Author Topic: How Washington Ruined Your Washing Machine  (Read 2736 times)

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Offline radioman

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How Washington Ruined Your Washing Machine
« on: March 18, 2011, 10:08:22 AM »
I don't have the link because I receieved this from a friend via email:


How Washington Ruined Your Washing Machine

The top-loading washer continues to disappear, thanks to the usual nanny state suspects.
WSJ
By SAM KAZMAN

It might not have been the most stylish, but for decades the top-loading laundry machine was the most affordable and dependable. Now it's ruined—and Americans have politics to thank.

In 1996, top-loaders were pretty much the only type of washer around, and they were uniformly high quality. When Consumer Reports tested 18 models, 13 were "excellent" and five were "very good." By 2007, though, not one was excellent and seven out of 21 were "fair" or "poor." This month came the death knell: Consumer Reports simply dismissed all conventional top-loaders as "often mediocre or worse."
How's that for progress?

The culprit is the federal government's obsession with energy efficiency. Efficiency standards for washing machines aren't as well-known as those for light bulbs, which will effectively prohibit 100-watt incandescent bulbs next year. Nor are they the butt of jokes as low-flow toilets are. But in their quiet destruction of a highly affordable, perfectly satisfactory appliance, washer standards demonstrate the harmfulness of the ever-growing body of efficiency mandates.

The federal government first issued energy standards for washers in the early 1990s. When the Department of Energy ratcheted them up a decade later, it was the beginning of the end for top-loaders. Their costlier and harder-to-use rivals—front-loading washing machines—were poised to dominate.
Front-loaders meet federal standards more easily than top-loaders. Because they don't fully immerse their laundry loads, they use less hot water and therefore less energy. But, as Americans are increasingly learning, front-loaders are expensive, often have mold problems, and don't let you toss in a wayward sock after they've started.

When the Department of Energy began raising the standard, it promised that "consumers will have the same range of clothes washers as they have today," and cleaning ability wouldn't be changed. That's not how it turned out.

In 2007, after the more stringent rules had kicked in, Consumer Reports noted that some top-loaders were leaving its test swatches "nearly as dirty as they were before washing." "For the first time in years," CR said, "we can't call any washer a Best Buy." Contrast that with the magazine's 1996 report that, "given warm enough water and a good detergent, any washing machine will get clothes clean." Those were the good old days.

In 2007, only one conventional top-loader was rated "very good." Front-loaders did better, as did a new type of high-efficiency top-loader that lacks a central agitator. But even though these newer types of washers cost about twice as much as conventional top-loaders, overall they didn't clean as well as the 1996 models.

The situation got so bad that the Competitive Enterprise Institute started a YouTube protest campaign, "Send Your Underwear to the Undersecretary." With the click of a mouse, you could email your choice of virtual bloomers, boxers or Underoos to the Department of Energy. Several hundred Americans did so, but it wasn't enough to stop Congress from mandating even stronger standards a few months later.

Now Congress is at it once again. On March 10, the Senate Energy Committee held hearings on a bill to make efficiency standards even more stringent. The bill claims to implement "national consensus appliance agreements," but those in this consensus are the usual suspects: politicians pushing feel-good generalities, bureaucrats seeking expanded powers, environmentalists with little regard for American pocketbooks, and industries that stand to profit from a de facto ban on low-priced appliances. And there are green tax goodies for manufacturing high-efficiency models—the kind that already give so many tax credits to Whirlpool, for example, that the company will avoid paying taxes on its $619 million profit in 2010.

Amazingly, the consensus also includes so-called consumer groups such as the Consumer Federation of America and Consumers Union. At last week's hearing, the federation touted a survey supposedly showing overwhelming public support for higher efficiency standards. But not a single question in that survey suggested that these standards might compromise performance. Consumers Union, meanwhile, which publishes Consumer Reports, claims that new washers can't be compared to old ones—but that's belied by the very language in its articles.

We know that politics can be dirty. Who'd have guessed how literal a truth this is?

Mr. Kazman is general counsel of the Competitive Enterprise Institute.
TGIF - "Thank God I'm Forgiven"

charlesoakwood

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Re: How Washington Ruined Your Washing Machine
« Reply #1 on: March 18, 2011, 10:20:32 AM »
Mail order from Canada or Mexico?

The lie of  tarriffs to secure American products.  Rid ourselves of bureaucrats and regulations and we will have more inexpensive products and people will have jobs.


Online Pandora

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Re: How Washington Ruined Your Washing Machine
« Reply #2 on: March 18, 2011, 10:28:30 AM »
It's not just the washing machine that's been ruined by politics, and not wholly the fault of the washers that clothes aren't coming clean; it's also the environazi, do-gooders who have seen to banning phosphates.

When our top-loader crapped out, we went ahead and "invested" in a front loader and my white clothes - dishcloths in particular - come out as stained-looking as when they went in, despite the use of bleach.  I keep the door propped open by wedging a rag in the clasp in order that the rubber gasket around the door dries out; water does get trapped in its folds, it smells bad and will transfer the odor to the clothes.   ::gaah::

I'm sure this  ::angry:: group has had their say in such things:

Quote
The group also supports a national energy efficiency standard for home appliances.[9]

I want these people and their "concern" to dry up and blow away.
"Under certain circumstances, profanity provides a relief denied even to prayer." - Mark Twain

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charlesoakwood

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Re: How Washington Ruined Your Washing Machine
« Reply #3 on: March 18, 2011, 10:36:52 AM »

Wonder how a little TSP would do there?


Online ToddF

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Re: How Washington Ruined Your Washing Machine
« Reply #4 on: March 18, 2011, 10:38:16 AM »
The problem with consumer reports is that they're leftist trash first, leftist trash second, and actual consumer educators last.

Yes, this will hurt the very people who benefit most from our tests and magazine, but do it anyway because it makes us feel good.

Online Pandora

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Re: How Washington Ruined Your Washing Machine
« Reply #5 on: March 18, 2011, 10:44:20 AM »

Wonder how a little TSP would do there?

Haven't tried it yet, but I will.  One would think the bleach would do the trick - it always did in the top-loader, and not a lot of it either.

The more I look around my house and observe the fine handed results of the Feds and their flunkies, the more  ::overkill:: I get.
"Under certain circumstances, profanity provides a relief denied even to prayer." - Mark Twain

"Let us assume for the moment everything you say about me is true. That just makes your problem bigger, doesn't it?"

Offline AmericanPatriot

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Re: How Washington Ruined Your Washing Machine
« Reply #6 on: March 18, 2011, 10:57:07 AM »
Wish I would have kept my mom's wringer washer
Of course, my wife wouldn't

Offline radioman

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Re: How Washington Ruined Your Washing Machine
« Reply #7 on: March 18, 2011, 10:59:13 AM »
We still have the top loading washer with a matching front loading dryer. that is the only way I can tell the difference between the washer and dryer when my wife asks me to put someting in the washer. :(
TGIF - "Thank God I'm Forgiven"

charlesoakwood

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Re: How Washington Ruined Your Washing Machine
« Reply #8 on: March 18, 2011, 11:19:53 AM »
We still have the top loading washer with a matching front loading dryer. that is the only way I can tell the difference between the washer and dryer when my wife asks me to put someting in the washer. :(

Granma had a hand wringer, said, "don't put your finger there" - Ha.ha..waaaaaa!

We still have the top loading washer with a matching front loading dryer. that is the only way I can tell the difference between the washer and dryer when my wife asks me to put someting in the washer. :(
::oldman::
you making fun of me? ::hysterical::


Offline Sectionhand

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Re: How Washington Ruined Your Washing Machine
« Reply #9 on: March 18, 2011, 12:43:10 PM »
Believe it or not , my Mother ( rest her soul ) , used to say that she actually preferred her old wringer washer from the 1940s and 50s to the newer models . Of course it was still a top loader after a fashion .