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UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
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#1
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On Sun, 01 Nov 2020 09:35:42 -0800, Mushy Devil wrote:
On Friday, 10 February 2017 at 01:50:12 UTC+2, therustyone wrote: You'll spend far more on calgon than it would cost to fix a fault caused by limescale. A descale with a little hot acid every 2 months is more practical. Citric works. What if you have a 3 year manufacturer's guarantee and they tell you to use Calgon. Will it be invalidated if you don't, or use a cheaper alternative, like Sainsbury's. 3 years of using Calgon in every wash is more expensive than buying a new washing machine A box of 75 cosrs £13.69 which works out at £0.1825 per tablet. Using one per day 7 days per week for three years comes out at under £200. Our Miele cost around £600 ten years ago and still as good as new. -- Mint 20.0, kernel 5.4.0-45-generic, Cinnamon 4.6.7 running on an AMD Phenom II X4 Black edition processor with 8GB of DRAM. |
#2
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On 05/11/2020 17:50, pinnerite wrote:
A box of 75 cosrs £13.69 which works out at £0.1825 per tablet. Using one per day 7 days per week for three years comes out at under £200. Our Miele cost around £600 ten years ago and still as good as new. My washing machine cost less than £200 nine years ago and is still going strong without using Calgon. Used mainly on a cold wash it occasionally gets a dose of washing soda on the hottest wash cycle. -- mailto : news {at} admac {dot} myzen {dot} co {dot} uk |
#3
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On Fri, 06 Nov 2020 08:56:25 +0000, alan_m wrote:
On 05/11/2020 17:50, pinnerite wrote: A box of 75 cosrs £13.69 which works out at £0.1825 per tablet. Using one per day 7 days per week for three years comes out at under £200. Our Miele cost around £600 ten years ago and still as good as new. My washing machine cost less than £200 nine years ago and is still going strong without using Calgon. Used mainly on a cold wash it occasionally gets a dose of washing soda on the hottest wash cycle. Our old Hotpoint lasted fifteen years; I fitted door seal, bearings, heater and motor brushes. Eventually the motor blew up. The heater didn't actually fail, but the integral seal hardened and started to leak. We are in a hard water area. There was practically NO scale on it, and we never used Calgon. -- My posts are my copyright and if @diy_forums or Home Owners' Hub wish to copy them they can pay me £1 a message. Use the BIG mirror service in the UK: http://www.mirrorservice.org *lightning surge protection* - a w_tom conductor |
#4
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On 06/11/2020 08:56, alan_m wrote:
On 05/11/2020 17:50, pinnerite wrote: A box of 75 cosrs £13.69 which works out at £0.1825 per tablet. Using one per day 7 days per week for three years comes out at under £200. Our Miele cost around £600 ten years ago and still as good as new. My washing machine cost less than £200 nine years ago and is still going strong without using Calgon. Used mainly on a cold wash it occasionally gets a dose of washing soda on the hottest wash cycle. On the packet of my lays purchase of washing powder tablets it says 'use two in hard water areas' I assume it has a Calgon equivalent built in... -- "It is an established fact to 97% confidence limits that left wing conspirators see right wing conspiracies everywhere" |
#5
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On 06/11/2020 09:50, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
On 06/11/2020 08:56, alan_m wrote: On 05/11/2020 17:50, pinnerite wrote: A box of 75 cosrs £13.69 which works out at £0.1825 per tablet. Using one per day 7 days per week for three years comes out at under £200. Our Miele cost around £600 ten years ago and still as good as new. My washing machine cost less than £200 nine years ago and is still going strong without using Calgon. Used mainly on a cold wash it occasionally gets a dose of washing soda on the hottest wash cycle. On the packet of my lays purchase of washing powder tablets it says 'use two in hard water areas' I assume it has a Calgon equivalent built in... Does your "lay" like being referred to in such terms? |
#6
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On 06/11/2020 13:54, Pancho wrote:
On 06/11/2020 09:50, The Natural Philosopher wrote: On 06/11/2020 08:56, alan_m wrote: On 05/11/2020 17:50, pinnerite wrote: A box of 75 cosrs £13.69 which works out at £0.1825 per tablet. Using one per day 7 days per week for three years comes out at under £200. Our Miele cost around £600 ten years ago and still as good as new. My washing machine cost less than £200 nine years ago and is still going strong without using Calgon. Used mainly on a cold wash it occasionally gets a dose of washing soda on the hottest wash cycle. On the packet of my lays purchase of washing powder tablets it says 'use two in hard water areas' I assume it has a Calgon equivalent built in... Does your "lay" like being referred to in such terms? And I think you need two because hard water decreases the detergent's cleaning efficiency, so you need more, rather than two protect the machine. |
#7
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On 06/11/2020 13:54, Pancho wrote:
On 06/11/2020 09:50, The Natural Philosopher wrote: On 06/11/2020 08:56, alan_m wrote: On 05/11/2020 17:50, pinnerite wrote: A box of 75 cosrs £13.69 which works out at £0.1825 per tablet. Using one per day 7 days per week for three years comes out at under £200. Our Miele cost around £600 ten years ago and still as good as new. My washing machine cost less than £200 nine years ago and is still going strong without using Calgon. Used mainly on a cold wash it occasionally gets a dose of washing soda on the hottest wash cycle. On the packet of my lays purchase of washing powder tablets it says 'use two in hard water areas' I assume it has a Calgon equivalent built in... Does your "lay" like being referred to in such terms? Normally it would be "latest". typo -- Canada is all right really, though not for the whole weekend. "Saki" |
#8
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pinnerite wrote:
On Sun, 01 Nov 2020 09:35:42 -0800, Mushy Devil wrote: On Friday, 10 February 2017 at 01:50:12 UTC+2, therustyone wrote: You'll spend far more on calgon than it would cost to fix a fault caused by limescale. A descale with a little hot acid every 2 months is more practical. Citric works. What if you have a 3 year manufacturer's guarantee and they tell you to use Calgon. Will it be invalidated if you don't, or use a cheaper alternative, like Sainsbury's. 3 years of using Calgon in every wash is more expensive than buying a new washing machine A box of 75 cosrs £13.69 which works out at £0.1825 per tablet. Using one per day 7 days per week for three years comes out at under £200. Our Miele cost around £600 ten years ago and still as good as new. But wait a minute, you've been using the tablets for 10 years presumably, cost well over £600. -- Chris Green · |
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