless "fuzzy logic" sensors and controls to supposedly detect when the laundry is properly wet, has only TWO rinses if left to run right through. Discovery number 2 was that, having adjusted the pressure switch, to get rinse water to come 1/4 up the door glass, I can now wash non-fast coloureds (40 degree wash) on "Duvet" and not only does it wash in water that comes 1/4 of the way up the glass, but it also rinses in the same level of water and, surprise surprise, it gets the washing pretty much soap free (almost as good as the 26 year old Hoover I used to have) in just TWO rinses. The only down side to this is that I still have to switch back to cottons to get a 60 degree wash, which means that the rinses, although they now fill up to 1/4 up the door, are all interspersed by spins which take positively eons to start due to "balancing" so the cycle takes hours as always. Interestingly the Duvet wash doesn't seem to bother with "balancing" but just spins and be b*ggered to the noise. I'm very pleased by this development, but must point out to anyone with this (or any other) machine and thinking of making the same adjustment that it will undoubtedly invalidate your warranty, so don't do it unless you are prepared to accept that fact.
Hi Folks,
Many of you will have seen my regular posts on the Hot Water Valve boards (both of them) and will know about my LG washer.
Not having actually read much on this board until Oliver pointed out to Michelle on the “I want a machine with a hot valve” board that her post on Rinsing should have been on here, I was unaware 3 days ago, when I fiddled with my LG’s pressure switch, of the post a bit further up this board about the “adjustable tuning slugs”.
That aside, I have made 2 interesting discoveries about my LG WM1444TDS washer, which may be of use to anyone else with thai machine and infuriated by it’s diabolical rinsing.
Discovery number 1 was that the “Duvet” cycle, which I always use to fill the machine up as it uses the pressure switch not the stupid and useless “fuzzy logic” sensors and controls to supposedly detect when the laundry is properly wet, has only TWO rinses if left to run right through.
Discovery number 2 was that, having adjusted the pressure switch, to get rinse water to come 1/4 up the door glass, I can now wash non-fast coloureds (40 degree wash) on “Duvet” and not only does it wash in water that comes 1/4 of the way up the glass, but it also rinses in the same level of water and, surprise surprise, it gets the washing pretty much soap free (almost as good as the 26 year old Hoover I used to have) in just TWO rinses.
The only down side to this is that I still have to switch back to cottons to get a 60 degree wash, which means that the rinses, although they now fill up to 1/4 up the door, are all interspersed by spins which take positively eons to start due to “balancing” so the cycle takes hours as always.
Interestingly the Duvet wash doesn’t seem to bother with “balancing” but just spins and be b*ggered to the noise.
I’m very pleased by this development, but must point out to anyone with this (or any other) machine and thinking of making the same adjustment that it will undoubtedly invalidate your warranty, so don’t do it unless you are prepared to accept that fact.
0 replies Oliver The pre-wash "trick" seems to work and during the main wash programme I still notice plenty of suds. If you put slightly too much detergent in or don't put enough laundry in the drum my machine is prone to foaming too much. Not tried this with stained laundry, but you have to treat stains before washing anyway. If anyone copies this "trick" (comment 97) and finds it cleans well and improves rinsing (or not), I would be keen to find out. I've noticed rinsing is better and I've not had to fill the machine with extra water during the rinses, but have enable the "extra rinse" option every time I use the machine. I know some people who have used soda crystals for years and never had any problems. The packet would not say you could use them in washing machines if they were known to cause damage. I know they soften water and are well known for removing grease and oil stains. There is a page on this site about soda crystals and washing machines: Soda crystals and washing machines Could you make a video on youtube on how to adjust pressure switches for higher water levels, in Plain English? It would be wise to warn viewers of the risks involved lol!! Cheers.
Oliver
The pre-wash “trick” seems to work and during the main wash programme I still notice plenty of suds. If you put slightly too much detergent in or don’t put enough laundry in the drum my machine is prone to foaming too much. Not tried this with stained laundry, but you have to treat stains before washing anyway. If anyone copies this “trick” (comment 97) and finds it cleans well and improves rinsing (or not), I would be keen to find out.
I’ve noticed rinsing is better and I’ve not had to fill the machine with extra water during the rinses, but have enable the “extra rinse” option every time I use the machine.
I know some people who have used soda crystals for years and never had any problems. The packet would not say you could use them in washing machines if they were known to cause damage. I know they soften water and are well known for removing grease and oil stains. There is a page on this site about soda crystals and washing machines:
Soda crystals and washing machines
Could you make a video on youtube on how to adjust pressure switches for higher water levels, in Plain English? It would be wise to warn viewers of the risks involved lol!!
Cheers.
0 replies Sounds good Richard (comment 96). Most of us have no idea how to alter the "adjustable tuning slugs". I would be too scared to take the lid off my washing machine! Making a video on how to do this and uploading it to youtube might help, but explained in plain English. One trick that most of us could try on modern washing machines is to take advantage of the pre-wash. Add your powder or liquid detergent directly in the drum and a tablespoon of soda crystals in the "main" compartment of the soap drawer (not the pre-wash compartment). The pre-wash will allow the clothes to soak up the detergent solution. After the pre-wash finishes, the machine will pump out the water and may perform a short spin. On the main cycle (at the temperature you chosen), the clothes will still have plenty of detergent absorbed and the main wash water will facilitate later rinsing. Pressing the "extra rinse" button or whatever it's called on your machine will also help when you try this pre-wash experiment. I've only tried this once, so don't know if it affects cleaning performance. Note that on old washing machines the pre-wash would be followed by a boil wash, so check carefully that your machine won't boil your laundry to death! It's a shame that we have to resort to drastic measures to achieve proper rinsing. If we don't, our clothes will still contain detergent and this causes no end of trouble. I sometimes wonder, after reading these comments, if allergy sufferers have no idea their condition can be traced to the washing machine not rinsing properly?
Sounds good Richard (comment 96). Most of us have no idea how to alter the “adjustable tuning slugs”. I would be too scared to take the lid off my washing machine!
Making a video on how to do this and uploading it to youtube might help, but explained in plain English.
One trick that most of us could try on modern washing machines is to take advantage of the pre-wash. Add your powder or liquid detergent directly in the drum and a tablespoon of soda crystals in the “main” compartment of the soap drawer (not the pre-wash compartment). The pre-wash will allow the clothes to soak up the detergent solution. After the pre-wash finishes, the machine will pump out the water and may perform a short spin. On the main cycle (at the temperature you chosen), the clothes will still have plenty of detergent absorbed and the main wash water will facilitate later rinsing. Pressing the “extra rinse” button or whatever it’s called on your machine will also help when you try this pre-wash experiment. I’ve only tried this once, so don’t know if it affects cleaning performance.
Note that on old washing machines the pre-wash would be followed by a boil wash, so check carefully that your machine won’t boil your laundry to death!
It’s a shame that we have to resort to drastic measures to achieve proper rinsing. If we don’t, our clothes will still contain detergent and this causes no end of trouble. I sometimes wonder, after reading these comments, if allergy sufferers have no idea their condition can be traced to the washing machine not rinsing properly?
0 replies Where can i buy High efficiency front loading detergent from within the UK that actually cleans and works? I use SA8 by Amway but get fed up of having to order it through a distributor. Persil, Ariel, Surf and all the others just foam too much
Where can i buy High efficiency front loading detergent from within the UK that actually cleans and works? I use SA8 by Amway but get fed up of having to order it through a distributor. Persil, Ariel, Surf and all the others just foam too much
0 replies WhatMatters: Could't agree more! Being environmentally friendly (oh it pains me to write that) is not just about what an appliance consumes but how it was made, transported etc. It would have less inpact for a washer to do 4 rinses 1/3 up the door and it last for 26 years ( Daves Hoover Electron for instance), Than a cheap rubbish Merloni (Indesit/Hotpoint etc) rinse twice with 2" of water in the drum and it only last 12 months!! Its not as if water does not get replenished often enough, I mean it must rain 13 out of the 12 months we get in a year! Plus we pay enough for it with water meters and such like. I've never heard of the toilet problem, but very interesting all the same, will ask people I know who have recently had their bathrooms refit to see if it a major problem! I know I'm sad!!!!!! HTH Oliver
WhatMatters:
Could’t agree more!
Being environmentally friendly (oh it pains me to write that) is not just about what an appliance consumes but how it was made, transported etc. It would have less inpact for a washer to do 4 rinses 1/3 up the door and it last for 26 years ( Daves Hoover Electron for instance), Than a cheap rubbish Merloni (Indesit/Hotpoint etc) rinse twice with 2″ of water in the drum and it only last 12 months!!
Its not as if water does not get replenished often enough, I mean it must rain 13 out of the 12 months we get in a year! Plus we pay enough for it with water meters and such like.
I’ve never heard of the toilet problem, but very interesting all the same, will ask people I know who have recently had their bathrooms refit to see if it a major problem! I know I’m sad!!!!!!
HTH
Oliver
0 replies Dave I'm aware of the "water plus" feature, but have heard that Mieles also suds lock, actually from what I've found out near enough all modern machines do it. Also have read copies of instruction manuals for Mieles and they only do 2 rinses, my Bosch does 4. Washers just arn't as good as they used to be!! On the Easy-care (synthetic) cycles my Bosch uses the dilution rinsing so as to avoid excessive creasing to the fabrics. The Bosch rinses absolutley perfecly so long as "Higher water level" is selected. The worst rinsing I have come across is on a very reliable Siltal integral washer, my mums to be precise, the quality is brilliant but the rinsing that famous Yorkshire word sh1te!!! I know a good engineer that should be able to keep the Bosch running for some time yet, aprenticed by a nice fella at Yeadon! HTH Oliver PS. Post for you in Hot valve blog!!
Dave
I’m aware of the “water plus” feature, but have heard that Mieles also suds lock, actually from what I’ve found out near enough all modern machines do it. Also have read copies of instruction manuals for Mieles and they only do 2 rinses, my Bosch does 4.
Washers just arn’t as good as they used to be!!
On the Easy-care (synthetic) cycles my Bosch uses the dilution rinsing so as to avoid excessive creasing to the fabrics. The Bosch rinses absolutley perfecly so long as “Higher water level” is selected.
The worst rinsing I have come across is on a very reliable Siltal integral washer, my mums to be precise, the quality is brilliant but the rinsing that famous Yorkshire word sh1te!!!
I know a good engineer that should be able to keep the Bosch running for some time yet, aprenticed by a nice fella at Yeadon!
HTH
Oliver
PS. Post for you in Hot valve blog!!
0 replies Oliver: I've not heard of any problems with suds locking. As the machines are specifically designed to spin with water in during wash and spin to force water and detergent through the fabric it shouldn't be an issue. Are you sure you don't have a partially blocked filter or a partial obstruction in the drain hose or pump chamber that's reducing how fast the water pumps away? That could cause such problems.
Oliver: I’ve not heard of any problems with suds locking. As the machines are specifically designed to spin with water in during wash and spin to force water and detergent through the fabric it shouldn’t be an issue. Are you sure you don’t have a partially blocked filter or a partial obstruction in the drain hose or pump chamber that’s reducing how fast the water pumps away? That could cause such problems.
0 replies Andy: A point that I forgot to mention, alot of washing machines suds-lock during the intermediate spins these days. Meaning that detergent is not pumping away properly and carrying through to the next rinse. However only modern machines seem to do this, and less rinse cycles, often two is the norm means even worse rinsing. My therory on this is not enough water in the rinse phase to dilute the detergent properly and spin it away, also modern machines spin very fast during the rinses about 800-to 1600rpm, whereas older machines do about 300-400rpm. None of our old machines suds-locked. The Siltal is a bugger for that, its rinsing is bad anyway but even worse because of it suds-locking. I have heard of Mieles doing this, not what you expect from the top quality end is it? I would never ever have a Miele as the rinsing is so poor, shame really as I always fancied one. Oh well at least I can keep my old reliable Bosch going!! All the Best Oliver.
Andy:
A point that I forgot to mention, alot of washing machines suds-lock during the intermediate spins these days. Meaning that detergent is not pumping away properly and carrying through to the next rinse. However only modern machines seem to do this, and less rinse cycles, often two is the norm means even worse rinsing.
My therory on this is not enough water in the rinse phase to dilute the detergent properly and spin it away, also modern machines spin very fast during the rinses about 800-to 1600rpm, whereas older machines do about 300-400rpm. None of our old machines suds-locked. The Siltal is a bugger for that, its rinsing is bad anyway but even worse because of it suds-locking. I have heard of Mieles doing this, not what you expect from the top quality end is it? I would never ever have a Miele as the rinsing is so poor, shame really as I always fancied one. Oh well at least I can keep my old reliable Bosch going!!
All the Best
Oliver.
0 replies Oliver: Yes I agree, as far as I'm aware the suds in washing machine detergent are put there mostly for show. In fact suds inhibit washing because they cushion the laundry and reduce the effects of rubbing against each other, which is an essential part of washing. Therefore if too many soapsuds are introduced you will get less efficient washing. My understanding is that a cynical public do not like detergent which doesn't contain soapsuds and apparently do not believe it is washing properly unless there are suds. This may well be true but it could easily be dealt with if detergent manufacturers wanted to. It would be very easy for them to get across the message that you don't need soapsuds. However, whether soapsuds are a substantial part of the rinsing problem or not I am not so sure. Regarding your comment on solid-state timers being unreliable, they replaced mechanical timers years ago under the flag of being much more reliable. Clearly a solid-state controller should be much more reliable as there are no moving parts but in practice if they are not well designed or cheap components are used they can be unreliable. In some of the cheaper makes they can not only commonly fail but are so expensive when they do that they often write the machine off. However, we will never go back to mechanical timers because all they can do is switch mechanical switches on and off in a linear fashion. Today's washing machines require computer program software to run and to monitor during wash. If they are made properly they should be more reliable than the mechanical timer.
Oliver: Yes I agree, as far as I’m aware the suds in washing machine detergent are put there mostly for show. In fact suds inhibit washing because they cushion the laundry and reduce the effects of rubbing against each other, which is an essential part of washing. Therefore if too many soapsuds are introduced you will get less efficient washing.
My understanding is that a cynical public do not like detergent which doesn’t contain soapsuds and apparently do not believe it is washing properly unless there are suds. This may well be true but it could easily be dealt with if detergent manufacturers wanted to. It would be very easy for them to get across the message that you don’t need soapsuds. However, whether soapsuds are a substantial part of the rinsing problem or not I am not so sure.
Regarding your comment on solid-state timers being unreliable, they replaced mechanical timers years ago under the flag of being much more reliable. Clearly a solid-state controller should be much more reliable as there are no moving parts but in practice if they are not well designed or cheap components are used they can be unreliable. In some of the cheaper makes they can not only commonly fail but are so expensive when they do that they often write the machine off. However, we will never go back to mechanical timers because all they can do is switch mechanical switches on and off in a linear fashion. Today’s washing machines require computer program software to run and to monitor during wash. If they are made properly they should be more reliable than the mechanical timer.
0 replies Frustrated with Technology: Foam does nothing in laundry detergent unless heavily soap based, it is there for the consumer only, so leaving it out would have no effect on rinsing, only to the eye. The chemicals that irritate our skin are still there eg. enzymes, surfactants etc. Foam hinders the cleaning power of detergents by cushioning fabrics and preventing the weave of the fabric openning up properly due to it restricting movement. Another big difference between the two detergents are laundry detergent contains OXYGEN based bleaching agents whereas dishwasher detergent contains CHLORINE based bleaching agents such as Domestos etc. also would remove colour from coloured clothing!! As for dishwashers not rinsing properly, don't worry detergent is removed from crockery very easily. Crockery does not absorb detergent like fabrics do. Dishwashers rinse more than you think, ours does two on Economy 50 and three on Intensive 65 (good job I kept the manual for that one!!!). There is no trace of detergent left on anything even after Economy wash. There is deffinatley a niche in the market for someone to invent a washing machine and washer-drier that rinses properley with a choice of water levels say 1/2, 1/3, 1/4, up the door on wash and rinse also make it have a choice on the number of rinses say ranging from two to five. "Shaw's Good Old Washer Co." sounds good don't you think!!This way people have a choice of how they want their laundry rinsing and washing. But make the default settings the current low water usages so it would sell and could also be A rated, the last bit suggested by Andy Trigg (Washerhelp), comment 48. Also make these machines mechanically timed as solid state timers are unreliable, often why modern washing machines break down!! All of our washing machines that have lasted well have been mechanical, whereas the solid state broken down within two years!! We like 'em simple up ere in Yorkshire don't we Andy!! All the Best Oliver Shaw.
Frustrated with Technology:
Foam does nothing in laundry detergent unless heavily soap based, it is there for the consumer only, so leaving it out would have no effect on rinsing, only to the eye. The chemicals that irritate our skin are still there eg. enzymes, surfactants etc. Foam hinders the cleaning power of detergents by cushioning fabrics and preventing the weave of the fabric openning up properly due to it restricting movement.
Another big difference between the two detergents are laundry detergent contains OXYGEN based bleaching agents whereas dishwasher detergent contains CHLORINE based bleaching agents such as Domestos etc. also would remove colour from coloured clothing!!
As for dishwashers not rinsing properly, don’t worry detergent is removed from crockery very easily. Crockery does not absorb detergent like fabrics do. Dishwashers rinse more than you think, ours does two on Economy 50 and three on Intensive 65 (good job I kept the manual for that one!!!). There is no trace of detergent left on anything even after Economy wash.
There is deffinatley a niche in the market for someone to invent a washing machine and washer-drier that rinses properley with a choice of water levels say 1/2, 1/3, 1/4, up the door on wash and rinse also make it have a choice on the number of rinses say ranging from two to five. “Shaw’s Good Old Washer Co.” sounds good don’t you think!!This way people have a choice of how they want their laundry rinsing and washing. But make the default settings the current low water usages so it would sell and could also be A rated, the last bit suggested by Andy Trigg (Washerhelp), comment 48. Also make these machines mechanically timed as solid state timers are unreliable, often why modern washing machines break down!!
All of our washing machines that have lasted well have been mechanical, whereas the solid state broken down within two years!! We like ’em simple up ere in Yorkshire don’t we Andy!!
All the Best
Oliver Shaw.
0 replies I've just realised something... Compare laundry detergent with dishwasher detergent and you notice one major difference: dishwasher detergent does not foam (or if it does, it's a very very small amount), compared to laundry detergent which foams excessively if you use slightly too much and/or wash too few items. Nearly all new washing machines don't rinse properly and I believe the reason is not JUST down to less water being used during rinsing and fewer rinse cycles. I reckon laundry detergent should be re-developed to rinse off fabrics easier and not create any foam. If they can already make dishwasher detergent to not foam excessively, why not do the same with laundry detergent? Talking of dishwasher detergent, if new dishwashers continue to use less and less water and the detergent remains on our crockery, would that cause a health hazard? New washing machines are a health hazard to people with sensitive skin, as you can read above!
I’ve just realised something…
Compare laundry detergent with dishwasher detergent and you notice one major difference: dishwasher detergent does not foam (or if it does, it’s a very very small amount), compared to laundry detergent which foams excessively if you use slightly too much and/or wash too few items.
Nearly all new washing machines don’t rinse properly and I believe the reason is not JUST down to less water being used during rinsing and fewer rinse cycles. I reckon laundry detergent should be re-developed to rinse off fabrics easier and not create any foam. If they can already make dishwasher detergent to not foam excessively, why not do the same with laundry detergent?
Talking of dishwasher detergent, if new dishwashers continue to use less and less water and the detergent remains on our crockery, would that cause a health hazard? New washing machines are a health hazard to people with sensitive skin, as you can read above!
0 replies Which? have done extensive tests on washing machine detergents and last time I checked the eco ones didn't do too well although they said they were OK for lightly soiled laundry. I suggest if people are keen to be environmentally friendly they should at least try some for lightly soiled items though not necessarily to replace normal detergent Eco friendly (green) detergents
Which? have done extensive tests on washing machine detergents and last time I checked the eco ones didn’t do too well although they said they were OK for lightly soiled laundry. I suggest if people are keen to be environmentally friendly they should at least try some for lightly soiled items though not necessarily to replace normal detergent Eco friendly (green) detergents
0 replies Using eco liquid, and not much, may help rinsing issues but unfortunately a consequence can be a build up of sludge and grease which can ruin a washing machine - Washing machine smells - causes of grease, slime and black mould inside washing machines If this happens use normal detergent with bleaching agents such as detergent for whites on a boil wash once a month although that isn't very "eco". However, there's not much point being environmentally friendly if it shortens the life of the washing machine or causes breakdowns.
Using eco liquid, and not much, may help rinsing issues but unfortunately a consequence can be a build up of sludge and grease which can ruin a washing machine – Washing machine smells – causes of grease, slime and black mould inside washing machines
If this happens use normal detergent with bleaching agents such as detergent for whites on a boil wash once a month although that isn’t very “eco”. However, there’s not much point being environmentally friendly if it shortens the life of the washing machine or causes breakdowns.
0 replies Carbon-Careful? I have tried Ecover liquid and other supposebly natural alternatives to main-stream washing powders and found them to be as useful as a snooze button on a smoke alarm!!!! I have to use skin ointments and creams and Ecover etc. does not remove them from my clothing, also if not properly rinsed out they still irritate my skin even non-bio! Also natural alternetives do not contain bleach which cause bacteria growth in you towels making them smell, also cause black slime in your washing machine. Unless run your machine empty regulally on a 95 degree wash. I use Ariel biological powder which does remove the skin treatments very well even with "Short wash" pressed in on my machine, so long as it is properly rinsed out it is OK. I have tried all detergents and am allergic to the lot you name it I've tried it!! Like I have said before washing machines using less water is a selling point, it has no effect on electricity usage what so ever, I do not care about the environment, I love my water guzzling Bosch to bits as it rinses perfectly well, and has cleared my dermatitis and eczema. The only point to saving water is if you are on a water meter, which we are. So what is more important saving water for a country that rains most of the time or not itching like a flea bitten cat? You decide!! All the best Oliver Shaw.
Carbon-Careful?
I have tried Ecover liquid and other supposebly natural alternatives to main-stream washing powders and found them to be as useful as a snooze button on a smoke alarm!!!!
I have to use skin ointments and creams and Ecover etc. does not remove them from my clothing, also if not properly rinsed out they still irritate my skin even non-bio! Also natural alternetives do not contain bleach which cause bacteria growth in you towels making them smell, also cause black slime in your washing machine. Unless run your machine empty regulally on a 95 degree wash.
I use Ariel biological powder which does remove the skin treatments very well even with “Short wash” pressed in on my machine, so long as it is properly rinsed out it is OK. I have tried all detergents and am allergic to the lot you name it I’ve tried it!!
Like I have said before washing machines using less water is a selling point, it has no effect on electricity usage what so ever, I do not care about the environment, I love my water guzzling Bosch to bits as it rinses perfectly well, and has cleared my dermatitis and eczema. The only point to saving water is if you are on a water meter, which we are. So what is more important saving water for a country that rains most of the time or not itching like a flea bitten cat? You decide!!
All the best
Oliver Shaw.
0 replies Use Ecover liquid, only a small amount. If that's no good then I suggest that when the cycle has finished you do another wash without any detergent - on my machine there is a "refreshing wash" cycle.
Use Ecover liquid, only a small amount. If that’s no good then I suggest that when the cycle has finished you do another wash without any detergent – on my machine there is a “refreshing wash” cycle.
0 replies Frustrated with Technology: Your comments are quite right, that adding water to your washing machine on the rinse cycle will help. This is clear evedence that they do not use enough water. When I had my Hotpoint Aquarius I contacted them about my machines inabillity to rinse. The stupid woman in the call centre said she would check to see if all Hotpoints machines were like this, she said they were, I mean do you really need to be a weatherman to know when it is p155ing it down!!! So I asked what Hotpoint were going to do about it, such as compensation towards me having to buy a new washing machine, short answer.....NO! Instead a very understated apology, which she bregrudginly had to give. They did not care their useless washing machine had cause me no end of dermatitis and eczema, the stupid woman made me feel like an oddity and said Hotpoint machines were good at rinsing, I would like to know what sort of washer she has, I bet she hasn't got a Hotpoint!!! I even suggested they relaunched a machine that they used to make that use high water levels the Aquarius Diamond springs to mind (they will still have the blue prints, they won't destroy those), they said it was a bad idea as this machine was bad for the environment as it was a "water guzzler", why do we need machines that use little water we hardly have droughts as it rains most of the year in the UK. This environmental tosh is a selling point, playing on peoples caring side! Going back 20 years who had heard of washing detergents aggrevating their skin, no body thats who! Because machines back the used alot of water, in the case of the Servis we had back then about 130 litres per cycle. The other week on the television doctor Hillary Jones was saying about more and more cases of detergent induced dermatitis due to it being left in our clothes. These modern washing machines are breeding a skin complaint, how long will it be before manufacturers see it is their fault and bring out some machines that rinse properly? Have you ever noticed that every time you buy a new washing machine it does a rinse less e.g. Tricity Bendix 4 rinses, Siltal 3 rinses, Hotpoint 2 rinses. just an example of some of the machines we have had over the years. How long before 1 rinse? So it is not just low water levels but less rinse cycles also. Plus you don't see "Super rinse" and "Higher water level" options on machines any more. My reconditioned Bosch WFF2000 (4 rinses and higher water level option) has cleared up my dermatitis and eczema, it shows machines from 12 years ago do rinse properly. This machine uses about 100 litres per cycle. My Mums Siltal washing machine uses 49 litres per cycle, you cannot even see the water in her machine, not even on rinse, I am not slating this machine 10-15 loads a week, 8 years old and still giong strong!! Hope this helps you, All the best Oliver.
Frustrated with Technology:
Your comments are quite right, that adding water to your washing machine on the rinse cycle will help. This is clear evedence that they do not use enough water.
When I had my Hotpoint Aquarius I contacted them about my machines inabillity to rinse. The stupid woman in the call centre said she would check to see if all Hotpoints machines were like this, she said they were, I mean do you really need to be a weatherman to know when it is p155ing it down!!!
So I asked what Hotpoint were going to do about it, such as compensation towards me having to buy a new washing machine, short answer…..NO! Instead a very understated apology, which she bregrudginly had to give.
They did not care their useless washing machine had cause me no end of dermatitis and eczema, the stupid woman made me feel like an oddity and said Hotpoint machines were good at rinsing, I would like to know what sort of washer she has, I bet she hasn’t got a Hotpoint!!!
I even suggested they relaunched a machine that they used to make that use high water levels the Aquarius Diamond springs to mind (they will still have the blue prints, they won’t destroy those), they said it was a bad idea as this machine was bad for the environment as it was a “water guzzler”, why do we need machines that use little water we hardly have droughts as it rains most of the year in the UK. This environmental tosh is a selling point, playing on peoples caring side!
Going back 20 years who had heard of washing detergents aggrevating their skin, no body thats who! Because machines back the used alot of water, in the case of the Servis we had back then about 130 litres per cycle. The other week on the television doctor Hillary Jones was saying about more and more cases of detergent induced dermatitis due to it being left in our clothes. These modern washing machines are breeding a skin complaint, how long will it be before manufacturers see it is their fault and bring out some machines that rinse properly?
Have you ever noticed that every time you buy a new washing machine it does a rinse less e.g. Tricity Bendix 4 rinses, Siltal 3 rinses, Hotpoint 2 rinses. just an example of some of the machines we have had over the years. How long before 1 rinse? So it is not just low water levels but less rinse cycles also. Plus you don’t see “Super rinse” and “Higher water level” options on machines any more.
My reconditioned Bosch WFF2000 (4 rinses and higher water level option) has cleared up my dermatitis and eczema, it shows machines from 12 years ago do rinse properly. This machine uses about 100 litres per cycle. My Mums Siltal washing machine uses 49 litres per cycle, you cannot even see the water in her machine, not even on rinse, I am not slating this machine 10-15 loads a week, 8 years old and still giong strong!!
Hope this helps you,
All the best
Oliver.
0 replies I suggested 1/3 height as families on water meters would end up paying a fortune, as the washing machine is used more often. Today’s living is too expensive as it is. I find one rinse 1/3 height works for me (along with the other rinses using less water): the clothes no longer feel rough and don’t smell of detergent like they used to before I tried this method. If you find one rinse 1/3 height is not enough, maybe try 1/2 the height and maybe repeat again on the next rinses. I know it’s inconvenient having to fill your machine with extra water, but if it stops your skin allergies then it’s worth the aggro. Have a towel ready to wipe any spillages on the floor. Be aware that today’s washing machines are electronically controlled and if you add too much water the electronics may think the machine has overfilled and will start pumping out the water immediately. If you are not near a tap, maybe fill a watering can from elsewhere, without the round sprinkling head attached. If you add soap powder to the drawer, pour the water into the pre-wash compartment so you don’t end up flushing down bits of powder that get left behind. The only other suggestions I have are: 1. If you are buying another washing machine, subscribe to Which? and look for a washing machine or washer-dryer with a good score for rinsing. 2. Why don’t we all complain to both the washing machine and detergent manufacturer’s about this problem? The more people who complain, the better.
I suggested 1/3 height as families on water meters would end up paying a fortune, as the washing machine is used more often. Today’s living is too expensive as it is. I find one rinse 1/3 height works for me (along with the other rinses using less water): the clothes no longer feel rough and don’t smell of detergent like they used to before I tried this method.
If you find one rinse 1/3 height is not enough, maybe try 1/2 the height and maybe repeat again on the next rinses. I know it’s inconvenient having to fill your machine with extra water, but if it stops your skin allergies then it’s worth the aggro. Have a towel ready to wipe any spillages on the floor.
Be aware that today’s washing machines are electronically controlled and if you add too much water the electronics may think the machine has overfilled and will start pumping out the water immediately.
If you are not near a tap, maybe fill a watering can from elsewhere, without the round sprinkling head attached.
If you add soap powder to the drawer, pour the water into the pre-wash compartment so you don’t end up flushing down bits of powder that get left behind.
The only other suggestions I have are: 1. If you are buying another washing machine, subscribe to Which? and look for a washing machine or washer-dryer with a good score for rinsing. 2. Why don’t we all complain to both the washing machine and detergent manufacturer’s about this problem? The more people who complain, the better.
0 replies I agree that few people would put up with all the hassle that Frustrated with Technology does but I'm sure its felt to be a needs-must situation. The best solution to a bad situation. To be fair most people don't seem to have a problem with the standard of rinsing. As for having water half way up the glass being a waste - it's only a waste if laundry can be rinsed just as well with less water. If cutting down on the amount of water to address one issue results in poorer rinsing which causes problems for some customers then that's a pointless "fix".
I agree that few people would put up with all the hassle that Frustrated with Technology does but I’m sure its felt to be a needs-must situation. The best solution to a bad situation. To be fair most people don’t seem to have a problem with the standard of rinsing.
As for having water half way up the glass being a waste – it’s only a waste if laundry can be rinsed just as well with less water. If cutting down on the amount of water to address one issue results in poorer rinsing which causes problems for some customers then that’s a pointless “fix”.
0 replies Frustrated with Technology: You call this the ultimate solution, I wouldn’t want to hang around waiting to fill my washing machine on the rinses with a hose pipe. It is a method but washers should already put enough water in without human intervention. Plus my washing machine is in a third storey bedroom with no sink in sight!! My parents machine in the kitchen is filled with a kettle as it too cannot put enough water in for the wash or rinses! I cannot use their machine as it leaves so much detergent in the washing. My previous Hotpoint was better but not by a lot, then the computer failed after only two and a half years, just what you want when you spend £500 on a washer. I have already replaced my Hotpoint with a reconditioned machine (Bosch WFF2000) that puts water one third up the door in the rinses and does it four times. All I have to do is press-Higher water level or it will do three with water a quarter up the door. You say water half way up the door is a waste, I disagree as I had no trouble with my skin 15 years ago when we had the Servis Quartz 1000, three rinses half way up the door. We are on the water meter but I would rather pay money for the water than be itching and scratching myself raw! The Bosch only cost £145 with a 12 month warranty, bought in Halifax, West Yorkshire from a shop that specialises in reconditioned Hotpoints and Bosch! Hope this helps with the rinse issues. All the best, Oliver.
Frustrated with Technology:
You call this the ultimate solution, I wouldn’t want to hang around waiting to fill my washing machine on the rinses with a hose pipe. It is a method but washers should already put enough water in without human intervention.
Plus my washing machine is in a third storey bedroom with no sink in sight!! My parents machine in the kitchen is filled with a kettle as it too cannot put enough water in for the wash or rinses! I cannot use their machine as it leaves so much detergent in the washing. My previous Hotpoint was better but not by a lot, then the computer failed after only two and a half years, just what you want when you spend £500 on a washer.
I have already replaced my Hotpoint with a reconditioned machine (Bosch WFF2000) that puts water one third up the door in the rinses and does it four times. All I have to do is press-Higher water level or it will do three with water a quarter up the door.
You say water half way up the door is a waste, I disagree as I had no trouble with my skin 15 years ago when we had the Servis Quartz 1000, three rinses half way up the door.
We are on the water meter but I would rather pay money for the water than be itching and scratching myself raw!
The Bosch only cost £145 with a 12 month warranty, bought in Halifax, West Yorkshire from a shop that specialises in reconditioned Hotpoints and Bosch!
Hope this helps with the rinse issues.
All the best, Oliver.
0 replies I think I have the ultimate solution! If your washing machine is not rinsing properly, even if you press the "extra rinse" button, you may want to try this: Buy a length of hose sufficient to reach from the cold tap of your kitchen sink into the soap drawer of the washing machine. Also buy the right adaptor for the tap or mixer tap. After the first rinse with a spin (on some delicate programmes, it may not spin between rinses) when the washing machine starts filling for the next rinse, use the hose to fill the washing machine drum up to 1/3 of the height on the door glass. Using more water than 1/3 is wasteful - and if you are on a water meter - using more every time would be expensive! Now let the washing machine continue as normal. I don't advise doing this on the final rinse if you are using fabric conditioner as you will dilute it too much. If you're still experiencing skin rashes, stop using fabric conditioner for about a month to rule that out. I hope this helps. I'm sure it's worth a try if detergent residue is causing havoc with your skin allergies?!
I think I have the ultimate solution!
If your washing machine is not rinsing properly, even if you press the “extra rinse” button, you may want to try this:
Buy a length of hose sufficient to reach from the cold tap of your kitchen sink into the soap drawer of the washing machine. Also buy the right adaptor for the tap or mixer tap.
After the first rinse with a spin (on some delicate programmes, it may not spin between rinses) when the washing machine starts filling for the next rinse, use the hose to fill the washing machine drum up to 1/3 of the height on the door glass. Using more water than 1/3 is wasteful – and if you are on a water meter – using more every time would be expensive!
Now let the washing machine continue as normal. I don’t advise doing this on the final rinse if you are using fabric conditioner as you will dilute it too much.
If you’re still experiencing skin rashes, stop using fabric conditioner for about a month to rule that out.
I hope this helps. I’m sure it’s worth a try if detergent residue is causing havoc with your skin allergies?!
0 replies Could not agree more!!! Oliver Shaw
Could not agree more!!!
Oliver Shaw
0 replies There is strong evidence that suggests most modern washing machines have gone so far up the road of being "environmentally friendly" that they don't use enough water to rinse thoroughly any more. If washing machine manufacturer's main concern is to get good ratings for low water usage and this results in poor rinsing what's wrong with making washing machines that do use the current low amounts by default on all washes - but have the ability to optionally use more water on rinses - up to twice as much if necessary. That way washers can still be promoted with badges and awards for low water usage but the user can choose to override the defaults for better rinsing if that's more important.
There is strong evidence that suggests most modern washing machines have gone so far up the road of being “environmentally friendly” that they don’t use enough water to rinse thoroughly any more.
If washing machine manufacturer’s main concern is to get good ratings for low water usage and this results in poor rinsing what’s wrong with making washing machines that do use the current low amounts by default on all washes – but have the ability to optionally use more water on rinses – up to twice as much if necessary. That way washers can still be promoted with badges and awards for low water usage but the user can choose to override the defaults for better rinsing if that’s more important.
0 replies Since e-mailling you last I have replaced my dreadful Hotpoint Aquarius with a Bosch WFF2000 reconditioned washing machine. Not only does it rinse properly, it does 4 RINSES with water one third up the door for each, but is quieter than my Hotpoint ever was. It has short programmes each no more than an hour and fifteen minutes, my clothes are far cleaner even though they used to be washed for way over two hours. It spins alot slower than the Hotpoint and my clothes are much much drier. It would seem if you want a washing machine to wash, rinse and spin properly you need a reconditioned machine about 12-15 years old or so! And it was a snip at £145.00 with a 12 month warranty. My clothing is not hard with detergent any more and my eczema and dermatitis has started to go away. My towels are actually soft and not like sandpaper any more! If you have skin problems irritated by washing detergents old machines are the way to go, they actually rinse in water!!! Oliver Shaw.
Since e-mailling you last I have replaced my dreadful Hotpoint Aquarius with a Bosch WFF2000 reconditioned washing machine. Not only does it rinse properly, it does 4 RINSES with water one third up the door for each, but is quieter than my Hotpoint ever was. It has short programmes each no more than an hour and fifteen minutes, my clothes are far cleaner even though they used to be washed for way over two hours.
It spins alot slower than the Hotpoint and my clothes are much much drier.
It would seem if you want a washing machine to wash, rinse and spin properly you need a reconditioned machine about 12-15 years old or so! And it was a snip at £145.00 with a 12 month warranty.
My clothing is not hard with detergent any more and my eczema and dermatitis has started to go away. My towels are actually soft and not like sandpaper any more!
If you have skin problems irritated by washing detergents old machines are the way to go, they actually rinse in water!!!
Oliver Shaw.
0 replies Our Bosch machine rinses very poorly even on super-rinse. If I put a newly washed facecloth into a bowl of water the water goes very cloudy as the detergent comes out, Obviously the towels are the same but of course they don't get immersed in the same way.
Our Bosch machine rinses very poorly even on super-rinse. If I put a newly washed facecloth into a bowl of water the water goes very cloudy as the detergent comes out, Obviously the towels are the same but of course they don’t get immersed in the same way.
0 replies Thank goodness I found this website before I called an engineer. My Bosch washing machine (2 years old) is dreadful at rinsing on delicate wash programmes. On a wool wash, everything comes out smeared with liquid detergent - and stains untouched. I recently bought detergent tablets because they were on offer - not only was there always residue on the clothes, but the tablets were sometimes only partly dissolved. It seems that there is not enough water in the whole wash cycle. I have the option to add extra water and / or an extra rinse to other programmes, but not delicates, so they get washed twice. When I first got the machine, I was pleased with how short the programme cycles were, but now I have to add all the extra functions, I am back up to 2 hours plus for a wash. I lived in the US for a few years - 25 minutes in an old laundrette top-loader and my washing was spotless.
Thank goodness I found this website before I called an engineer. My Bosch washing machine (2 years old) is dreadful at rinsing on delicate wash programmes. On a wool wash, everything comes out smeared with liquid detergent – and stains untouched. I recently bought detergent tablets because they were on offer – not only was there always residue on the clothes, but the tablets were sometimes only partly dissolved. It seems that there is not enough water in the whole wash cycle. I have the option to add extra water and / or an extra rinse to other programmes, but not delicates, so they get washed twice. When I first got the machine, I was pleased with how short the programme cycles were, but now I have to add all the extra functions, I am back up to 2 hours plus for a wash. I lived in the US for a few years – 25 minutes in an old laundrette top-loader and my washing was spotless.
0 replies Cindy: Top loaders use a lot more water than front loaders and are generally not as good in other ways too but they do rinse better because of all the water they use. This problem shows how so often the answer to one problem only creates others. Which is best, a top loader or a front loader washing machine?
Cindy: Top loaders use a lot more water than front loaders and are generally not as good in other ways too but they do rinse better because of all the water they use. This problem shows how so often the answer to one problem only creates others.
Which is best, a top loader or a front loader washing machine?
0 replies My old front-load washer (a Maytag Neptune) used about 25 gallons of water per load and rinsed 3 times with an extra rinse possible for a total of 4 times and I loved it. I replaced it with 2 different front-loaders and had skin issues wearing clothing washed in both of them--due to inadequate rinsing. After much discussion with representatives from Maytag and Whirlpool, I discovered the water standards are extremely tight on the new front-loaders. So, I purchased a top-load Maytag Centennial washer. You can choose the water level you want; and you can also choose extra rinse for every load. The top-loaders don't have as many features and aren't as "pretty" but at least they rinse my clothing well--using about 40 gallons per load. There are other brands that do the same, but be careful because some of the top-loaders are energy efficient and don't allow you to choose your water level. Best wishes to you! Cindy
My old front-load washer (a Maytag Neptune) used about 25 gallons of water per load and rinsed 3 times with an extra rinse possible for a total of 4 times and I loved it. I replaced it with 2 different front-loaders and had skin issues wearing clothing washed in both of them–due to inadequate rinsing. After much discussion with representatives from Maytag and Whirlpool, I discovered the water standards are extremely tight on the new front-loaders. So, I purchased a top-load Maytag Centennial washer. You can choose the water level you want; and you can also choose extra rinse for every load. The top-loaders don’t have as many features and aren’t as “pretty” but at least they rinse my clothing well–using about 40 gallons per load. There are other brands that do the same, but be careful because some of the top-loaders are energy efficient and don’t allow you to choose your water level. Best wishes to you!
Cindy
0 replies Steve: To be honest I think adding water to the final rinse isn't likely to make a significant difference although it may help a little. The idea of having to do that on each wash, trying to catch it before it's finished the last rinse is depressing. If things are that bad, a new machine may be preferable although as discussed, most machines are not very good at rinsing. The Indesit Moon was above average at rinsing according to Which? but Indesit make budget machines and aren't renowned for reliability. If your washing machine doesn't pump out into something fitted with a u-bend you can get smells, that's the main purpose of a u-bend. Having said that the smells are likely to enter the kitchen rather than come directly from the washing machine as there is always water inside the sump hose which acts like a trap where smells shouldn't get past.
Steve: To be honest I think adding water to the final rinse isn’t likely to make a significant difference although it may help a little. The idea of having to do that on each wash, trying to catch it before it’s finished the last rinse is depressing. If things are that bad, a new machine may be preferable although as discussed, most machines are not very good at rinsing. The Indesit Moon was above average at rinsing according to Which? but Indesit make budget machines and aren’t renowned for reliability.
If your washing machine doesn’t pump out into something fitted with a u-bend you can get smells, that’s the main purpose of a u-bend. Having said that the smells are likely to enter the kitchen rather than come directly from the washing machine as there is always water inside the sump hose which acts like a trap where smells shouldn’t get past.
0 replies I, too, am having trouble finding a washing machine that rinses well and am concerned that our government (United States) is going to make the energy star standards mandatory. After wearing clothing washed in "energy efficient" machines, I have to seek medical help for medication to counter my skin reaction. Fewer machines are available that allow consumers to choose the water level they desire. We need to begin writing manufacturers about this problem--there must be many people who are itching and don't know it is caused from poor rinsing in their washing machine.
I, too, am having trouble finding a washing machine that rinses well and am concerned that our government (United States) is going to make the energy star standards mandatory. After wearing clothing washed in “energy efficient” machines, I have to seek medical help for medication to counter my skin reaction.
Fewer machines are available that allow consumers to choose the water level they desire. We need to begin writing manufacturers about this problem–there must be many people who are itching and don’t know it is caused from poor rinsing in their washing machine.
0 replies The HE article is refering to American style top loading washers, so unless you are in the US using a HE top loader and still using the high sudsing traditional top loader detergent it's not something to be concerned about. It's also dated 2005. It refers to a change in the top loaders that traditionally had large central agitators and washed like the old twin tubs we had in the UK. As such they used high sudsing detergents - as did we in our twin tubs. Back in 2005 a new type of top loader had started to become popular which had replaced the agitator with paddles similar to those used in front loading washing machines and used less water. This article says "traditional" detergent is no longer suitable for such machines and low sudsing (front loader) detergent is needed. The automatic detergents in the UK are designed to be used in cold fill front loading washing machines and should work perfectly well if used correctly. Poor rinsing has to be down to using less water on rinses as far as I can see. However, it must be remembered that detergent is designed to leave laundry smelling of it (usually a pleasant smell) and that suds-like foam in the final rinsing water is not necessarily evidence of poor rinsing as the strangely named "sorry to be a party pooper" mentioned in an earlier comment.
The HE article is refering to American style top loading washers, so unless you are in the US using a HE top loader and still using the high sudsing traditional top loader detergent it’s not something to be concerned about. It’s also dated 2005.
It refers to a change in the top loaders that traditionally had large central agitators and washed like the old twin tubs we had in the UK. As such they used high sudsing detergents – as did we in our twin tubs.
Back in 2005 a new type of top loader had started to become popular which had replaced the agitator with paddles similar to those used in front loading washing machines and used less water. This article says “traditional” detergent is no longer suitable for such machines and low sudsing (front loader) detergent is needed.
The automatic detergents in the UK are designed to be used in cold fill front loading washing machines and should work perfectly well if used correctly.
Poor rinsing has to be down to using less water on rinses as far as I can see. However, it must be remembered that detergent is designed to leave laundry smelling of it (usually a pleasant smell) and that suds-like foam in the final rinsing water is not necessarily evidence of poor rinsing as the strangely named “sorry to be a party pooper” mentioned in an earlier comment.
0 replies I am looking for a new washing machine as my old (very old) Hotpoint 95620 is coming to the end, but it has been a wonderful machine, and rinses perfectly. I am wondering where the H E detergent can be purchased as i feel I will need it when l,hear all the complaints of non-rinsing machines. I wonder if the name of stockists could be published somewhere. Hopefully margaret Rutland
I am looking for a new washing machine as my old (very old) Hotpoint 95620 is coming to the end, but it has been a wonderful machine, and rinses perfectly. I am wondering where the H E detergent can be purchased as i feel I will need it when l,hear all the complaints of non-rinsing machines. I wonder if the name of stockists could be published somewhere. Hopefully margaret Rutland
0 replies Ann: I’ve added the following to the article after your comment - Which? do rate some washing machines as satisfactory for rinsing and even a couple are rated as good although unfortunately the few rated good (so far) are not so good on reliability. Which? are constantly reviewing washing machines so if rinsing is particularly important to you it makes sense to become a member and see all the buying advice. I can’t print their advice for copyright reasons.
Ann: I’ve added the following to the article after your comment –
Which? do rate some washing machines as satisfactory for rinsing and even a couple are rated as good although unfortunately the few rated good (so far) are not so good on reliability.
Which? are constantly reviewing washing machines so if rinsing is particularly important to you it makes sense to become a member and see all the buying advice. I can’t print their advice for copyright reasons.
0 replies I have had a Miele for about 3 years. I thought I was buying the best in the business, but its rinsing capabilities are risible; I have to give the towels no fewer than 3 separate rinse after the wash has finished, and they STILL feel like planks and need to be tumbledried. So do the jeans. I have to use the "water plus" button on every wash no matter what the contents, and I only ever use a single bubble of detergent. I have had Miele engineers around but they say it is working normally. Well, this normally isn't good enough. I would change it but the blog tells us that Which? says none rinses properly. Lets all write to the manufacturers and tell them their products do not reach the standard required as far as rinsing is concerned. Go on. Do it. I have.
I have had a Miele for about 3 years. I thought I was buying the best in the business, but its rinsing capabilities are risible; I have to give the towels no fewer than 3 separate rinse after the wash has finished, and they STILL feel like planks and need to be tumbledried. So do the jeans. I have to use the “water plus” button on every wash no matter what the contents, and I only ever use a single bubble of detergent. I have had Miele engineers around but they say it is working normally. Well, this normally isn’t good enough. I would change it but the blog tells us that Which? says none rinses properly. Lets all write to the manufacturers and tell them their products do not reach the standard required as far as rinsing is concerned. Go on. Do it. I have.
0 replies Just by chance I have come across this wonderful web-site and have been so thrilled to realise that I am not the only one to be so disappointed with a washing machine which is useless at rinsing. Six years ago when I bought my Zanussi machine, I complained to the retailer (with no success) and to Zanussi about the ineffectiveness of its rinsing. After much correspondence between Zanussi and myself I was left feeling that I was an oddity, and that I didn't appreciate advances in washing machine technology. I also felt so frustrated that I could not convince Zanussi of the utter uselessness of the rinsing function of the machine. Although I have reduced the amount of detergent to the smallest amount feasable, I frequently have to carry out extra rinses, and on occasion I have been known to wash by HAND to ensure thorough rinsing. Wonderful web-site. Thank you!
Just by chance I have come across this wonderful web-site and have been so thrilled to realise that I am not the only one to be so disappointed with a washing machine which is useless at rinsing. Six years ago when I bought my Zanussi machine, I complained to the retailer (with no success) and to Zanussi about the ineffectiveness of its rinsing. After much correspondence between Zanussi and myself I was left feeling that I was an oddity,
and that I didn’t appreciate advances in washing machine technology. I also felt so frustrated that I could not convince Zanussi of the utter uselessness of the rinsing function of the machine. Although I have reduced the amount of detergent to the smallest amount feasable, I frequently have to carry out extra rinses, and on occasion I have been known to wash by HAND to ensure thorough rinsing. Wonderful web-site. Thank you!
0 replies It shouldn't be necessary to run the entire rinse programmes again but with many washing machines you can't select individual rinses any more. Many people actually like the smell of detergent and it's specially perfumed to that end. If you have an extra rinse option button it's worth trying that. Make sure you don't overload which can reduce rinse efficiency.
It shouldn’t be necessary to run the entire rinse programmes again but with many washing machines you can’t select individual rinses any more. Many people actually like the smell of detergent and it’s specially perfumed to that end. If you have an extra rinse option button it’s worth trying that.
Make sure you don’t overload which can reduce rinse efficiency.
0 replies I have to run the "Rinse" programme after the machine has finished, it means I get extra rinses and the softener is dispensed during the last rinse on the "Rinse" programme. The disadvantages: the machine takes nearly an hour longer to finish and it increases the "wear and tear", but I'd rather my laundry is rinsed properly. The clothes feel softer and don't smell so strongly of detergent like they used to before I tried this method. Worth a try?
I have to run the “Rinse” programme after the machine has finished, it means I get extra rinses and the softener is dispensed during the last rinse on the “Rinse” programme.
The disadvantages: the machine takes nearly an hour longer to finish and it increases the “wear and tear”, but I’d rather my laundry is rinsed properly.
The clothes feel softer and don’t smell so strongly of detergent like they used to before I tried this method.
Worth a try?
0 replies i usually do a wash with nothing at all and it dosent create suds as soon as i took the eco balls out it stopped
i usually do a wash with nothing at all and it dosent create suds as soon as i took the eco balls out it stopped
0 replies If you use a washing machine with nothing in at all it will usually still create some suds because of all the previous residue inside the machine, it could be that?. Eventually it should stop but it depends how long you've been using the eco balls.
If you use a washing machine with nothing in at all it will usually still create some suds because of all the previous residue inside the machine, it could be that?. Eventually it should stop but it depends how long you’ve been using the eco balls.
0 replies one thing i also dont understand is that it created suds
one thing i also dont understand is that it created suds
0 replies Here's a quote from the review -The principal claim made by the manufacturers of these products is that they machine-wash your clothes without any additives at all. This, it is claimed, results from agitation of ceramic granules or the like, within the perforated balls which ionise (or is it de-ionise?) the water. The effect of this, it is said, is to lift dirt from your clothes, just as a detergent would, except without the harshness of chemicals that fade your clothes and require you to add softeners to your wash."
Here’s a quote from the review –
The principal claim made by the manufacturers of these products is that they machine-wash your clothes without any additives at all. This, it is claimed, results from agitation of ceramic granules or the like, within the perforated balls which ionise (or is it de-ionise?) the water. The effect of this, it is said, is to lift dirt from your clothes, just as a detergent would, except without the harshness of chemicals that fade your clothes and require you to add softeners to your wash.”
0 replies they are the original brand eco balls and they do list chemicals i think(?) I wonder what the co ball company has to say about this (im in agony here)
they are the original brand eco balls and they do list chemicals i think(?) I wonder what the co ball company has to say about this (im in agony here)
0 replies Matt: There's a mention of eco balls on Whitegoodshelp you might want to look at eco balls My understanding though is they don't contain chemicals, which is why they are eco friendly. There are probably various versions knocking about these days, what are yours called? "Eco Balls" are the original and a trademarked name.
Matt: There’s a mention of eco balls on Whitegoodshelp you might want to look at eco balls
My understanding though is they don’t contain chemicals, which is why they are eco friendly. There are probably various versions knocking about these days, what are yours called? “Eco Balls” are the original and a trademarked name.
0 replies after reading this I bought some eco balls and i am wondering if they release peroxide after picking them up while they were wet made my hand burn (b-u-r-n) like i touched bleach has anyone else noticed this? help!
after reading this I bought some eco balls and i am wondering if they release peroxide after picking them up while they were wet made my hand burn (b-u-r-n) like i touched bleach has anyone else noticed this? help!
0 replies Of all washing machines you would expect Miele to be the best performance-wise not just in build quality. I wrote my article after learning that even miele washing machnes were often "poor" at rinsing according to Which? However, as pointed out in my article the majority of people don't seem to have a problem with the standard of rinsing modern washing machines give. If people are allergic to detergent though it is a different matter although I'm not sure how anyone can know for sure it is the washing detergent causing the irritation as it's a complex issue ( Biological detergents not guilty? -Biological enzymes do not cause skin irritation ) Do you use fabric conditioner? That potentially could cause irritation but the blame may be assumed to lie with the detergent. The thing about fabric conditioner is that it doesn't get rinsed off properly as it only goes into the machine on the very last rinse. It's also possible that something in the detergent you use has changed since acquiring the Miele and that could account for the increase in problems. At the end of the day the washing detergent manufacturers have some responsibility here and as one of the items in the eczema society article points out, detergent manufacturers should have customer helplines for anyone with allergic reactions to their products which should be looked into. Have you tried something like Dreft by the way? Advice from the eczema society regarding washing detergent is, "wash clothes in the minimum effective quantity of non-biological, un-perfumed washing powder. Give clothes an extra rinse. Avoid fabric conditioners." I'm not too sure that using less detergent is necessarily beneficial as it would affect wash efficiency which could allow other things to cause irritation and combined with low temperature washes could allow bacteria to build up. It will also stop the water softening agents working properly which could cause damage to the washing machine through limescale over a period of years. However, if reducing quantity has definitely helped it's probably the less of two evils. House mites can also cause problems and they can survive low temperature washing as a previous article of mine points out Dust mites and washing machines Related: You should be able to download a PDF Fact sheet from National Eczema Society on dust mites. Apologies if some of my comments are things you are already aware of. I try to be comprehensive enough to help others following too.
Of all washing machines you would expect Miele to be the best performance-wise not just in build quality. I wrote my article after learning that even miele washing machnes were often “poor” at rinsing according to Which? However, as pointed out in my article the majority of people don’t seem to have a problem with the standard of rinsing modern washing machines give.
If people are allergic to detergent though it is a different matter although I’m not sure how anyone can know for sure it is the washing detergent causing the irritation as it’s a complex issue ( Biological detergents not guilty? -Biological enzymes do not cause skin irritation )
Do you use fabric conditioner? That potentially could cause irritation but the blame may be assumed to lie with the detergent. The thing about fabric conditioner is that it doesn’t get rinsed off properly as it only goes into the machine on the very last rinse.
It’s also possible that something in the detergent you use has changed since acquiring the Miele and that could account for the increase in problems.
At the end of the day the washing detergent manufacturers have some responsibility here and as one of the items in the eczema society article points out, detergent manufacturers should have customer helplines for anyone with allergic reactions to their products which should be looked into.
Have you tried something like Dreft by the way? Advice from the eczema society regarding washing detergent is, “wash clothes in the minimum effective quantity of non-biological, un-perfumed washing powder. Give clothes an extra rinse. Avoid fabric conditioners.”
I’m not too sure that using less detergent is necessarily beneficial as it would affect wash efficiency which could allow other things to cause irritation and combined with low temperature washes could allow bacteria to build up. It will also stop the water softening agents working properly which could cause damage to the washing machine through limescale over a period of years. However, if reducing quantity has definitely helped it’s probably the less of two evils.
House mites can also cause problems and they can survive low temperature washing as a previous article of mine points out Dust mites and washing machines
Related: You should be able to download a PDF Fact sheet from National Eczema Society on dust mites.
Apologies if some of my comments are things you are already aware of. I try to be comprehensive enough to help others following too.
0 replies 18 months ago, much against my husband’s advice because of the expense, I purchased a Miele washing machine because having done my homework I decided that the brand was definitely the best. I am bitterly disappointed by its inability to rinse thoroughly (I never for one moment investigated this possibility as my old machine rinsed perfectly). Despite trying every type of washing substance, powder, tablets, liquid etc, it still fails to rinse. My husband who had slight eczema, is now having medical treatment in an attempt to reduce his symptoms. I daren’t tell him that I believe the washing machine is to blame or I wouldn't hear the end of it!! Cannot believe that this brand, I paid £800 for my model, fails to live up to its reputation in this area. Sadly I cannot afford to replace the machine and have resorted to using the tiniest amount of detergent at the expense of best cleaning results.
18 months ago, much against my husband’s advice because of the expense, I purchased a Miele washing machine because having done my homework I decided that the brand was definitely the best. I am bitterly disappointed by its inability to rinse thoroughly (I never for one moment investigated this possibility as my old machine rinsed perfectly). Despite trying every type of washing substance, powder, tablets, liquid etc, it still fails to rinse. My husband who had slight eczema, is now having medical treatment in an attempt to reduce his symptoms. I daren’t tell him that I believe the washing machine is to blame or I wouldn’t hear the end of it!! Cannot believe that this brand, I paid £800 for my model, fails to live up to its reputation in this area. Sadly I cannot afford to replace the machine and have resorted to using the tiniest amount of detergent at the expense of best cleaning results.
0 replies I am fed up with the new general washer & I absolutely argree that modern washers are rubbish in rinsing. I had a Samsung silver nano last year which has a design fault of being too sensitive to balance the load in order to get to spin ( takes forever to finish one spin). Rinsing is terrible as well. I changed to Zanussi 1227 & I am very unhappy with it as well because it uses so little water. Many times I took out the load to check after it's been washed a few minutes in the washer, to my annoyance, my clothes or towels etc are not even completely wet, ( I tried half load to full loading the washer). It uses more or less same amount of water for the rinse cycles. So obviously how such little amount of water can do a proper rinse? Even if you are not bothered with the soap being removed or not, if you look at the water of the last rinse, they still look murky with dirt particles! With the modern washers using very little water for rinsing, I noticed that in order to try to get so called efficient rinsing with little water, the washers are now programmed to have much longer spinning time in order to squeeze out as much water as possible from the load. With the laundry are fast spinned much longer; they get demaged or worn out more quickly; my new towels look as if they' ve been used 10 years just after several washes! Everytime I do the laundry, I have to spend lots of time to add extra water through the soap dispenser to increase the water level. I am trying to find a old generation washer which would do a more decent rinse even if it's second hand. Being a member of Thought Field Therapy (TFT)Association, I myself & many other fellow members have used TFT & various methods to test allergies for thousands of clients. Majority of people tested are found to be affected by most laundry products (detergent & conditioner) even though they are not aware of it at all, but their health are actually affected somehow. Few people get skin irritation by using them, but that doesn't mean our health are not affected. Just by smelling clothes which has been washed with laundry products, our sympathetic nervous system immediately show some signs of being negatively affected; (this can be measured with some equipment). How much worse when our skin are constantly absorbing the toxins from the clothes we wear or from the bed linens we sleep on, day in & day out. Eco Balls are found to be much more tolerable by the people tested. Ecover range is better tolerated than other common brands, but every individual is different. I use Eco Ball myself. Many sources (eg: Dr Hulda Clark in her Cancer books) commented that most common personal & household products, including laundry products are cancerous or harmful. There are many internets sources give such informations. We live in a unavoidable toxic world with toxic food & substances every where; the modern generation of washers add more nonsense & harm!!!
I am fed up with the new general washer & I absolutely argree that modern washers are rubbish in rinsing. I had a Samsung silver nano last year which has a design fault of being too sensitive to balance the load in order to get to spin ( takes forever to finish one spin). Rinsing is terrible as well.
I changed to Zanussi 1227 & I am very unhappy with it as well because it uses so little water. Many times I took out the load to check after it’s been washed a few minutes in the washer, to my annoyance, my clothes or towels etc are not even completely wet, ( I tried half load to full loading the washer). It uses more or less same amount of water for the rinse cycles. So obviously how such little amount of water can do a proper rinse? Even if you are not bothered with the soap being removed or not, if you look at the water of the last rinse, they still look murky with dirt particles!
With the modern washers using very little water for rinsing, I noticed that in order to try to get so called efficient rinsing with little water, the washers are now programmed to have much longer spinning time in order to squeeze out as much water as possible from the load. With the laundry are fast spinned much longer; they get demaged or worn out more quickly; my new towels look as if they’ ve been used 10 years just after several washes!
Everytime I do the laundry, I have to spend lots of time to add extra water through the soap dispenser to increase the water level. I am trying to find a old generation washer which would do a more decent rinse even if it’s second hand.
Being a member of Thought Field Therapy (TFT)Association, I myself & many other fellow members have used TFT & various methods to test allergies for thousands of clients. Majority of people tested are found to be affected by most laundry products (detergent & conditioner) even though they are not aware of it at all, but their health are actually affected somehow. Few people get skin irritation by using them, but that doesn’t mean our health are not affected.
Just by smelling clothes which has been washed with laundry products, our sympathetic nervous system immediately show some signs of being negatively affected; (this can be measured with some equipment). How much worse when our skin are constantly absorbing the toxins from the clothes we wear or from the bed linens we sleep on, day in & day out. Eco Balls are found to be much more tolerable by the people tested. Ecover range is better tolerated than other common brands, but every individual is different. I use Eco Ball myself.
Many sources (eg: Dr Hulda Clark in her Cancer books) commented that most common personal & household products, including laundry products are cancerous or harmful. There are many internets sources give such informations.
We live in a unavoidable toxic world with toxic food & substances every where; the modern generation of washers add more nonsense & harm!!!
0 replies Party pooper? I wouldn't say that was the case at all. Your comments are welcome and you sound like you have knowledge on the subject. However, If you say that the Which? tests are good, and do indeed indicate rinsing is frequently poor then there's a reasonable chance that the presence of suds people have reported is an indication of poor rinsing. You make an important point that the presence of suds is not necessarily an indication of poor rinsing although it's confusing as logically if thoroughly rinsed everything should be removed. I remember hearing that the suds are added for the consumer only, as they don't like it when they can't see soap suds, which they equate to cleaning. As you say, they are not necessary at all and in fact inhibit cleaning. The whole issue is a puzzle because how can someone judge if their washing machine is rinsing properly other than if the rinse water is clear? I even read an article in the paper the other day that says researchers have found that detergent doesn't cause skin irritation or allergy - biological detergent (Biological detergents not guilty? Biological enzymes do not cause skin irritation). At the end of the day Which? tests say that most washing machines are poor at rinsing which should be unacceptable. The trouble is, I don't get many people complaining about poor rinsing so maybe it's purely theoretical in that they still rinse adequately for most people.
Party pooper? I wouldn’t say that was the case at all. Your comments are welcome and you sound like you have knowledge on the subject. However, If you say that the Which? tests are good, and do indeed indicate rinsing is frequently poor then there’s a reasonable chance that the presence of suds people have reported is an indication of poor rinsing.
You make an important point that the presence of suds is not necessarily an indication of poor rinsing although it’s confusing as logically if thoroughly rinsed everything should be removed.
I remember hearing that the suds are added for the consumer only, as they don’t like it when they can’t see soap suds, which they equate to cleaning. As you say, they are not necessary at all and in fact inhibit cleaning.
The whole issue is a puzzle because how can someone judge if their washing machine is rinsing properly other than if the rinse water is clear? I even read an article in the paper the other day that says researchers have found that detergent doesn’t cause skin irritation or allergy – biological detergent (Biological detergents not guilty? Biological enzymes do not cause skin irritation).
At the end of the day Which? tests say that most washing machines are poor at rinsing which should be unacceptable. The trouble is, I don’t get many people complaining about poor rinsing so maybe it’s purely theoretical in that they still rinse adequately for most people.
0 replies Sorry to be a party pooper but I am a bit concerned that some important factors are being left out of this discussion. If I recall correctly, Which tests rinsing by measuring the alkalinity of the water (detergent is alkaline) and also comparing the results to a high speed 2,800rpm industrial spinner. Tests like this are good and have indicated rinsing is frequently poor. However, some of the home tests posted here seem to judge rinsing by foam or suds. Suds must be present for genuine soaps to clean but suds do not have to be present for detergents to clean. In the case of a detergent, suds are still useful as an indcator during the wash that some active detergent is left over and therefore there is not a shortfall. But foam is actually a problem in the actual wash part of the cycle. It prevents proper wetting of the fabric, buffers the fabric from a physical agitation, limits the passage of dirt from fabric, etc. Foam is unwanted during the actual wash, so foam inhibitors are an ingredient of laundry detergents. When the foam inhibitor gets removed by the rinsing then left-over detergent will create lots and lots of suds. They are usually thin and wispy suds. So paradoxically, as fabrics are rinsed and rinsed (particularly if they are rinsed a lot) after the washing part of the cycle then suds often increase. Some posts mention how suds appear when washing towels without using any detergent at all. I agree there must be some detergent but it may be so little and be so dilute as to not be particularly significant. (Of course, the person with eczema can not tolerate even this much but many people can.) ---- I might add an observation to posting by Nikki Jenkins (13NOV2007) in which Nikki takes her visiting Bosch engineer to task for saying what could be seen was only surfactant. To slightly over-simplify, not all surfactants are detergents. Laundry fabric conditioners are surfactants (usually cationic) but they are poor at cleaning. The majority of household liquid disinfectant is also surfactant. So are many hair conditioners. In fact, if a washing machine is foaming over due to incorrect detergent dosing then adding conditioner (a surfactant) to the detergent water (mainly surfactant) will dampen down the foam quite significantly. ---- Just to make life a bit more complicated, some formulations of laundry detergent (Tesco Liquid Bio comes to mind) actually do contain quite a large proportion of genuine soap whereas something like Persil Liquid Bio contains much less. This gives washing machine "foam watchers" an extra challenge in order to determin whether rinsing has been done properly. ---- All this is by way of saying that suds can be a very poor indicator of good rinsing. (And that knowing a little about detergents can cause misleading conclusions.)
Sorry to be a party pooper but I am a bit concerned that some important factors are being left out of this discussion.
If I recall correctly, Which tests rinsing by measuring the alkalinity of the water (detergent is alkaline) and also comparing the results to a high speed 2,800rpm industrial spinner. Tests like this are good and have indicated rinsing is frequently poor.
However, some of the home tests posted here seem to judge rinsing by foam or suds. Suds must be present for genuine soaps to clean but suds do not have to be present for detergents to clean. In the case of a detergent, suds are still useful as an indcator during the wash that some active detergent is left over and therefore there is not a shortfall. But foam is actually a problem in the actual wash part of the cycle. It prevents proper wetting of the fabric, buffers the fabric from a physical agitation, limits the passage of dirt from fabric, etc. Foam is unwanted during the actual wash, so foam inhibitors are an ingredient of laundry detergents.
When the foam inhibitor gets removed by the rinsing then left-over detergent will create lots and lots of suds. They are usually thin and wispy suds. So paradoxically, as fabrics are rinsed and rinsed (particularly if they are rinsed a lot) after the washing part of the cycle then suds often increase.
Some posts mention how suds appear when washing towels without using any detergent at all. I agree there must be some detergent but it may be so little and be so dilute as to not be particularly significant. (Of course, the person with eczema can not tolerate even this much but many people can.)
—-
I might add an observation to posting by Nikki Jenkins (13NOV2007) in which Nikki takes her visiting Bosch engineer to task for saying what could be seen was only surfactant. To slightly over-simplify, not all surfactants are detergents. Laundry fabric conditioners are surfactants (usually cationic) but they are poor at cleaning. The majority of household liquid disinfectant is also surfactant. So are many hair conditioners. In fact, if a washing machine is foaming over due to incorrect detergent dosing then adding conditioner (a surfactant) to the detergent water (mainly surfactant) will dampen down the foam quite significantly.
—-
Just to make life a bit more complicated, some formulations of laundry detergent (Tesco Liquid Bio comes to mind) actually do contain quite a large proportion of genuine soap whereas something like Persil Liquid Bio contains much less. This gives washing machine “foam watchers” an extra challenge in order to determin whether rinsing has been done properly.
—-
All this is by way of saying that suds can be a very poor indicator of good rinsing. (And that knowing a little about detergents can cause misleading conclusions.)
0 replies This Which article and the resulting comments have made me SO cross. About 10 or so years ago I discovered that modern automatic washing machines just do not rinse properly - full stop, end of story. I reached this conclusion following a long period of time, during which my young daughter developed eczema, I was scratching my shins raw to the point where they were bleeding, and our bed linen was covered in blood where my husband had scratched himself raw round his neck, chest, back and legs. I deduced this was caused by biological washing powders, but changing to non-bio made no difference. I then decided to test that the machine was rinsing by plunging a towel into a bowl of hot water - well, it was as if it had never been rinsed! Then followed about 6 years of arguing with Bosch that their washing machines didn't rinse properly, engineers coming out - one idiot told me that the white soapy froth in the water was surfactant! I pointed out to him that surfactant IS soap, stupid man - we ended up with John Lewis replacing the Bosch with a Miele, but the problem is still there. The scientific fact of the matter is that to remove detergent from clothes you need two things : warm or hot water AND plenty of it. Modern washing machines have neither - you cannot buy a modern machine that rinses in hot water, and neither can you buy a modern machine that uses sufficient amounts of water. So I have to spend hours of my precious time rinsing, rinsing and rerinsing laundry by hand, spinning it out in the washing machine, and then starting the process all over again over and over again to get rid of the soap. For the last 3 years I have been too busy to do this, the result is that all our clothing and linen has a massive soap build up again, we are scratching ourselves to death, and I now have got a huge problem once again trying to rid my laundry of detergent. It is absolutely ridiculous - AND to add insult to injury I wrote to Which and told them about this all those years ago and they basically said they couldn't understand what I was talking about, that their tests showed that modern washing machines were very good at rinsing. What a load of tosh !
This Which article and the resulting comments have made me SO cross. About 10 or so years ago I discovered that modern automatic washing machines just do not rinse properly – full stop, end of story. I reached this conclusion following a long period of time, during which my young daughter developed eczema, I was scratching my shins raw to the point where they were bleeding, and our bed linen was covered in blood where my husband had scratched himself raw round his neck, chest, back and legs. I deduced this was caused by biological washing powders, but changing to non-bio made no difference. I then decided to test that the machine was rinsing by plunging a towel into a bowl of hot water – well, it was as if it had never been rinsed! Then followed about 6 years of arguing with Bosch that their washing machines didn’t rinse properly, engineers coming out – one idiot told me that the white soapy froth in the water was surfactant! I pointed out to him that surfactant IS soap, stupid man – we ended up with John Lewis replacing the Bosch with a Miele, but the problem is still there. The scientific fact of the matter is that to remove detergent from clothes you need two things : warm or hot water AND plenty of it. Modern washing machines have neither – you cannot buy a modern machine that rinses in hot water, and neither can you buy a modern machine that uses sufficient amounts of water.
So I have to spend hours of my precious time rinsing, rinsing and rerinsing laundry by hand, spinning it out in the washing machine, and then starting the process all over again over and over again to get rid of the soap. For the last 3 years I have been too busy to do this, the result is that all our clothing and linen has a massive soap build up again, we are scratching ourselves to death, and I now have got a huge problem once again trying to rid my laundry of detergent.
It is absolutely ridiculous – AND to add insult to injury I wrote to Which and told them about this all those years ago and they basically said they couldn’t understand what I was talking about, that their tests showed that modern washing machines were very good at rinsing.
What a load of tosh !
0 replies Ruth: If they are replacing a faulty washing machine so soon, and particularly as they cannot supply another - and do not have one you want then you should be able to get your money back and buy from elsewhere. If you want to research consumer issues I have a section here - Consumer advice - washing machines
Ruth: If they are replacing a faulty washing machine so soon, and particularly as they cannot supply another – and do not have one you want then you should be able to get your money back and buy from elsewhere.
If you want to research consumer issues I have a section here – Consumer advice – washing machines
0 replies My son has eczema and therefore I need a washing machine that rinses well. I too have noticed that my aeg electrolux washing machine despite being a best buy still shows soap suds in the machine from a previous wash if I put a washing load in without detergent. I usually have 2 washing machines due to having 3 children as it is easier to get through the laundry quickly. My new 9kg best buy Bosch washer despite only owning it for just over 3 weeks has now broken as the rubber door seal pulled away and got tangled in a pair of trousers! The company I bought this from have agreed to replace the machine but this model has now been replaced or discontinued . I am unsure which model to replace it with as this company do not sell siemens washers which seem to be the only other usually reliable brand that is reasonable at rinsing..
My son has eczema and therefore I need a washing machine that rinses well. I too have noticed that my aeg electrolux washing machine despite being a best buy still shows soap suds in the machine from a previous wash if I put a washing load in without detergent.
I usually have 2 washing machines due to having 3 children as it is easier to get through the laundry quickly. My new 9kg best buy Bosch washer despite only owning it for just over 3 weeks has now broken as the rubber door seal pulled away and got tangled in a pair of trousers! The company I bought this from have agreed to replace the machine but this model has now been replaced or discontinued . I am unsure which model to replace it with as this company do not sell siemens washers which seem to be the only other usually reliable brand that is reasonable at rinsing..
0 replies Couldn't agree more about the poor rinsing of modern washing machines. When my fifteen year old machine died, I bought another and had vague suspicions that it wasn't rinsing properly. Quite by accident, my suspicions have been proved correct by a newly purchased set of Ecoballs, which require no detergent. The first time I used the balls on towels which had previously been washed tradionally, I was horrified to find that the machine was filled with foam and I had to do two extra rinses even though I had used NO DETERGENT. To think that we were using these 'clean' towels to dry ourselves, when all along we were smearing ourselves with chemicals. My daughter has mild eczema and I am interested to see if this clears up. I have been using the Ecoballs for a fortnight now and so far find them to wash perfectly satisfactorily, except for my dishcloths which tend to pong a bit, although a quick soak in a mild bleach solution seems to have solved the problem. It is true that the Ecoballs aren't perfect - it doesn't remove stains and you must use a stain remover - but at least my washing isn't chemical-ridden.
Couldn’t agree more about the poor rinsing of modern washing machines. When my fifteen year old machine died, I bought another and had vague suspicions that it wasn’t rinsing properly. Quite by accident, my suspicions have been proved correct by a newly purchased set of Ecoballs, which require no detergent. The first time I used the balls on towels which had previously been washed tradionally, I was horrified to find that the machine was filled with foam and I had to do two extra rinses even though I had used NO DETERGENT. To think that we were using these ‘clean’ towels to dry ourselves, when all along we were smearing ourselves with chemicals. My daughter has mild eczema and I am interested to see if this clears up.
I have been using the Ecoballs for a fortnight now and so far find them to wash perfectly satisfactorily, except for my dishcloths which tend to pong a bit, although a quick soak in a mild bleach solution seems to have solved the problem. It is true that the Ecoballs aren’t perfect – it doesn’t remove stains and you must use a stain remover – but at least my washing isn’t chemical-ridden.
0 replies I agree with the statement about not rinsing properly, I repair appliances for a living and have a 30 year old Hotpoint top loader myself, It is far more reliable than any new machines and far easier to repair. But the main thing is it washes and rinses better than any other machine I have tested, and I have tested them all. Also it will complete a 60 degree whites load in under an hour if the water going in is hot enough, and the towels are WHITE!! not shades of grey. My work jeans go in on a 40 degree wash covered in grease etc and cutting oil and come out clean after only 45 mins. The only down side to this is the water consumtion, but that is more than compensated for by the reliabity and longevity of the machine itself. I have many customers to whom I have supplied reconditioned top loaders to replace new machines that just arent doing the job they are supposed to. Mark.
I agree with the statement about not rinsing properly, I repair appliances for a living and have a 30 year old Hotpoint top loader myself, It is far more reliable than any new machines and far easier to repair. But the main thing is it washes and rinses better than any other machine I have tested, and I have tested them all. Also it will complete a 60 degree whites load in under an hour if the water going in is hot enough, and the towels are WHITE!! not shades of grey. My work jeans go in on a 40 degree wash covered in grease etc and cutting oil and come out clean after only 45 mins. The only down side to this is the water consumtion, but that is more than compensated for by the reliabity and longevity of the machine itself. I have many customers to
whom I have supplied reconditioned top loaders to replace new machines that just arent doing the job they are supposed to.
Mark.
0 replies Rinsing Capabilities of Washing Machines. We heartily endorse these conclusions. For thirty years we had a succession of Hotpoint top loading machines which produced clean washing with little detectable powder residue using Persil . Towels were clean, soft and fluffy. Terry nappies could be washed and sterilised using the hot wash. These machines used full measures of washing powder and large quantites of water. When the last machine was beyond repair we purchased a Hotpoint Ultima WF 860. This has the energy and water economies now deemed necessary. However we immediately noticed that the towels were hard and the bedding activated breathing allergies. Washing powder was reduced to the absolute usable minimum, about a table spoonful for a full load. Subsequent experiments, with care not to overload the machine, extra machine rinses, rinsing in the sink by hand and subsequent spinning in the machine have produced the following conclusions : * Towels retain the most powder residue, the water in the sink becomes totally cloudy even after two extra machine rinses. The fluffy texture previously produced cannot be replicated, even using a good tumble drier. Towels hung out to dry without any tumbling dry like board. * Heavy cottons like sheets retain large mounts of powder residue unless rinsed in the sink. * Light cottons like underwear retain less, but can still irritate unless hand rinsed. * Artificial fibres retain the least powder residue. The problem can be diminished by using Ecover liquid wash, but this is not suitable for all washes. Ecoballs, or the Lakeland equivalent do not leave residue, but the fabrics are often harsh, and stains are left despite the use of the stain removing cream supplied. The application of this is a fiddly extra job. Through the good offices of John Lewis who supplied the machine two Hotpoint engineers visited us, and were both surprised by the amount of powder residue revealed in hand rinses. The machine was deemed to be working satisfactorily by the manufacturers. It would seem to us that controlled experiments under laboratory conditions are necessary to measure the amount of powder residue left in fabrics by modern washing machines. Those with skin or respiratory allergies are at risk from the present generation of machines which may be energy efficient and use little water, but do not rinse clothes effectively. P & E Kenyon.
Rinsing Capabilities of Washing Machines.
We heartily endorse these conclusions. For thirty years we had a succession of Hotpoint top loading machines which produced clean washing with little detectable powder residue using Persil . Towels were clean, soft and fluffy. Terry nappies could be washed and sterilised using the hot wash. These machines used full measures of washing powder and large quantites of water. When the last machine was beyond repair we purchased a Hotpoint Ultima WF 860. This has the energy and water economies now deemed necessary. However we immediately noticed that the towels were hard and the bedding activated breathing allergies.
Washing powder was reduced to the absolute usable minimum, about a table spoonful for a full load. Subsequent experiments, with care not to overload the machine, extra machine rinses, rinsing in the sink by hand and subsequent spinning in the machine have produced the following conclusions :
* Towels retain the most powder residue, the water in the sink becomes totally cloudy even after two extra machine rinses. The fluffy texture previously produced cannot be replicated, even using a good tumble drier. Towels hung out to dry without any tumbling dry like board.
* Heavy cottons like sheets retain large mounts of powder residue unless rinsed in the sink.
* Light cottons like underwear retain less, but can still irritate unless hand rinsed.
* Artificial fibres retain the least powder residue.
The problem can be diminished by using Ecover liquid wash, but this is not suitable for all washes.
Ecoballs, or the Lakeland equivalent do not leave residue, but the fabrics are often harsh, and stains are left despite the use of the stain removing cream supplied. The application of this is a fiddly extra job.
Through the good offices of John Lewis who supplied the machine two Hotpoint engineers visited us, and were both surprised by the amount of powder residue revealed in hand rinses. The machine was deemed to be working satisfactorily by the manufacturers.
It would seem to us that controlled experiments under laboratory conditions are necessary to measure the amount of powder residue left in fabrics by modern washing machines. Those with skin or respiratory allergies are at risk from the present generation of machines which may be energy efficient and use little water, but do not rinse clothes effectively.
P & E Kenyon.
Top loading washing machines do use a lot more water than front loaders although Which? don’t rate them very highly saying none of the ones they tested were good enough to be best buys.
They do tend to be more reliable too but they cost more to run. The extra water usage probably does make them rinse better. Each time a “problem” is addressed it causes another as in this case where the “problem” of using too much water is solved at the expense of reducing rinsing efficiency significantly.
Likely replying to Andy(A.R.T)Trigg
Andy,
These machines are not blocked, I have already had them in bits! The problem is instead of starting to spin slowly, they are going up to about 650rpm straight away, meaning the pump cannot cope. So it foams up the detergent and then will not go it just throws it down the door and around the tank until it starts filling for the next rinse!
My old Bosch starts spinning at about 100rpm and takes it from there up to about 400rpm, this machine never suds locks.
All the best
Oliver
Likely replying to Oliver Shaw
Hello Oliver. On wash the spin is to force the detergent through the laundry, it shouldn’t energise the pump it should just throw all the water about and soap suds will be very evident. Then it should continue with the wash. Hope we are talking about the same thing.
Likely replying to Andy(A.R.T)Trigg
Hi Andy
I mean the intermediate spins ie. between the rinses to supposably clear the water from the load from the previous rinse!
This is the programme sequence if it helps….
Wash – intermediate spin – rinse – int.spin – rinse – int.spin – rinse-int.spin – rinse – final spin.
All the best
Oliver.
Likely replying to Oliver Shaw
Hi Oliver / Andy and all readers.
Thanks for referring me to this board Oliver: most interesting.
This suds-locking things is def for real Andy: my LG is a real bugger for it.
In the case of the LG the problem is caused by a combination of factors:
1. in the wash phase of the cycle the duration is excessive (about an hour on most programmes) and the agitation is very vigorous (which is good). This means that vast amounts of foam are created on every wash.
2. When the wash ends the LG spins (it does NOT spin at all with water in as you suggest many modern ones do) but it spins before any rinses start. This results in a very unpleasant sound and you can hear the motor labouring greatly and the drum slowing down as huge white tides of foam flow down the door.
3. when the rinses start there is, as I have so often moaned about on the hot fill board, insufficient water, so the rinses turn into 2nd, 3rd and 4th wash phases with the soap that’s left.
I get round this quite easily though – as mentioned in a post higher up this board I run water into the soap drawer if I am around to do so, and I do this on the first rinse or sometimes even at the wash phase (like the old “dilution rinse” that Hoover’s used to have). If I am not likely to be around when the rinses start I Select “rinse ++” which on the LG gets water up to about 1/4 up the door and also heats up all the rinses to 30 degrees to help dissolve the detergent better. I have to say that this is pretty good rinsing, but the drawback is time (and energy use). On a 60 degree white wash the standard time is 2h12m, but with Rinse++ selected it’s 3h50m.
Oliver – mum has a Miele Prestige PLus and with the “water plus” selected it washes in water that just reaches the bottom of the door glass, does a dilution rinse (adds water to the wash water up to 1/3 up the door) and then does all it’s rinses 1/3 way up the door too. Mum had a Hoover Electron 1100 (same as mine) before that – we bought hem at the same time when I first left home in 1983 and mum’s finally died 2 years ago, mine last July. Both of us dislike the new machines we have but Hoover are now so unreliable that we decided not to get them again. However, since mum started using the “water plus” she says the Miele is as good as the old Hoover except that it only takes cold water so it costs more to run. If your Bosch ever packs up completely you might like to reconsider Miele for a model with “water plus”.
Likely replying to Andy(A.R.T)Trigg
Hi Andy,
Sudslocking……..
Both the IAR Siltal and Hotpoint are not blocked, they pumped fine. They just time-out before all the soapy water has had chance to drain. Bad programming and intermediate spinning. The Bosch will not sudslock and cannot due to programming etc.
They cannot be fixed as you put it, unless you fancy reprogramming them for me!!!
HTH,
Oliver.
Likely replying to Oliver Shaw
Hello Oliver. Hopefully the advice may be useful for others as this is a potential issue in some cases of particularly poor rinsing.
Likely replying to Andy(A.R.T)Trigg
Hi Andy,
I agree some machines could be partially blocked, I am as guilty for not cleaning the filter as often as I should too! Yes right about the Hotpoint filter, stupid place, nobody even knows it there as it says self cleaning pump!
All the best,
Oliver.
Likely replying to Andy(A.R.T)Trigg
Hi Andy,
Laundry detergent smells stronger now than they ever has done.
On the side of a box of Ariel it says……..”For an extra burst of freshness on your favorite items add an extra 70ml and smell the difference”.
So by adding extra Ariel rinsing will be done to a worse standard, it could block up the machine as there will be far too much powder in there in the first place and sensitive skin will suffer. The extra 70ml is not for cleaning just for smell, what a down right waste.
Back when I was born in the late 1980’s laundry detergents just smelt of a clean soft smell, todays detergents are just awful, the perfume is far too strong, it almost bits your nose off. My laundry only smells a little of Persil as the Bosch rinses very well, that proves it rinses well when you smell whats in the box as it were.
I don’t know if this is just me but when you walk down the street or at work some people positivley stink of laundry detergent/fabric conditioner, everywhere you go you can smell soap powder, so people are either adding too much or they have modern washing machines that do not rinse properly. Must be the new trend to smell like Persil! Who wants to be coated in the ingredients of soap powder on a permanent basis?
I personally do not like the smell at all and would happily use a stink free washing powder if it cleaned as well as Ariel or Persil and kept the machine clean of course.
Oliver.
Likely replying to Andy(A.R.T)Trigg
Hi Andy,
Yes Calgon is normally as useful as a snooze button on a smoke alarm. My thoughts were if you add Calgon you can add less detergent, a lot less in some cases. This in turn may improve rinsing results without and consequential damage being caused to the washing machine. The only problem is if you use too little it will not keep bacteria at bay and will still rot the machine with a bio-film. So if anyone wishes to try it use the amount recommended for a soft water area and no less.
Oliver.
Likely replying to Oliver Shaw
Hi Oliver. Yes that’s a bit of lateral thinking :-) If you use Calgon you can use less detergent so it’s possible it could be relevant in this rinsing issue as long as Calgon causes less irritation than the detergent or if it rinses away easier (I don’t know the answer to either of them). Not sure about how you get the right balance though. It might be worth experimenting with.
Likely replying to Andy(A.R.T)Trigg
Hi Andy,
I disagree with using non-bio for maintenance washes. The enzymes may only be active for 15 minutes or so, but this is long enough for them to assist in breaking down the soil in the machine, then the bleach, surfactants and pure heat can take it from there. Enzymes are very quick to react, they are not a one shot job either, they attack one part of the soil and when broken down move on to another part, this all happens in a very short space of time.
Although I do see what you mean, 40 deg C is the ideal, the New Wave machines used to have an “Enzyme Plateau”, meaning it heated to 40 deg C and washed for 8 minutes, then carried on heating up to the chosen temperature and washed as normal. The Bosch does similar if “Intensive” is selected, it fills to low level, heats to 40 4 looks, deg C, when reached fills to medium level and heats up to the chosen temperature, so maximum effect from the bio powder.
Also the nearer to 53 deg C the water gets the faster the enzymes work, until breaking point so a fast reaction becomes even faster. It just happens they seem to work at optimum performance, at exactly 37 deg in C, the human body temperature as we are full of enzymes too.
The ideal maintenance wash would have a higher water level anyway, it is a good idea to top the water level up to the bottom of the door glass so it can clean where it normally wouldn’t, especially with today’s low water levels, thus taking longer to heat a larger mass of water giving the enzymes more time to clean the machine.
The best way to clean a washing machine is with a product called “Affresh” which breaks up the muck, but these tablets work better the slower they are heated up so also benefit from a higher water level, starting from cold, as would the bio powder.
All the best,
Oliver.
Likely replying to Oliver Shaw
Hi Oliver. I’m basing my advice about using non biological detergents for maintenance washes on knowledge that they are designed for hot washes, and presumably keep working right up to 90 degrees, whereas biological detergents are designed for cool washes.
It just seems more logical to use them but a maintenance wash with biological detergent is likely to be effective too. I couldn’t say for certain if one is definitely better than the other. The most important factors are the temperature and the need for the detergent to contain bleaching agents.
Likely replying to Andy(A.R.T)Trigg
Hi Andy,
I wasn’t having a go, just seems more logical in my eyes to use bio for the extra kick in cleaning the machine, especially if it hasn’t been done for a long time. This is one of the reasons I recommend topping up the water level to about 1″ up the glass, with cold water only.
When the enzymes denature the detergent then contains exactly the same ingredients as its non-bio variant, and as they cost the same it would probably be best to use bio.
All the best,
Oliver.
Likely replying to Andy(A.R.T)Trigg
Hi Andy,
Which? rinse tests are funnily enough done using a 2800rpm spin dryer as well. Whether they use warm or cold water to extract the detergent I don’t know, but at least there is light at the end of the tunnel if Indesit have made a machine rinse propelry.
All the best,
Oliver.
Likely replying to Oliver Shaw
Thanks Oliver: It’s a shame it’s one of the budget manufacturers but at least they’ve shown it can be done. Funnily enough they also give it 4 out of 5 stars for water usage so it doesn’t appear to use substantially more water. I’d be interested as to the exact reason why this washing machine apparently rinses even better than an £800 Miele.
Likely replying to Andy(A.R.T)Trigg
Hi Andy,
Yes, it was distilled white vinegar.
Oliver.
Likely replying to Andy(A.R.T)Trigg
Hi Andy,
We have soft water according to Yorkshire water ( We are only 45 minutes away from you, were over in Brighouse), however we do get limescale in the kettle and around the shower heads, but no water supply is 100% free from rubbish, we are the end of the line too so all the debris in the pipe head our way. We do not use any water softening agents at all, only a normal dose of washing powder for soft water, 95ml of Persil Automatic.
The problems are all down to 2 things:
1- The machines in question did not rinse with enough water to dilute the detergent properly so it would spin away. Only the Siltal and Hotpoint are affected. The Bosch cannot sudslock due to programming and high rinse water levels.
2- Any detergent made by Proctor and Gamble are far too soapy even with half the recommended dose for our area. Ariel makes the Siltal pour foam out of the despenser drawer when interim spinning.
We managed to solve the big mystery by using Unilevers detergents Surf is rubbish but Persil can shift anything. Also adjusting the pressure switch on the Siltal so it washes and rinses with more water mean’t it now dilutes the detergent properly and just rinses and spins as it should.
All the best,
Oliver.
Likely replying to Andy(A.R.T)Trigg
Hi Andy,
Its just like WMUsers Zanussi-Electrolux. It may add 2 rinses, however it will only spin slowly after rinse 3 and 4, so the rinsng is no better than the normal rinse cycle with the normal intermediate spin cycles.
All the best,
Oliver.
Likely replying to Oliver Shaw
Hi Oliver: This one may be different. I find it hard to believe that 2 extra rinses would add no benefit, especially as the option is designed to rinse more thoroughly specifically for people with allergies or with soft water.
It doesn’t say the spins will be affected either. This machine also has a rinse only programme, which does, “3 rinses with long spin at the max speed”.
Likely replying to Andy(A.R.T)Trigg
Hi Andy,
My take on this subject is slightly different.
Firstly the Electrolux group produced John Lewis machine, the normal 3 rinse cycles with a faster intermediate spin after the wash and between all the rinses is more through than some current MODERN machines on the market anyway. Alot of machines only do 2 rinses using less water for each.
However the Lux Group machines are let down massivley when extra rinse is selected, yes it may do 5 rinses but heres the rub there are no intermediate spins until after the third rinse and the they are much much slower thus counteracting the positive effect of all the additional water. Yes it probaly does make the machine rinse better in theory but in the real world the difference is negligable.
But here is the twist in the tale, my Bosch when rinsing with “Higher Water Level” selected will perform 4 rinses 1/3 up the door but spin after the wash and between all the rinses at 400rpm for about 1 minute 45 seconds. The result is clear rinse water in the fourth rinse and NO detergent can be extracted out of anything even when plunged into a sink full of hot water. However the standard rinse cycle on my Bosch fills to the bottom of the door glass and performs 3 rinses plus has a longer 2 minute intermediate spin speed after the wash and between the rinses at 800rpm. The result is not as through rinsing however better than current machines on the market and adequate for MOST people without any allergies to detergent etc.
If the Lux machines used more water on the extra rinse option then reducing the intermediate spin speed wouldn’t make a blind bit of difference.
The word “Reasonable” is a bugger as you say, MY version of reasonable rinsing is not being able to remove detergent by hand in water in the sink out of towels. But people have varying demands from what they expect from anything not just washing machines.
Something else keeps cropping up, the statement from Nikki about not having an allergy to detergent, if you react to residue in clothing you HAVE an allergy. My parents’ machine before the pressure switch adjustment rinsed awfully (3 rinses in 3-4″ of water), the amount of detergent left in clothing was stupid if anything was immersed in the sink the water become completeley cloudy and soaped up impressively. But neither if them have EVER reacted to this residue, so clearly have NO allergy. However I do have a servere case of dermatitis and eczema and am badly affected by detergent left in my clothing so cannot stand this type of rinsing, hence the old Bosch.
If this warm/hot water rinsing is such a good idea why don’t Nikki and WMUser connect the machines to the hot water supply via a TMV valve? If as Nikki says her Miele uses a sufficient amount of water to rinse (1/2 way up the door?) surely it would make sense? This could also make BETTER not PERFECT use of WMUsers extra rinse option. This would seem the obvious solution, but nobody seems keen to implement it. So long as the water is not above 40oC the machine should be perfectly fine.
The LG machine with Medic-Rinse only heats the FINAL rinse water to 40oC, not all the rinses, but it does seem to be a selling point rather than a useful feature as LG’s are not famous for rinsing that well anyway, reliability has been questioned many times also.
The only current machines I know of that rinse with warm water from the hot supply are SOME American top loaders and they are available over here too, so these are a serious option to consider but they are a pain to get into the average British home.
However I do agree with Andy about modern washing machines, manufactureres will always pander to the masses as this is where the most profit is they do not give a damn about the little man or the poor sod with allergies, profit rules OK. At least most modern washing machines have an adjustable pressure switch if you feel confident to have ago, so can be made automatically to fill higher on certain parts of the cycle if you wish.
All the best,
Oliver.
Likely replying to Oliver Shaw
Hello Oliver and everyone else.
I know this is not exactly related to the subject but after a few days of searching the internet high and low I’m running out of solutions and this is the only site on which I saw someone, Oliver Shaw, talking about a Siltal a good number of times, apparently they’re not as popular as other brands.
I have a Siltal WM, the user manual got misplaced and the person that used to operate the WM is not around any more. I can’t seem to find any user manuals on the internet for any Siltal WMs. Can you please help me with that, or at least some general user guidelines about programs and controls?
I know the chance of having the same model are slim but I’m hoping Siltal didn’t make a lot of changes from model to model and my mind can compensate if i have the basics to start from.
Thank you.
Likely replying to Valentin
Hi Valentin,
My parents have the Siltal, it is a BI 1000X H/C. It is a nearly ten year old integrated machine. I have no idea where the manual is for it but I can give you instrustions how to work it. All Siltal appliances (even the modern ones are dead easy) are simple in operation.
Their Siltal has 4 options as follows:
Economy wash – Allows you to use a lower temperature on the themostat dial and extends the wash time accordingly so as not to compromise wash results.
Fast Spin – If selected performs a 1000rpm spin on cottons only, if unselected it is 650rpm. All slow spin positions are 650rpm.
Half-load – Reduces wash and rinse water, but leaves wash time the same.
The last one is on and off.
There are two dials, the first is the programmer (mechanical timer in this case, all modern ones are solid state control), This is split into 3 sections for cottons, synthetics and woollens. The bucket symbols are wash cycles, the shower symbols rinse cycles and the spirals (full spiral is long spin a broken spiral is short spin) are spin cycles, a bucket with an arrow pointing through the bottom is a drain only, a bucket with a line just below the top is rinse hold and the “o”s are stop positions. On synthetic and wool programmes it automatically leaves the load held in the final rinse water requiring manually advancing to the final spin to stop creasing, this is a feature not a fault.
The last dial is the wash temperature selector (thermostat) you must select the temperature you actually want as they do not work like other machines where the temperature has a limit for a set programme, it will perform a wool wash at 95oC if desired.
If you could post a picture of your machine it would be a great help, I am still very familiar with Siltals modern machines so would be able to help if I saw the machine. The modern ones are massivley different from my parents machine.
And yes finding these machines over here is like trying to find rocking horse Sh!t, very rare indeed. Good luck.
HTH,
Oliver.
Likely replying to Oliver Shaw
Hello Oliver,
I’m writing to thank you and to let you know thanks to your message everything was ok. The temperature dial was a bit of a problem first because the programs also have a default temperature as written on the front of the machine. Also, I wasn’t used to the mechanical dial which goes through all the programs instead of the one I left it at.
Thank you again.
Likely replying to Valentin
Hi Valentin,
Glad to help, any more problems feel free to ask.
All the best,
Oliver.
Likely replying to Andy(A.R.T)Trigg
Hi Andy,
Yes, washing machines rinse well enough for the masses, there is no question of that.
When I say rinse properly I don’t mean, rinse to anyones standard. I mean when rinsed in hot water in the sink, no soap is removed or indeed dirt. Both the Asko and Miele achieve this and pass with flying colours. The final rinse in both machines is indeed free from soap and the water is crystal clear, so the dirt has gone too. Both myself and my Mum do alot of very heavily soiled laundry due to mucky jobs so the machines get a good test.
All the best Andy,
Oliver.