Category Archive: Washing machines

Nov 16 2012

Water-saving tips that Thanksgiving cooks can be grateful for

Water-saving tips that Thanksgiving cooks can be grateful for

The holidays involve a lot of entertaining and all that entails—cooking, dirty dishes, and loads of laundry. You can do it all without throwing money down the drain along with the extra water you’re using and the energy it takes to heat it. The folks at WaterSense, the conservation program run by the Environmental Protection Agency, suggest some simple ways to save that your guests won’t even notice.

In the kitchenDon’t run the tap when washing dishes in the sink. Instead, plug the drain and fill the sink with soapy water or use a plastic wash basin. This will significantly reduce the amount of water you use, according to WaterSense.
According to Energy Star, dishwashers built before 1994 can use as much as 10 gallons of water per cycle. Even if you have a newer model, make sure it’s fully loaded each time you run it. This reduces the number of loads.
Save yourself some elbow grease by only scraping the food scraps off the plate and letting the dishwasher do the rest. Don’t scrub them clean first. And avoid using the “rinse hold” on your machine for just a few soiled dishes. It uses 3-7 gallons of hot water each time.
Instead of letting the faucet run until the water is cool, fill a pitcher with water and store it in the refrigerator. When you serve dinner, put an ice-cold pitcher of water on the table.
Instead of running hot water over frozen foods, thaw them out in the microwave or overnight in the refrigerator.
Garbage disposals use water to break down the food inside. If you can accommodate one, consider adding food wastes to a compost pile instead of tossing them down the garbage disposal.

In the laundryWash your clothes in cold water using cold-water detergents whenever possible. Switching your temperature setting from hot to warm can cut a load’s energy use in half.
Wash and dry full loads. If you are washing a small load, use the appropriate water-level setting.
Dry towels and heavier cottons in a separate load from lighter-weight items.
Don’t over-dry your clothes. Rely on a moisture sensor, which automatically shuts off the machine when your clothes are dry.
Clean the lint screen in the dryer after every load to improve air circulation and prevent fire hazards.
Use the cool-down cycle to allow the clothes to finish drying with the heat remaining in the dryer.

In the long term
If you’re shopping for a new washer or dishwasher, look for Energy Star models. Energy Star clothes washers use 50 percent less water and 37 percent less energy than standard washers. Energy Star dishwashers are required to use 5.8 gallons of water per cycle or less. In its washing machine tests, Consumer Reports tests both water and energy efficiency. We also test dishwashers for energy use and measure cycle times.

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Nov 12 2012

10 matching washers and dryers that cleaned up in our tests

10 matching washers and dryers that cleaned up in our tests

Take a look at online promotions for laundry appliances and you’ll often see a woman beaming as she breezes past her stylish matching washer and dryer. At Consumer Reports we value substance over style and typically recommend that you buy the best machine for the job. Fortunately, in our tests of washers and dryers we found 10 pairs in which each individual machine performed impressively.

All of the washers in our dynamic duos are recommended models or Best Buys and the few dryers that didn’t make the list came close. The pairs include both front-loading washers and high-efficiency (HE) top-loading washers. The best front-loaders clean better and use even less water than the best HE top-loaders. Front-loaders spin faster than HE top-loaders so more water is typically extracted, reducing drying time but front-loaders generally have longer wash cycles. HE top-loaders don’t have a center agitator and use a variety of methods to lift and tumble laundry. They’re high-efficiency because they use less water and spin faster than conventional top-loaders, also cutting dryer time.

dryer_LG_DLEX2550W.jpgIn addition to washing performance, Consumer Reports tests how gentle a washing machine is on fabric as well as its energy and water efficiency. We also look at such factors as noise and vibration that homeowners might find annoying if the laundry room is adjacent to a living area. And we compare cycle times. Front loaders can take anywhere from 65 to 105 minutes to wash an eight-pound load. Top loaders are a little quicker, ranging from 35 to 75 minutes.

All of the dryers on the list have large capacities and a moisture sensor that helps save energy by shutting off the machine before the laundry is dried too much. That’s easier on fabrics, too. In our clothes dryer tests, we run the machines with different sized loads and a variety of fabrics. We also measure noise, capacity and convenience. Here’s a laundry list of 10 matching washers and dryers that were top performers.

Top-loading washers and matching dryers
Washer: Kenmore 2800[2], $800 (CR Best Buy)
Electric dryer: Kenmore 6800[2], $700 (CR Best Buy)
Gas dryer: Kenmore 7800[2], $780 (CR Best Buy)

Washer: LG WT5070C[W], $1,000 (Recommended)
Electric dryer: LG DLEX5170[W], $900 (Recommended)
Gas dryer: LG DLGX5171[W], $1,050 (Recommended)

Washer: Samsung WA5451AN[W], $950 (CR Best Buy)
Electric dryer: Samsung DV5451AE[W], $900 (CR Best Buy)
Gas dryer: Samsung DV5451AG[W], $1,000 (CR Best Buy)

Washer: Samsung WA422PRHD[WR], $800 (CR Best Buy)
Electric dryer: Samsung DV422EWHD[WR], $750
Gas dryer: Samsung DV422GWHD[WR], $850

Front-loading washers and matching dryers
Washer: LG WM8000H[V]A, $1,350 (Recommended)
Electric dryer: LG DLEX8000[V], $1,350 (Recommended)
Gas dryer: LG DLGX8001[V], $1,440 (Recommended)

Washer: LG WM3470H[W]A, $1,100 (Recommended)
Electric dryer: LG DLEX3470[W], $1,000 (Recommended)
Gas dryer: LG DLGX3471[W], $1,200 (Recommended)

Washer: LG WM2250C[W], $720 (CR Best Buy)
Electric dryer: LG DLE2550[W], $800 (Recommended)
Gas dryer: LG DLG2551[W], $800 (Recommended)

Washer: Samsung WF457ARGS[GR], $1,550 (Recommended)
Electric dryer: Samsung DV457EVGS[GR], $1,550 (Recommended)
Gas dryer: Samsung DV457GVGS[GR], $1,700 (Recommended)

Washer: Samsung WF520AB[P], $1,400 (Recommended)
Electric dryer: Samsung DV520AE[P], $,1400 (Recommended)
Gas dryer: Samsung DV520AG[P], $1,480 (Recommended)

Washer: Whirlpool Duet WFW94HEX[W], $1,100 (Recommended)
Electric dryer: Whirlpool Duet WED94HEX[W], $1,000
Gas dryer: Whirlpool Duet WGD94HEX[W], $1,050

You can find more details on the model page for each washer and dryer. You can also compare up to five washers or dryers using the comparison feature in our Ratings. And, before you buy, look online for sales as well as rebates from manufacturers and Energy Star (washers only).

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Oct 15 2012

Sure Life’s Good, but which LG washer is better?

Sure Life’s Good, but which LG washer is better?

This is a tale of two washers. Both are made by LG. Both top our latest Ratings. If you had to choose one, what’s the difference? About $350 and the fact that it’s time to come clean–are you a fan of front-loaders or totally devoted to top loaders?

The best front-loaders clean better and more efficiently than the best high-efficiency (HE) top-loaders. “The fact that front-loaders use less water than HE top-loaders means that the detergent concentration is greater in a front-loader and front-loaders generally have longer wash cycles,” says Emilio Gonzalez, an engineer who runs Consumer Reports’ tests of laundry appliances. “The front-loader’s tumbling action can also help boost cleaning.” Front-loaders spin even faster than HE top-loaders, so typically more water is extracted and drying time is reduced. And as a group, front-loaders tend to be very quiet.

That said, more than twice as many top-loaders were sold in the last 18 months, according to the Association of Home Appliance Manufacturers, a trade group. Among the best washers we’ve tested, front-loaders usually cost several hundred dollars more than top-loaders. washer_LG_WT5070CW.jpgThe front-loader’s wash time can take up to 100 minutes, and while vibration isn’t a problem for our highest rated models, it is possible that a front-loader’s high spinning speed might vibrate too much for it to be placed near a living area in your home. And then there’s the question of convenience. Does it bother you to have to stoop to put laundry in the front-loader, or do you prefer dropping dirty laundry in the top-loader?

Now about those LGs. The LG WT5070C[W], $1,000, tops our latest Ratings of top-loaders and is a CR Best Buy. This HE model offers impressive cleaning, large capacity, and a 65-minute normal wash cycle. As for the top-rated front-loader, the LG WM8000H[V]A, $1,350, was excellent at washing, is a recommended model, and offers the largest capacity we’ve tested. But the normal cycle time is 100 minutes. However, the TurboWash option cut wash time by about 20 minutes in our tests and delivered comparable cleaning of our eight-pound load of laundry.

For all the details on performance and features, see the results of our washing machine tests. These LG washers have matching dryers that we’ve tested. They’re also recommended models, so check the dryer Ratings. We’ve noted the matching dryer on the washer model page.

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Oct 02 2012

LG’s muscular washer and dryer are cleaning champs as well

LG’s muscular washer and dryer are cleaning champs as well

Lately we’ve noticed that some of the appliances tested by Consumer Reports are getting bigger and bigger, like the matching front-loading washer and dryer from LG. The mega-capacity machines allow you to do bigger loads of laundry less often, says the manufacturer. In our tests, we found that this pair was not only bigger, but better in many ways.

The LG WM8000H[V]A front-loader, $1,350, was superb overall, tops our latest Ratings of dozens of washers, and is a recommended model. Its capacity is the largest we’ve tested, but the normal cycle takes 100 minutes for an eight-pound load and when we filled the washer to capacity it took more than two hours to clean our 24-pound load of wash. That’s substantially longer than other tested washers. So while the oversized LG allows you to wash more laundry less often, each load will take you longer. The washer does have a TurboWash option, which delivered comparable cleaning of our eight-pound load and cut wash time by about 20 minutes.

dryer_LG_DLEX8000V.jpgThe LG matching electric dryer, DLEX8000[V], offers excellent drying and is relatively quiet. It’s also a recommended model, but at $1,350 it’s among the more expensive dryers we’ve tested. The gas model is DLGX8001[V], $1,440. And as you might have guessed, both the washer and dryer take up slightly more space than the typical twosome. Each machine is two inches wider.

In our washing machine tests, models that rated excellent in capacity fit 17 to 24 pounds of laundry. Models that earned excellent capacity scores in our dryer tests can typically hold these large loads as well. To give you some idea of how much laundry the jumbo LG front-loader can accommodate, we were able to put in 27 cotton items—the mix included towels, jeans, shorts and shirts. A conventional top-loader had room for 16 of these items, about 14 pounds.

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Aug 31 2012

DOE looks to students to build more efficient appliances

DOE looks to students to build more efficient appliances

The Energy Department is looking to a new generation of engineers and entrepreneurs to help solve the nation’s energy challenges. To that end, it awarded first prize to a team of students at the University of Maryland who redesigned the room air conditioner as part of a DOE appliance challenge. The completed prototype reduced energy use by 30 percent compared to a typical unit, which would result in substantial savings for homeowners.

To win the Max Tech and Beyond Appliance Design Competition, the Maryland team simplified the design of a standard wall-mounted air conditioner by separating the systems that remove humidity and provide cooling. The result is that the compressor consumes much less power, according to the team’s project overview.

Almost all the air conditioners in Consumer Reports tests meet Energy Star standards, which use at least 10 percent less energy than standard models. And there are other ways to save right now. For starters, don’t buy more air conditioner than you need or you’ll end up with a room that’s clammy and not comfortable. Also look at the unit’s EER (Energy Efficiency Rating). The higher the number the lower its operating costs compared to other models of that size. Some of the best units in our tests have EERs of 10.7 and higher. (Check the specs tab.)

The runner-up in the DOE contest was a team from Marquette University that developed a prototype of a hybrid clothes dryer and water heater, fired by natural gas. The unit uses the waste heat from the clothes dryer to heat water for the next load of wash. The team demonstrated that they could get a 10 percent improvement in dryer efficiency compared to products currently on the market. Their project was sponsored by A.O. Smith, which makes water heaters, and Whirlpool.

Because most dryers sold today use similar amounts of energy, you won’t find a yellow EnergyGuide label or Energy Star sticker on them—or an energy use designation in our dryer Ratings—as any comparisons would be meaningless. But the DOE and Energy Star have made finding ways to make dryers more efficient a priority. Until that happens, the best way to save money doing your laundry is to get a high-efficiency washing machine, which wrings more water out of the load. That and a dryer with a moisture sensor will ensure the machine doesn’t run longer than it has to.

The projects of the seven other teams in the appliance challenge included ways to make lightbulbs, pool heaters and home heating systems more efficient. We wish them every success.

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Jul 26 2012

Home Depot adds three new major appliance brands

Home Depot adds three new major appliance brands

Home Depot may be the largest home improvement retailer but when it comes to selling major appliances it trails behind Sears, the leader, and Lowe’s. In a seeming effort to change that, Home Depot has added three new appliance lines, Whirlpool, Electrolux and Frigidaire, brands that are already sold by its competitors. All three have fared pretty well in Consumer Reports appliance tests.

According to the Top 100 Major Appliance Retailers Report from Twice, Sears’ appliance sales slipped three percent in 2010 to $7.3 billion, while sales declined nearly two percent at Lowe’s, to $5.5 billion. In contrast, Home Depot saw a one percent increase, to $3.4 billion.

Home Depot already sells Whirlpool’s brandmates Maytag and Amana. Frigidaire is in the Electrolux family. The big box store will be adding ranges, refrigerators, freezers, dishwashers and washer-dryer pairs. Starting this summer, the retailer will expand the appliance sections of a limited number of stores and make the new products available through the company’s Depot Direct delivery network in all U.S. stores, according to a company press statement.

Overall, Whirlpool, Frigidaire and Electrolux are well represented in Consumer Reports top appliance picks although they do better in some product categories than others. Kenmore, the house brand of Sears, is also very well represented. Thirty models from Home Depot’s three new brands appear on our recommended list of refrigerators including two bottom-freezer models, nine side-by-sides and 19 top freezers. They also fare well in our brand reliability for refrigerators, especially Whirlpool.

One-third of the models on our list of recommended freezers come from Whirlpool or Frigidaire including the self-defrost uprights Whirlpool EV161NZT, $700, and Frigidaire FFU21F5H[W], $650, which are both CR Best Buys. The brands’ representation isn’t quite as robust in the other categories and there are no models from those three brands on our list of recommended dishwashers.

No matter where you shop it’s good to have a number of choices. Before you go, check the performance of the models you’re considering and the reliability of the brand on this website. To get started, check the appliance section.

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Jun 21 2012

Samsung pushes innovation with its 2012 appliance line

Samsung pushes innovation with its 2012 appliance line

The largest French-door refrigerator in its class and a washing machine that will notify your smart phone when the laundry is done were among the innovations on display at Samsung’s Make Your House Work Event, held yesterday at Milk Studios in downtown Manhattan. Ranges, dryers, and other appliances joined the unveiling of 2012 products.

To help talk up the new product lines, Samsung brought in a panel of lifestyle gurus, including Liz Pryor of Good Morning America; Christina Stanley-Salerno, founder of TakeBackYourTable.com; and Julie Morgenstern, a professional organizer and best-selling author of Organizing From The Inside Out.

Some of the new innovations were a harder sell than others. Take the Grocery Manager app on Samsung’s new four-door refrigerator with wifi-enabled LCD screen, model RF4289, $3,500. Is it really a time-saver to have to manually enter your groceries into the app, plus their expiration dates, so that the fridge can then notify you when foods are about to spoil? Whatever happened to checking the milk carton? More useful is the ability to access Epicurious from the fridge to get recipe ideas for those items inside. And the Google Calendar app is a helpful organizing tool for busy households that keeps the fridge from being plastered with sticky notes.

Saumsung_Flex_Oven_175.jpgThe biggest-in-class refrigerator distinction belongs to Samsung’s new RF323TE, $3,300, with a 32 claimed-cubic-foot capacity that beats the previous leaders from LG and Kenmore. The question with these super-size refrigerators is still whether so much storage space is really necessary. For example, Samsung says its new behemoth will hold up to 32 bags of groceries, a larger haul than most households will likely see each week. But if capacity is your top priority, this new Samsung could be promising.

Among ranges, the news continues to be induction, which more consumers are embracing. Samsung’s current 30-inch induction range, $1,700, makes our recommended list. The new model NE597N0, $2,000, adds a flexible cooking surface for griddles and a nifty boil sensor that automatically reduces the heat to a preset level once the contents in a pot reach a boil.

As for laundry equipment, smart technologies were again the big story, though some seem more useful than others. A huge benefit for consumers is the dryer sensors on models DV456 and DV457 dryers, $1,100 and $1,700 respectively, which detect clogs in the duct work, greatly reducing the risk of fire. These sensors should really be on all dryers. The smart phone app that provides status updates and lets you start, stop and pause the machines has less practical value, though some consumers may find it useful.

In sum, Samsung continues to assert itself as one of the most innovative appliance manufacturers. And in past tests, many of its appliances have been adept at the basics too, whether it’s getting clothes clean or maintaining consistent temperatures in the refrigerator. We’ll let you know if that’s still the case when these latest appliances arrive to our appliance testing labs.

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Jun 19 2012

Five large appliance features that are worth the money

Five large appliance features that are worth the money

In an effort to distinguish themselves in a difficult market, makers of large appliances have been loading their wares with more and more features. But do you really need a washer with 33 cycles or a wifi-enabled refrigerator? In our tests of hundreds of appliances at Consumer Reports, our technicians have found fabulous features that improve performance, convenience or safety. But others seem frivolous and may be a waste of money. Here are five of our all-time favorites:

Washers: Auto-load sensing
Are you using too much water, too little? Here’s a feature that gives you one less thing to worry about. Auto-load sensing automatically determines load size and the amount of water needed, allowing you to skip a step and possibly save water. Auto-load sensing is common on front-loaders and high-efficiency top-loaders and is coming to some conventional top-loaders.

Dryers: Moisture sensors
This is the most important dryer feature and it’s been available on all but the least expensive models for a decade. Moisture sensors do a better job of shutting off the dryer when clothes are dry than models with a thermostat, preventing overdrying. Sensor-based dryers are also easier on fabrics because they don’t subject them to unnecessary heat. They also use less energy.

Refrigerators: Digital temperature controls
Digital controls tell it like it is by displaying the actual temperature and the set temperature, allowing you to correct discrepancies and prevent meltdowns—yours and the ice cream’s. If you thought we’d pick a through-the-door water and ice dispenser as our favorite feature, no way. That’s what buyers request most often, but it’s a minor convenience with a major drawback. Our surveys confirm that, as a group, refrigerators with water and ice dispensers still require considerably more repairs than those without dispensers (ask neighbors with dispenser-crazy kids). Water and ice dispensers also boost cost and energy use while eating up space.

Ranges: High power elements or burners
Always in a rush? A high-power gas burner or electric element can quickly bring a pot of water to a boil, making pasta pronto. And high-power burners and elements can heat large quantities fast—great for parties—and are terrific for types of cooking that require high heat such as searing and stir-frying. You’ll find this feature on cooktops too.

Cooktops: Hot-surface warning lights
This is an important safety feature since the surface of the electric smoothtop can remain hot long after an element has been turned off. Many smoothtops have at least one warning light, but ideally each element should have its own.

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Jun 14 2012

Five products that don’t measure up to their model names

Five products that don’t measure up to their model names

Based on their monikers, a “chill” air conditioner or “pet” vacuum may seem like just the thing to cool your home or tackle that pesky dog hair. And you’d think that a string trimmer called “grasshog” would be a champ at chomping through the weeds. But when Consumer Reports put these products through their paces they didn’t live up to their names.

Vacuums. Removing pet hair is one of a vacuum cleaner’s toughest chores. As its name implies, the 22-pound bagless upright Bissell Lift-Off Multi-Cyclonic Pet 89Q9 is intended to excel at removing animal hair and fur. But it was only fair at that job, had mediocre airflow and was middling at carpet cleaning. It did get an excellent score for cleaning bare floors. The Hoover WindTunnel T-Series Pet UH30310, on the other hand, did master the pet hair test earning a score of excellent. It was also tops at cleaning bare floors and very good at carpets. Both vacuums were a bit noisy.

Air conditioners. We tested two Friedrich Chill air conditioners, the CP06G10 and the CP05G10, but only the latter one made our list of recommended models. The difference was the ability to power through brownout conditions when voltage is low. The CP05G10 aced that test while its brandmate struggled. Both were excellent at cooling and the CP06G10 is quieter.

String trimmers. Black & Decker’s GrassHog GH610, a light duty electric string trimmer, apparently lost its appetite, barely munching through the tall grass and weeds in our tests. And it wasn’t too sharp at edging either. Typically, the gas-powered trimmers do a better job at cutting tall grass but if you want an electric trimmer opt for Black & Decker’s GH1000, which made hay of our tests for tall grass, edging and trimming, was easy to start and comfortable to handle.

Washing machines. The Aquasmart WL42T26DW1 from Fisher & Paykel is a high-efficiency top loader that proved to be only partially effective at getting clothes clean and did mediocre on our gentleness test. But it does use water smartly, scoring an excellent on the water efficiency test. Consider instead one of the nine CR Best Buys on our recommended list of top-loaders from such brands as Kenmore, LG, Samsung, Whirlpool and Maytag.

Knives. You would expect the 15-piece Tools of the Trade Fine Edge Stainless Steel knife set from Macy’s to ace our cutting performance test. But knives in the set were mediocre performers on our food slicing and cutting tasks. The Ginsu Chikara, a CR Best Buy, aced those tests and also features handles that are more comfortable to use.

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May 16 2012

New washer and dishwasher standards to save loads of money

New washer and dishwasher standards to save loads of money

Energy and water efficiency standards released today by the U.S. Department of Energy will deliver clothes washers that use as much as 35 percent less energy and water and dishwashers that use about 14 percent less energy and 23 percent less water. While the standards don’t take effect until 2013 for dishwashers and 2015 for clothes washers, many top models in Consumer Reports’ current Ratings of these appliances already make the grade.

Clothes washers and dishwashers account for roughly 3 percent of residential energy use and more than 20 percent of indoor water use in homes across the country, according to the DOE. By reducing the amount of energy and water that all models on the market can use, the new standards have the potential to save consumers a total of $20 billion over the lives of the units. “These efficiency improvements for clothes washers and dishwashers will save consumers money and provide consumers with more efficient options that are still affordable and high-performing,” said Shannon Baker-Branstetter, Policy Counsel at Consumers Union.

According to an analysis by the American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy and the Appliance Standards Awareness Project (ASAP), clothes washers that meet the new standard save between $400 and $600 in lower energy and water bills over their lifetime compared to today’s basic models. The savings for dishwashers are about $100. Lower utility bills will offset additional upfront costs within about two years for both products.

Check Consumer Report’s dishwasher and washer Ratings to find models that combine top cleaning performance with the latest efficiencies.

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