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[email protected] June 21st 10 03:27 AM

Energy saving automatic mode on dryer
 
On many occasions, I've read on this group that using "automatic" mode
on a dryer saved energy.

I call BS. When I dry clothes in automatic mode, selecting the "Energy
Preferred" setting, it takes nearly two hours to dry a load, and the
clothes come out smoking HOT!

Using the timed setting, a load of clothes dries in 60 minutes, and
come out COOL because of the 20 minute cooldown.

Those of you who drink the "automatic mode is more efficient" koolaid
should try using the timed setting on your dryers. You may be
pleasantly surprised, and you'll get your laundry done earlier.

Molly Brown June 21st 10 05:44 AM

Energy saving automatic mode on dryer
 
On Jun 20, 7:27*pm, wrote:
On many occasions, I've read on this group that using "automatic" mode
on a dryer saved energy.

I call BS. When I dry clothes in automatic mode, selecting the "Energy
Preferred" setting, it takes nearly two hours to dry a load, and the
clothes come out smoking HOT!

Using the timed setting, a load of clothes dries in 60 minutes, and
come out COOL because of the 20 minute cooldown.

Those of you who drink the "automatic mode is more efficient" koolaid
should try using the timed setting on your dryers. You may be
pleasantly surprised, and you'll get your laundry done earlier.


Automatic mode is just another way the appliance manufacturers are
shining the same old s… to sell their goods.

mm June 21st 10 11:44 AM

Energy saving automatic mode on dryer
 
On Sun, 20 Jun 2010 19:27:39 -0700 (PDT),
wrote:

On many occasions, I've read on this group that using "automatic" mode
on a dryer saved energy.

I call BS. When I dry clothes in automatic mode, selecting the "Energy
Preferred" setting, it takes nearly two hours to dry a load, and the
clothes come out smoking HOT!

Using the timed setting, a load of clothes dries in 60 minutes, and
come out COOL because of the 20 minute cooldown.

Those of you who drink the "automatic mode is more efficient" koolaid
should try using the timed setting on your dryers. You may be
pleasantly surprised, and you'll get your laundry done earlier.


I have a wetness mode. Is that what you mean by automatic?

I like it. Although I wouldn't call it more efficient. It just
means I don't run the dryer past the time it is a certain level of
dryness.

It has a big dot where I guess it expects most people to set it. I
set it halfway closer to stop and sometimes more.

I put the temp on the lowest, not counting AIR, becuase my impression
is that when sta-press clothes get hot, they get wrinkles that only go
away when washed again, if then.

I often mix things in the dryer, but then I stop it early and take out
the sta-press shirts and polyester pants and the socks, which dry
earlier. If I kept them in until the towels were dry, it would beat
them up for nothing.

Sometimes if I set the humidistat too close to stop, the towels and
cotton underwear are still a bit wet when removed. I put them on the
shower bar above the bathtub until they dry. The towels seem a little
stiff until I've used them once.

Even the cotton/polyester shirts can be too wet if I take them out too
soon, but when they are warm, I can't tell. If I put the shirt on a
few minutes later, it will feel wet, but it dries out within 3 or 5
mintues.

It's a Sears Whirlpool. 31 years old. I'm the only one here but it's
never needed any repairs. The wetness control has a knob with a
pointer that enables me to set it at the start, but then it moves.
There should really be a second knob or pointer, so I have a record of
where I set it, so I can set it to the same spot if I'm perfectly
happy, and more or less if it wasn't perfect. But they don't have
that, so I try to remember as best I can.

[email protected] June 21st 10 12:20 PM

Energy saving automatic mode on dryer
 
On Jun 21, 6:44*am, mm wrote:
On Sun, 20 Jun 2010 19:27:39 -0700 (PDT),
wrote:

On many occasions, I've read on this group that using "automatic" mode
on a dryer saved energy.


I call BS. When I dry clothes in automatic mode, selecting the "Energy
Preferred" setting, it takes nearly two hours to dry a load, and the
clothes come out smoking HOT!


Using the timed setting, a load of clothes dries in 60 minutes, and
come out COOL because of the 20 minute cooldown.


Those of you who drink the "automatic mode is more efficient" koolaid
should try using the timed setting on your dryers. You may be
pleasantly surprised, and you'll get your laundry done earlier.


I have a wetness mode. Is that what you mean by automatic? *

I like it. * Although I wouldn't call it more efficient. *It just
means I don't run the dryer past the time it is a certain level of
dryness.



Yes, I agree. I'd say if the OP's is behaving as described,
something is wrong with it. Mine just runs until they are dry, then
shuts off.

ransley June 21st 10 12:25 PM

Energy saving automatic mode on dryer
 
On Jun 20, 9:27*pm, wrote:
On many occasions, I've read on this group that using "automatic" mode
on a dryer saved energy.

I call BS. When I dry clothes in automatic mode, selecting the "Energy
Preferred" setting, it takes nearly two hours to dry a load, and the
clothes come out smoking HOT!

Using the timed setting, a load of clothes dries in 60 minutes, and
come out COOL because of the 20 minute cooldown.

Those of you who drink the "automatic mode is more efficient" koolaid
should try using the timed setting on your dryers. You may be
pleasantly surprised, and you'll get your laundry done earlier.


Then obviously its defective, it isnt working as designed.

jamesgangnc[_3_] June 21st 10 12:56 PM

Energy saving automatic mode on dryer
 
On Jun 20, 10:27*pm, wrote:
On many occasions, I've read on this group that using "automatic" mode
on a dryer saved energy.

I call BS. When I dry clothes in automatic mode, selecting the "Energy
Preferred" setting, it takes nearly two hours to dry a load, and the
clothes come out smoking HOT!

Using the timed setting, a load of clothes dries in 60 minutes, and
come out COOL because of the 20 minute cooldown.

Those of you who drink the "automatic mode is more efficient" koolaid
should try using the timed setting on your dryers. You may be
pleasantly surprised, and you'll get your laundry done earlier.


Your dryer is broken. There is a humidistat in the outflow air that
speeds up the dial when it senses lower water content. Your's
probably needs replacing.

LSMFT June 21st 10 01:24 PM

Energy saving automatic mode on dryer
 
wrote:

On many occasions, I've read on this group that using "automatic" mode
on a dryer saved energy.

I call BS. When I dry clothes in automatic mode, selecting the "Energy
Preferred" setting, it takes nearly two hours to dry a load, and the
clothes come out smoking HOT!

Using the timed setting, a load of clothes dries in 60 minutes, and
come out COOL because of the 20 minute cooldown.

Those of you who drink the "automatic mode is more efficient" koolaid
should try using the timed setting on your dryers. You may be
pleasantly surprised, and you'll get your laundry done earlier.



I have a manual temperature setting, air only-extra low-low-medium-high.
I use medium and close dry in 30 minutes with cool down.
My light bill was $31.00 this month with laundry once a week and 2 point
of use electric, tankless water heaters.

--


If I wasn't me I wouldn't like me either.
Signature file not found

mm June 21st 10 07:36 PM

Energy saving automatic mode on dryer
 
On Mon, 21 Jun 2010 04:56:27 -0700 (PDT), jamesgangnc
wrote:

On Jun 20, 10:27*pm, wrote:
On many occasions, I've read on this group that using "automatic" mode
on a dryer saved energy.

I call BS. When I dry clothes in automatic mode, selecting the "Energy
Preferred" setting, it takes nearly two hours to dry a load, and the
clothes come out smoking HOT!

Using the timed setting, a load of clothes dries in 60 minutes, and
come out COOL because of the 20 minute cooldown.

Those of you who drink the "automatic mode is more efficient" koolaid
should try using the timed setting on your dryers. You may be
pleasantly surprised, and you'll get your laundry done earlier.


Your dryer is broken. There is a humidistat in the outflow air that
speeds up the dial when it senses lower water content. Your's
probably needs replacing.


Mine, the 31-year old whirlpool, has two metal strips in back of the
dryer basket itself, and as the clothes rub by, it measures the
electric resistance, or something like that.

And I know it wokds because when I vary the dial, I get the expected
results. I don't know what happens if the dial has moved halfway to
stop and I twist it ahead or back, but not all the way to where it
started. It must speed up the stopping or slow it down,
but I can't guess how much.


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