• Syd@lemm.ee
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    9 months ago

    They’re not built to last nearly as long though, especially refrigerators.

    Also, does that mean your old washer was cold water only?

    • TwanHE@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      Probably internal heater. Warm water connection probably saves having to connect up the gas.

      • Raxiel@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        When I was a lot younger, pretty much every washing machine (here in the UK) had both hot and cold fill. It went away for three reasons.

        1. Machines got more water efficient.
        2. Direct hot water from a combi gas boiler became the standard (replacing big jacketed tanks in most houses).
        3. New detergents led to a campaign to encourage washing at 30°C rather than 40-60°C
          It’s more cost effective to heat a small amount of water directly at100% efficiency in the machine than drawing cold water out of the pipework and either heating it then rest of the way directly or pouring it down the drain until it ran hot from the 80% efficient gas appliance.
          Interesting to hear it might be making a comeback. I can see the logic if there’s a source of hot water from a heat pump, provided losses can be minimised.
          Personally I have PV so (weather permitting) electric is preferable to gas other than for space heating and bathing. That could change though. As it is, the heat pump drier, efficient as it is, still accounts for the majority of the energy used for laundry, even with the washer doing an extra spin cycle.
          • SkippingRelax@lemmy.world
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            9 months ago

            Nah quite the opposite, same experience as the other guy, looking at washing machines in Italy and Australia, they used to have hot and cold intake but moving to cold only and leaving it to the appliance to heat up a small amount of water.

            My newish washing machine is a bosch, the model is prolly from 5 years ago though i bought it more recently, and it’s got cold water intake only (unliken the ancient LG that was sold to someone who needed a cheap one)