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Default Dishwasher and dog

I've owned a piece of crap Maytag dishwasher for just over a year.
I've had 4 service calls so far because it doesn't clean well. I
leave residue on dishes -- particularly on glasses on top shelf.

Each time the service man found dog hair in the filter that covers the
grinder. He says that's to blame. It makes no sense to me. Yes we
have a hairy dog but we aren't the only ones who do. So I'm left with
the following questions.

1. Why do that have a very fine filter BEFORE the grinder. It's so
small that nothing of substance could ever be ground.

2. Would it hurt to remove the filter? What's the worst that could
happen -- the impeller gets matted up with hair?

3. Has anyone else had this problem.

4. Is their a cure other than just getting rid of it -- the
dishwasher, not the dog.

I see no reason to wash dishes BEFORE putting them in the dishwasher
go get everything off of them that's bigger than a grain of sand.
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On Dec 8, 9:29*am, Pat wrote:
I've owned a piece of crap Maytag dishwasher for just over a year.
I've had 4 service calls so far because it doesn't clean well. *I
leave residue on dishes -- particularly on glasses on top shelf.

Each time the service man found dog hair in the filter that covers the
grinder. *He says that's to blame. *It makes no sense to me. *Yes we
have a hairy dog but we aren't the only ones who do. *So I'm left with
the following questions.

1. *Why do that have a very fine filter BEFORE the grinder. *It's so
small that nothing of substance could ever be ground.

2. *Would it hurt to remove the filter? *What's the worst that could
happen -- the impeller gets matted up with hair?

3. *Has anyone else had this problem.

4. *Is their a cure other than just getting rid of it -- the
dishwasher, not the dog.

I see no reason to wash dishes BEFORE putting them in the dishwasher
go get everything off of them that's bigger than a grain of sand.


Residue is from water quality, try different soaps or a softner. Dogs
should not be washed in the dishwasher, plates should not go on the
floor and should be rinsed of food and dog hair first. How do you get
hair in a dishwasher, I have 3 that shed like falling leaves and never
had that issue.
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On Dec 8, 10:37*am, ransley wrote:
On Dec 8, 9:29*am, Pat wrote:





I've owned a piece of crap Maytag dishwasher for just over a year.
I've had 4 service calls so far because it doesn't clean well. *I
leave residue on dishes -- particularly on glasses on top shelf.


Each time the service man found dog hair in the filter that covers the
grinder. *He says that's to blame. *It makes no sense to me. *Yes we
have a hairy dog but we aren't the only ones who do. *So I'm left with
the following questions.


1. *Why do that have a very fine filter BEFORE the grinder. *It's so
small that nothing of substance could ever be ground.


2. *Would it hurt to remove the filter? *What's the worst that could
happen -- the impeller gets matted up with hair?


3. *Has anyone else had this problem.


4. *Is their a cure other than just getting rid of it -- the
dishwasher, not the dog.


I see no reason to wash dishes BEFORE putting them in the dishwasher
go get everything off of them that's bigger than a grain of sand.


Residue is from water quality, try different soaps or a softner. *Dogs
should not be washed in the dishwasher, plates should not go on the
floor and should be rinsed of food and dog hair first. How do you get
hair in a dishwasher, I have 3 that shed like falling leaves and never
had that issue.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -



In the dishwashers I've seen, the filter is there to filter the water
while it's being recirculated, collecting any particles. Then, when
the pump out begins, water is drawn from BEFORE the filter, taking
whatever collected there and sending it out through the grinder.

I would think hair could present a problem, because unlike the
expected food particles, it might get embedded in the filter so it
won't easily wash out. I guess I'm wondering how any significant
amount of dog hair can get in there to begin with. If you're putting
dog feeding dishes in there, the obvious solution is to wash those by
hand.

Have you called the Maytag helpline to ask them?
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Pat wrote:
I've owned a piece of crap Maytag dishwasher for just over a year.
I've had 4 service calls so far because it doesn't clean well. I
leave residue on dishes -- particularly on glasses on top shelf.

Each time the service man found dog hair in the filter that covers the
grinder. He says that's to blame. It makes no sense to me. Yes we
have a hairy dog but we aren't the only ones who do. So I'm left with
the following questions.

1. Why do that have a very fine filter BEFORE the grinder. It's so
small that nothing of substance could ever be ground.

2. Would it hurt to remove the filter? What's the worst that could
happen -- the impeller gets matted up with hair?

3. Has anyone else had this problem.

4. Is their a cure other than just getting rid of it -- the
dishwasher, not the dog.

I see no reason to wash dishes BEFORE putting them in the dishwasher
go get everything off of them that's bigger than a grain of sand.

Hi,
Did you have aone before this one? Did the old one work fine?
Wonder if your water is hard. I have 3 cats and a dog in the house.
Our El Cheapo GE washer does the job just fine.
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i can't imagine how the rest of the house looks if your actually getting DOG
HAIR in the dishwasher. Jeeeezzzeee.... shave that MF!!

s


"Pat" wrote in message
...
I've owned a piece of crap Maytag dishwasher for just over a year.
I've had 4 service calls so far because it doesn't clean well. I
leave residue on dishes -- particularly on glasses on top shelf.

Each time the service man found dog hair in the filter that covers the
grinder. He says that's to blame. It makes no sense to me. Yes we
have a hairy dog but we aren't the only ones who do. So I'm left with
the following questions.

1. Why do that have a very fine filter BEFORE the grinder. It's so
small that nothing of substance could ever be ground.

2. Would it hurt to remove the filter? What's the worst that could
happen -- the impeller gets matted up with hair?

3. Has anyone else had this problem.

4. Is their a cure other than just getting rid of it -- the
dishwasher, not the dog.

I see no reason to wash dishes BEFORE putting them in the dishwasher
go get everything off of them that's bigger than a grain of sand.





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Steve Barker DLT wrote:
i can't imagine how the rest of the house looks if your actually getting DOG
HAIR in the dishwasher. Jeeeezzzeee.... shave that MF!!

s

Gotta be a troll. Imagine putting dishes with dog hair on them in
dishwasher. There's a joke about the dog called Cold Water, where old
man said dishes were washed by cold water.
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"Frank" wrote

Gotta be a troll. Imagine putting dishes with dog hair on them in
dishwasher.


I'm sure it is a troll.


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On Dec 8, 12:07*pm, "cshenk" wrote:
"Frank" wrote

Gotta be a troll. *Imagine putting dishes with dog hair on them in
dishwasher.


I'm sure it is a troll.


I'm sure I'm not a troll and you're a moron. I've been on-and-off
hold for about an hour with Maytag. They say you should completely
rinse EVERY dish that goes in the dishwasher. So why bother to have
the darn thing? I have no idea how dog hair gets in their -- one
piece here and one piece there. 25 or 30 loads later the filter is
matted. I'm about to send the thing out the door with a big crash.

Gad to know that Maytag things you should rinse EVERYTHING first, then
wash in dishwasher, then re-rinse when they come out. What a waste of
time/water/energy. Every other dishwasher I've seen has handled hair
okay.
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Pat wrote:
On Dec 8, 12:07 pm, "cshenk" wrote:
"Frank" wrote

Gotta be a troll. Imagine putting dishes with dog hair on them in
dishwasher.

I'm sure it is a troll.


I'm sure I'm not a troll and you're a moron. I've been on-and-off
hold for about an hour with Maytag. They say you should completely
rinse EVERY dish that goes in the dishwasher. So why bother to have
the darn thing? I have no idea how dog hair gets in their -- one
piece here and one piece there. 25 or 30 loads later the filter is
matted. I'm about to send the thing out the door with a big crash.

Gad to know that Maytag things you should rinse EVERYTHING first, then
wash in dishwasher, then re-rinse when they come out. What a waste of
time/water/energy. Every other dishwasher I've seen has handled hair
okay.


Now you know why Maytag is considered a POS.
Try escalating to THE sales manager. Tell he/she you are going to make
them famous via the Internet unless they give back your money.

Lou
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On Dec 8, 10:45*am, "Steve Barker DLT"
wrote:
i can't imagine how the rest of the house looks if your actually getting DOG
HAIR in the dishwasher. *Jeeeezzzeee.... *shave that MF!!

s

"Pat" wrote in message

...



I've owned a piece of crap Maytag dishwasher for just over a year.
I've had 4 service calls so far because it doesn't clean well. *I
leave residue on dishes -- particularly on glasses on top shelf.


Each time the service man found dog hair in the filter that covers the
grinder. *He says that's to blame. *It makes no sense to me. *Yes we
have a hairy dog but we aren't the only ones who do. *So I'm left with
the following questions.


1. *Why do that have a very fine filter BEFORE the grinder. *It's so
small that nothing of substance could ever be ground.


2. *Would it hurt to remove the filter? *What's the worst that could
happen -- the impeller gets matted up with hair?


3. *Has anyone else had this problem.


4. *Is their a cure other than just getting rid of it -- the
dishwasher, not the dog.


I see no reason to wash dishes BEFORE putting them in the dishwasher
go get everything off of them that's bigger than a grain of sand.- Hide quoted text -


- Show quoted text -


Better yet Nair Hair Remover, instant Hairless dog.


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well my maytag works just fine.. There's two key elements to having it work
good.

1. proper (140 degree) hot water
2. keep the dog out of it.


s



"LouB" wrote in message
...

Now you know why Maytag is considered a POS.
Try escalating to THE sales manager. Tell he/she you are going to make
them famous via the Internet unless they give back your money.

Lou



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"Pat" wrote in message news:16fcc487-0f71-
I see no reason to wash dishes BEFORE putting them in the dishwasher
go get everything off of them that's bigger than a grain of sand.


Ewww, gross. Your problem is that you're not rinsing the dishes, not that
your dishwasher is not performing properly.


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On Mon, 8 Dec 2008 17:31:16 -0500, "h"
wrote:


"Pat" wrote in message news:16fcc487-0f71-
I see no reason to wash dishes BEFORE putting them in the dishwasher
go get everything off of them that's bigger than a grain of sand.


Ewww, gross. Your problem is that you're not rinsing the dishes, not that
your dishwasher is not performing properly.


What "gross"?

If I had a dishwasher that needed rinsed dishes I'd get a new one. My
2000-ish whirlpool isn't quite as 'hungry' as my 1970's Kenmore was-
but I've seen it eat lots of solubles like mashed potatoes, squash,
etc.

Jim
[btw- also have a very 'sheddy' dog and never saw any dog hair in the
dishwasher. And I wash his dishes in there.]


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On Dec 8, 4:46*pm, Jim Elbrecht wrote:
On Mon, 8 Dec 2008 17:31:16 -0500, "h"
wrote:



"Pat" wrote in message news:16fcc487-0f71-
I see no reason to wash dishes BEFORE putting them in the dishwasher
go get everything off of them that's bigger than a grain of sand.


Ewww, gross. Your problem is that you're not rinsing the dishes, not that
your dishwasher is not performing properly.


What "gross"?

If I had a dishwasher that needed rinsed dishes I'd get a new one. My
2000-ish whirlpool isn't quite as 'hungry' as my 1970's Kenmore was-
but I've seen it eat lots of solubles like mashed potatoes, squash,
etc. * *

Jim
[btw- also have a very 'sheddy' dog and never saw any dog hair in the
dishwasher. *And I wash his dishes in there.]


The trouble is dog hair is not soluble in water, or any common
household chemical, for that matter. I would just rinse dishes that
were around the dog to get any loose hair off before putting them in
ths dishwasher. I don't see how hair could getinto the machine unless
the dog crawls in at night to find a nice warm dark place to sleep.
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Pat wrote:
On Dec 8, 12:07 pm, "cshenk" wrote:
"Frank" wrote

Gotta be a troll. Imagine putting dishes with dog hair on them in
dishwasher.

I'm sure it is a troll.


I'm sure I'm not a troll and you're a moron. I've been on-and-off
hold for about an hour with Maytag. They say you should completely
rinse EVERY dish that goes in the dishwasher. So why bother to have
the darn thing? I have no idea how dog hair gets in their -- one
piece here and one piece there. 25 or 30 loads later the filter is
matted. I'm about to send the thing out the door with a big crash.

Gad to know that Maytag things you should rinse EVERYTHING first, then
wash in dishwasher, then re-rinse when they come out. What a waste of
time/water/energy. Every other dishwasher I've seen has handled hair
okay.


Okay so you're not a troll. But, I'm not coming to dinner at your house
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On Dec 8, 6:57*pm, Frank wrote:
Pat wrote:
On Dec 8, 12:07 pm, "cshenk" wrote:
"Frank" wrote


Gotta be a troll. *Imagine putting dishes with dog hair on them in
dishwasher.
I'm sure it is a troll.


I'm sure I'm not a troll and you're a moron. *I've been on-and-off
hold for about an hour with Maytag. *They say you should completely
rinse EVERY dish that goes in the dishwasher. *So why bother to have
the darn thing? *I have no idea how dog hair gets in their -- one
piece here and one piece there. *25 or 30 loads later the filter is
matted. *I'm about to send the thing out the door with a big crash.


Gad to know that Maytag things you should rinse EVERYTHING first, then
wash in dishwasher, then re-rinse when they come out. *What a waste of
time/water/energy. *Every other dishwasher I've seen has handled hair
okay.


Okay so you're not a troll. *But, I'm not coming to dinner at your house


But the dishes are clean after wash in sink, wash in dishwasher, and
rinse when coming out.
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Um, is the filter that's getting clogged something he could just take care
of himself, say, weekly?

As for pre-rinsing the manual says nothing about that except if you don't
plan to wash for a long time you should run a rinse cycle on the machine.
All it says is:

"Remove leftover food, bones, toothpicks and other
hard items from the dishes. Remove labels from containers before
washing."

This is from this manual. Not the most expensive Maytag.
http://www.maytag.com/assets/product...and%20Care.pdf
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"Pat" wrote in message
...
I've owned a piece of crap Maytag dishwasher for just over a year.
I've had 4 service calls so far because it doesn't clean well. I
leave residue on dishes -- particularly on glasses on top shelf.

Each time the service man found dog hair in the filter that covers the
grinder. He says that's to blame. It makes no sense to me. Yes we
have a hairy dog but we aren't the only ones who do. So I'm left with
the following questions.

1. Why do that have a very fine filter BEFORE the grinder. It's so
small that nothing of substance could ever be ground.

2. Would it hurt to remove the filter? What's the worst that could
happen -- the impeller gets matted up with hair?

3. Has anyone else had this problem.

4. Is their a cure other than just getting rid of it -- the
dishwasher, not the dog.

I see no reason to wash dishes BEFORE putting them in the dishwasher
go get everything off of them that's bigger than a grain of sand.


I'm sure you tried this already, but I usually run the faucet till hot water
comes out, then fire up the dishwasher. We have two shedding pooches, and
haven't had a problem with our mid-level Maytag.




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"Pat" wrote in message
...
I've owned a piece of crap Maytag dishwasher for just over a year.
I've had 4 service calls so far because it doesn't clean well. I
leave residue on dishes -- particularly on glasses on top shelf.

Each time the service man found dog hair in the filter that covers the
grinder. He says that's to blame. It makes no sense to me. Yes we
have a hairy dog but we aren't the only ones who do. So I'm left with
the following questions.

1. Why do that have a very fine filter BEFORE the grinder. It's so
small that nothing of substance could ever be ground.

2. Would it hurt to remove the filter? What's the worst that could
happen -- the impeller gets matted up with hair?

3. Has anyone else had this problem.

4. Is their a cure other than just getting rid of it -- the
dishwasher, not the dog.

I see no reason to wash dishes BEFORE putting them in the dishwasher
go get everything off of them that's bigger than a grain of sand.


Pat, Pat, Pat. Do we gotta tell you everything? Stick your bald head in
there. Close the door. Turn it on, but don't forget the soap and stuff to
make the dishes shiny. Your head bald head will act like a magnet and take
the hair out instantly.

Geez.

Steve

BTW, you only have one more chance to actually ask a relevant question, or I
will personally stick you in MY dishwasher and leave you there.


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"Pat" wrote in message
...
On Dec 8, 12:07 pm, "cshenk" wrote:
"Frank" wrote

Gotta be a troll. Imagine putting dishes with dog hair on them in
dishwasher.


I'm sure it is a troll.


I'm sure I'm not a troll and you're a moron. I've been on-and-off
hold for about an hour with Maytag. They say you should completely
rinse EVERY dish that goes in the dishwasher. So why bother to have
the darn thing?

************************************************

We've had dogs for 30+ year and never had a problem with the DW and hair.
Nor have I ever heard of anyone else with that problem. I can only imagine
your house is a hairy mess or you get a slobbering hairy dog lick the plates
clean first and hair sticking on them. Thank you for not inviting me for
dinner at your place. Find the real problem and quit blaming Maytag.


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bull****. i've never (and will never) wash a dish before putting it in a
dishwasher. If you're going to do that, you might just as well dry it and
put it away.

s


"h" wrote in message
...

Ewww, gross. Your problem is that you're not rinsing the dishes, not that
your dishwasher is not performing properly.



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"Pat" wrote
"cshenk" wrote:

I'm sure it is a troll.


I'm sure I'm not a troll and you're a moron.


Thank you. At least I dont have dog hair clogs in my dishwasher and i have
a dog and a cat (medium to long hair) and have had cats for neigh on 20
years now (long hairs) as well as maytags for diswashers. I do not
pre-rinse my dishes unless its pet bowl stuff.



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"cshenk" wrote in message
...
"Pat" wrote
"cshenk" wrote:

I'm sure it is a troll.


I'm sure I'm not a troll and you're a moron.


Thank you. At least I dont have dog hair clogs in my dishwasher and i
have a dog and a cat (medium to long hair) and have had cats for neigh on
20 years now (long hairs) as well as maytags for diswashers. I do not
pre-rinse my dishes unless its pet bowl stuff.


The last repairman who looked at my very old Kitchen Aid (ancient..they
don't make them like that one anymore) told me to always rinse the dishes
off regardless of the brand or model. He said there is not a dishwasher on
the market that can handle washing the dishes and eliminating the food too.

I replaced the KA with a cheap GE (on his advice) and it's works perfectly.

BTW: We only replaced the KA because the parts are getting expensive and
hard to find. The new KA's are not the same. They are good but not worth the
money.

We always pre-clean and use that time to get the water hot for the washer.

We have soft water too and I think that helps too.

How in the world someone gets dog hair in their dw is beyond me??!!

Olddog




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Shave the dog.
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"Pat" wrote in message
...
I've owned a piece of crap Maytag dishwasher for just over a year.
I've had 4 service calls so far because it doesn't clean well. I
leave residue on dishes -- particularly on glasses on top shelf.



I have a dog & a Maytag & don't have any of those problems. However, the
detergent you're using may make a difference. Get something where it lists
"enzymes" as an ingredient. Such detergents clean better.

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"olddog" wrote in message
BTW: We only replaced the KA because the parts are getting expensive and
hard to find. The new KA's are not the same. They are good but not worth
the money.


I'm on the fourth KA in about 40 years. Each is better than the previous.
Present one is four years now, not a problem and the only less than perfect
dish was a couple of times they were not loaded properly and water could not
get to the surface. Only rinsing is a quick psst under the water to get big
stuff off, or if it is not going to run right away to get any potential
smelly stuff off.

Never had a dog hair clog either.


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Pat wrote:
On Dec 8, 12:07 pm, "cshenk" wrote:
"Frank" wrote

Gotta be a troll. Imagine putting dishes with dog hair on them in
dishwasher.

I'm sure it is a troll.


I'm sure I'm not a troll and you're a moron. I've been on-and-off
hold for about an hour with Maytag. They say you should completely
rinse EVERY dish that goes in the dishwasher. So why bother to have
the darn thing? I have no idea how dog hair gets in their -- one
piece here and one piece there. 25 or 30 loads later the filter is
matted. I'm about to send the thing out the door with a big crash.

Gad to know that Maytag things you should rinse EVERYTHING first, then
wash in dishwasher, then re-rinse when they come out. What a waste of
time/water/energy. Every other dishwasher I've seen has handled hair
okay.

Hmmm,
That is absurd! Is it your first ever dish washer or is it a replacement
for old one you had?
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"Ed Pawlowski" wrote in message
...

"olddog" wrote in message
BTW: We only replaced the KA because the parts are getting expensive and
hard to find. The new KA's are not the same. They are good but not worth
the money.


I'm on the fourth KA in about 40 years. Each is better than the previous.
Present one is four years now, not a problem and the only less than
perfect dish was a couple of times they were not loaded properly and water
could not get to the surface. Only rinsing is a quick psst under the
water to get big stuff off, or if it is not going to run right away to get
any potential smelly stuff off.

Never had a dog hair clog either.

That's good to hear. Ours was so old it was back when Hobart made them. I
know they got sold out. The guy said they are still good. If I had extra
cash I would of got one. But I could buy 4 or 5 GE's for the price of one
KA.

The GE works well and is very quite. $380.00. ;-) We have one of those open
designed living/dining/kitchen area so quite was a priority.

Olddog







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"olddog" wrote
"cshenk" wrote


I'm sure I'm not a troll and you're a moron.


Thank you. At least I dont have dog hair clogs in my dishwasher and i
have a dog and a cat (medium to long hair) and have had cats for neigh on
20 years now (long hairs) as well as maytags for diswashers. I do not
pre-rinse my dishes unless its pet bowl stuff.


The last repairman who looked at my very old Kitchen Aid (ancient..they
don't make them like that one anymore) told me to always rinse the dishes
off regardless of the brand or model. He said there is not a dishwasher on
the market that can handle washing the dishes and eliminating the food
too.


I think it's a matter of level. I dont have much on them but grease etc by
the time they go in there. I dont exactly pre-wash them, but a little
rinsing before adding, yes.

I replaced the KA with a cheap GE (on his advice) and it's works
perfectly.

BTW: We only replaced the KA because the parts are getting expensive and
hard to find. The new KA's are not the same. They are good but not worth
the money.


Dishwashers are one of the things wit a fairly short life expectancy. I
gather 7 years is some sort of average but we've been lucky I guess as most
seem to last about 11 for us.

How in the world someone gets dog hair in their dw is beyond me??!!


Dunno, but it sounds too odd to be true to me.


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The last time I got dog hair in my dishwasher, I tried to wash my dog in
there. The new dishwasher works better, and I don't have many dreams as
often of the dog screaming ..........

Steve


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"SteveB" toquervilla@zionvistas wrote in message
...
The last time I got dog hair in my dishwasher, I tried to wash my dog in
there. The new dishwasher works better, and I don't have many dreams as
often of the dog screaming ..........

Steve

My nephew is going in the dw if he keeps it up. ;-)

Just kidding...don't call social services


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On Dec 8, 8:16*pm, Steve Kraus wrote:
As for pre-rinsing the manual says nothing about that except if you don't
plan to wash for a long time you should run a rinse cycle on the machine. *
All it says is:

"Remove leftover food, bones, toothpicks and other
hard items from the dishes. Remove labels from containers before
washing."


....and that is done by PRE-RINSING the dishes off into the garbage
disposal in most areas. Dog hair counts as a hard item.
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"olddog" wrote in message
...

"SteveB" toquervilla@zionvistas wrote in message
...
The last time I got dog hair in my dishwasher, I tried to wash my dog in
there. The new dishwasher works better, and I don't have many dreams as
often of the dog screaming ..........

Steve

My nephew is going in the dw if he keeps it up. ;-)

Just kidding...don't call social services


Tip: they can only call social services if you turn it ON. Just say the
kid was playing, and got locked in. If there's water in there, they know
someone turned it on from the outside. An hour or so in there gives them a
lot of time to reflect and readjust. And if it don't, the next time, just
the threat will get them to be good.

For a while, anyway. After that, there's always dark basements, sheds, and
other isolation attitude adjustment booths. Read 1984. Everyone has their
biggest fear.

Just kidding. But it works.

Steve




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"SteveB" toquervilla@zionvistas wrote in message
...

"olddog" wrote in message
...

"SteveB" toquervilla@zionvistas wrote in message
...
The last time I got dog hair in my dishwasher, I tried to wash my dog in
there. The new dishwasher works better, and I don't have many dreams as
often of the dog screaming ..........

Steve

My nephew is going in the dw if he keeps it up. ;-)

Just kidding...don't call social services


Tip: they can only call social services if you turn it ON. Just say the
kid was playing, and got locked in. If there's water in there, they know
someone turned it on from the outside. An hour or so in there gives them
a lot of time to reflect and readjust. And if it don't, the next time,
just the threat will get them to be good.

For a while, anyway. After that, there's always dark basements, sheds,
and other isolation attitude adjustment booths. Read 1984. Everyone has
their biggest fear.

Just kidding. But it works.

Steve


Rat cage strapped to the head. I'll think about it. Hmmmm... "You want
something to cry about!"

That would make everything else seems pretty damn good.

Olddog


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replying to Ed Pawlowski, Amanda wrote:
I rinse my plates every time, I don't allow the dogs to eat any people food,
especially off of dishes, and I wash all dishes and toys by hand or in the
washing machine. I still get small amounts of hair on the blade, which ends up
blocking the tiny exit enough that water recirculates food particles. I have
to take the whole dishwasher apart to clean the grinder, about a 2 hour job.
So now I'm going to buy one that does not have a grinder and only has a filter.

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On Thu, 25 May 2017 20:14:23 GMT, Amanda
m wrote:

I have to take the whole dishwasher apart to clean the grinder, about a 2 hour job.


Do you also take the adjustable feet off?
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replying to Pat, RobbD wrote:
Buy a Bosch.

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replying to cshenk, RobbD wrote:
This is our 2nd Bosch dishwasher. Our first Bosch was over 20 years old and
was still in perfect working condition when we sold the house it was in.,
Neither Bosch ever required a repair. We never rinse dishes. I clean the
filter weekly, and use a dishwasher cleaner monthly. With proper maintenance
a really good dishwasher will last many years. Overall, it pays to never buy
a cheap dishwasher.

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