Wireless dishwasher
Technology moves fast these days... Who expected wireless dishwashers?
I got my wireless builtin dishwasher delivered today. To be fair, it came with a wire; but nothing to plug that in. https://i.imgur.com/K31GlMl.png Tomorrow brings another day and another dishwasher. :turtle: |
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A wireless port? :confused: What type is it? |
I believe it is an O Mission counter socket.
The supplier claims the manufacturer tests these machines before they get shipped. In that case the guy that tested it manhandled the plug when he pulled it out; the socket probably got pushed in and now rests inaccessible somewhere in its intestines. |
I'm a wireless dishwasher. :D
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When I read the title, I expected a picture of a big dog.:)
Our dog's tall enough to reach the sink and tries to "clean" everything within reach.:o |
Yeah, I could see a dog cleaning the dishes ;)
Btw 22/7? Try 355/113! Wireless technology is quite old actually. Practically all civilizations of old except some early American cultures used wireless communication exclusively. |
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Got a new dishwasher, this time with a counterplug; installed it and tested on a small wash. So much better than the old one, why did I wait for it to break down...
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I'm always torn on if I want a dishwasher or not. Seems like just as much work as simply washing dishes as you use them. You also don't run out of dishes when you wash them as they get used. Then, my wife doesn't have a method to loading the washer; she just puts things wherever they fit, starting at the center of the rack and randomly placing things from there.
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When my parents built their house at the coast in 1980, they put a cabinet over the sink that had rubberized pull-out racks like a dishwasher.
They could wash the dishes, put them in the rack, close it and the doors and let the light over the faucets dry them. |
Why a dishwasher...
It does save time and money. It is amazingly efficient. We usually run it once every 2 days; the old one took 20-30 liters of water and 2 kWh or so for that. The new one takes only 16 liters and 1.5 kWh in its most wasteful program - but it measures dirt and will shorten water and power use if possible. It has a heat pump to heat up the new batch of clean water with the outgoing dirty water. It does not appear hot, nor does the outflow, but the machine definitely is hot inside when ready. It is going to save money and water, I'll check the bills to see if it does indeed drop. We had to do the washing by hand for a couple of days; that's 6 times instead of 1. My wife uses lukewarm water as not to burn her hands, but it doesn't get properly clean. She insists on using the highest temperature when using the machine, go figure. When I do the washing-up I get it as hot as possible and just try not to burn my hands. But even then it cools off quite fast, I sometimes need a refill for the evening batch. Then there are the odd jobs like thoroughly cleaning the kitchen hood filters, grills, deep fryer etc. that are basically too large or clumsy to clean in the sink. The machine is relatively silent too. Can't hear it over the kitchen hood. But it projects a blue spot on the floor when it runs. |
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Give it enough rope then it will dish it out I guess.
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The wrong way, obviously. Don't even ask how she puts the TP on the roller. That's guaranteed to be the wrong way.
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