The use of water depends on which of the two types of machines you have, between a top-loading and a front-loading. A top-loading washer uses around 40 gallons of water from start to finish, whereas a front-loading machine uses about half as much..
You need to use a laundry detergent specifically for front loading washers, otherwise you will end up with a suds overflow. If you only have regular detergent, then start out with only about 2 or 3 tablespoons, then adjust with each load as needed. But I strongly recommend using one made for a front loader, which will tell you on the container how much to use, depending on the brand, the size of the load, etc.
You can, but you would have to use it very sparingly - perhaps 1/2 of normal amount. HE washers work best with HE detergent - conventional detergent sudses much too heavily.
The average washing machine is said to use 65 liters of water per cycle. It is more energy efficient to fully load the washing machine because a half wash uses the same amount of water as a full wash.
2 amps
Consider the following - a submerged object displaces its volume, but a floating object displaces its weight. You also know (or can assume) the load is evenly distributed. So you can take the weight of the load (the horse) and apportion the displacement evenly across the boat. Now you are better prepared to calculate the answer.
Too many variables to give a good answer. By hand? How much laundry? Front load machine? etc.
If you have a high efficiency washer then it should automatically adjust but if not then there should be a setting to adjust how much water you want based on your load size, therefor no water should be wasted.
If you use one perfect cup, you can wash 35 loads with one box if it contains 35 cups of laundry detergent and you only use 1 cup per load of laundry. 35 divided by 1 =35 NOTE: By the way, usually 1 full cup is far too much for 1 load of laundry unless it is super dirty and is a very full load.
The GE WSXH208H 3.1 CuFt Front Loading Washer uses 10 gallons of water for a small load and 15 gallons of water for a large load which can save up to 23 gallons of water per load as compared to a typical washing machine.
It depends upon several factors: a) The size of the load (the larger the load, the more detergent will be required) b) How dirty the load is (the more dirty, the more detergent is likely to be needed) c) How hard your water is (the harder the water, the more detergent is likely to be needed) d) The concentration of detergent used (the less concentrate the detergent, the more will be required) Basically, it is impossible to say how much detergent to use without seeing your laundry, how dirty it is, what kind of water you have and which detergent you intend to use. However, manufacturers will have done extensive testing of their products and will have instructions on the packaging as to how much detergent to use for various combinations of (a)-(c) above. If you are uncertain of the factors above I suggest your own testing: use the lower/lowest dosage suggested by the manufacturer and see how it washes - if it isn't satisfactory, try a higher dosage suggested. After a while of doing your laundry, you should have gained the experience to know which dosage to use for each load of laundry.
That depends on where you live -- you need to find out the cost of laundry detergent and how much you'd use per load, how much water you'd need per load and how much that costs, how much a washing machine costs and the electricity to run one, and if you plan to use an electric drying machine you'd need to figure in the cost of that and how much electricity would cost.
Typical volumetric payload: 66.4 tonnes; 145.5 lbsx1000
1 oz of water
as much water ya oussy cud get haahah.......
please someone anser this question sorry i dont no it myself! :(
It's a 10" high stand that your washer/dryer are set on with the purpose of raising the working height of the appliance so the user doesn't have to bend as much to load or unload.
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