Such a simple design & washing technique and yet more effective than today's washers which have dozens of ultra modern fancy gizmo attachments.I bet even Germans of today wont be able to make a machine this good that will last for decades.
Não, não estraga a sua roupa, quando você lava um material delicado é só colocar menos, para que o material que flutue na água esfregue menos e não se estrague. No, it doen't damage delicate laundry. If you need to wash delicate garments just load half of the maximum load so that the laundry float in the wash water, this way the fabrics are washed gently.
You fifn’t put any warm or hot water..,which is needed for most clothes..what will you do with the dirty water?..where will it go once your finished ...
@@royerperezcedeno8534 jabón de pasta en hojuelas (o rallado). Así te lo venden. Lo usan mucho para ropa de bebé. En este caso se ve que es ropa blanca o de cama.
It is just a mechanical gear system capable of transforming the rotations of the motor into an alternating motion. You can see a similar mechanism open for restoration in this playlist of mine for another washing machine whose operating principle is very similar. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-t-uyicNJ3pU.html
I do not understand why you got shocked... I just took a video of a vintage washing machine that is in my vintage washing machine museum and operate it to show to people who have never seen such a machine how it works... just like one can drive a car from the early 1930s... anyway, thanks for watching! :-)
@@CandyBimatic Wow, I wouldn't have ever imagined they kept this design going for that long !!!! It must have been a really popular machine !!! In the US, almost ALL washers were fully automatic by the mid 1950's. If you bought a wringer washer you were considered backward and old fashioned !!!
I know ... but you have to take into consideration that the United States did not have the Second World War at home ... you did not have your cities, your houses under the bombings ... in 1945 almost 70% of Europe it was destroyed, razed to the ground, the United States has never experienced anything like it. Imagine September 11, 2001 happening almost every day anywhere in the country for 5 years. After an experience like this, the priorities are very different, the last thing you think about is looking for an automatic washing machine or anything that is not essential. The economic boom in Italy and Europe began in the mid-1950s and by the early 1960s the technological gap was closed, however in European countries many people continued to prefer semi-automatic twin-tub washing machines. AEG and Hoover continued to produce their twin-tub washing machines until the mid-1990s. Different countries, different history, different culture and different habits ...
You can add hot water if you like... it's made of wood, hot water do not cause damage to it as it happen in many of the nowaday plastic made washing machines which cannot stand water temperature above 70°C. Thanks for watching.