That brown 'gunk' that you referenced in the video are resin beads. They are used to attract the dissolved magnesium and calcium in the water via ion exchange. The water will come out the other end as soft water. It's non-toxic and from what I'm told, if you swallow the stuff it will act as an antacid. The salt is used to regenerate the resin by forcing the resin to release the captured hard water deposits. The injection of salt into the resin chamber must be occurring at some stage in the cleaning cycle and we haven't seen it yet. It must be part of the commands issued by the electronic board at some stage during the wash/rinse cycle. Home water softeners work on the same principle but the salt flushing is usually set to occur very late at night when nobody would be using the water.
You are right. The so called regeneration of the ion exchanger ("brown gunk") happens during the drying stage, but not in every wash cycle of the dishwasher (more like every 2nd, every 3rd and so on). How often the regeneration takes place depends on the hardness of the water, and with most dishwashers is set _manually_ via a menu setting. This is why it's important to have this setting where it needs to be at for the given hardness of the tap water. Many people never touch it, have hard water and then wonder why they have stains. By the way, the dishes themselves never come in contact with the salt or it's brine at any time. It is purely for regeneration of the ion exchanger. The ion exchanger is where the softening magic happens and it works fine without salt until it is saturated and needs regeneration.
I can confirm because one of our filters broke and looked just like that. Thankfully it was contained and did not flow all of our house pipes. 😧 Phew!😅
Very strange, these UK machines are a bit odd. The way we have it in the US with just a motor heater and food chopper works perfectly, although salt would definitely help in harder water conditions. Excellent information!
Hi. Thanks for the well edited, dynamic video. I thoroughly enjoyed it The brown stuff in the salt container is called "ionic echange resin". Essentially a dishwasher (or any water softener that uses salt) does not soften the water directly by means of salt, but rather by a ionic exchange process. In short, limescale (which is responsible for white marks on dishes) is calcium carbonate. The water softener job is to absorb calcium from the water molecules and release in its place another molecule, which in the case of a salt based softener is, you guessed it, sodium (I remember to the reader of the comment that salt is sodium chloride). In short, water does NOT flow from the valve, through the salt container, into the wash tub. This would cause water to be salty and create rust spots on cutley, metal and leave a nasty white residue on the dishes and the inside of the machine. What happens istead is that water flows through the valve, into the resins (which are separated from the salt reservoir by means of a solenoid valve) and finally into the machine. Now, you may wonder, what is salt used for then? Well, these resins can't accumulate calcium ions forever and will eventually get full. Salt is then used every X liters of water filled (which the electronics can detect by means of that little spinny thing - a flowmeter - mounted on the heat exchanger or by means of software guesses based on how long the fill valve has remained open) to regenerate the resins. In this process, called "regeneration", water flows from the valve, through the salt container, thorugh the separating valve, into the resins and finally is immediately drained out by the drain pump. A series of water fills where the pump still remains active is then used to rinse out any salt residue from the resins. Hope this comment was useful to someone. Cheers
Yeah i totally get it... The brown stuff and salt are there because they just need to be... Ok. Ok i'll try interpret this for everybody. Salt gets rid off limescale? Brown resin gets rid of salt?
In the stores back int he 1970's they often had dishwasher display models with clear fronts that would be running. It was an effective way to catch the attention of shoppers.
It has been many decades since I've seen it, but I once saw a manufacturer make their dishwasher frame clear and run it in the store so you could watch its action as a marketing tool. Never seen that since.
11:58 A little tip from someone who works in the hospitality industry. Place cutlery in cutlery baskets with the handles facing upwards. This means you don't have to touch the eating part to take the cutlery out, which means you get fewer germs on the cutlery. Apart from that: Great video - keep it up!
your suggestion is against dishwasher instructions, but tbh I had the same thoughts and tried to wash as you said, and it resulted that some stuff remained dirty in Eco mode, which I'm always using (safes a lot of water and electricity which is expensive in Poland)
Finally the best video for visually understanding the workings of a dishwasher is here... Many have put cameras inside for demonstration but a fully transparent dishwasher is something on a totally different level. Awesome job 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
What I like most about dishwashers is that they are more efficient than washing by hand, apart from the fact that you save a lot of water. One of the best inventions.
That bucket collecting the water coming out of the dishwasher didn't fill up. It was surprising to see such a small amount of water being used for cleaning dishes.
@@Rhaspun In fact, there are also dishwashers that are even better at saving water, since they have special filters that clean the water and reuse it. Right there it guarantees great water savings.
@@Eze91tif i remember correctly, some dishwashers save the last rinse water on the side since its practically clean water. And uses it as pre wash in the next cycle.
Thank you for this video. I used to be a customer service for Bosch dishwasher before but this is the first time I ever see the inside when this is in action.❤
Lovely video. Glad you added shoes, combs and miscellaneous items in the end to demonstrate how effective the dishwasher is at cleaning random household items. More people need to know this. Also people need to run cycles accordingly and not run steam/heat cycles with delicate items.
Applause for an outstanding job! I’ve always wanted to see this process!! Truly, this is great info. Bravo from Sacramento for going above-and-beyond!!
Must say, running dishes in the washer, then opening it to let the steam wash over my face as a child. Smelling that clean chemial smell while feeling my pores open. Theres a reason I was eager to be the one to fill and run it as a kid. Just the scent of dish detergent triggers something in my brain. Such nostalgia
Nerd curiosity… I loved! But the comparison was not totally fair because ‘no one’ leaves the tap open during manual dishwashing but only to remove the soap foam, and with hot water only during winter.
Clearly you are not me, and I’m sure I am not alone. This dishwasher seems very small compared to the standard 24” x 24” in North America. Is this a standard size in the country where the video was made?
I remember going into a furniture and home appliance store with my mom one day. They had a see-through dishwasher on display and I was fascinated. Thanks for doing this so I can see it all again!
Stunned by the thoroughness of your experiment. It answered every question I had, including whether the dishwasher uses more water than handwashing. Thanks - and you have a new subscriber!
You don't need to "rinse off the large impurities". If they will go down the plughole in your sink then your dishwasher will deal with them just fine. Pre-rising your plates and dishes before you put them in the dishwasher is totally unnecessary and wastes water. The dishwasher is very efficient with water compared to washing by hand, so just tip/scape your leftovers into the bin and put your dishes in the dishwasher.
Large chunks of food (ie meat or fat) will take a long time to dissolve down the dishwasher drain and cause a stinky smell. For this reason there is an important step not many of us know: clean your dishwasher! Take the bottom tray out and unscrew the screen in the floor of the DW. I’ve found food and labels (ie stickers from the bottom of mugs or jar labels) inside clogging the holes making the machine less effective bc dirty water won’t fully drain.
Years ago, dishwashers were pressure washers they clean the dirtiest dishes in a very short period of time because they had very large pumps and used enough water required by these pumps. Now the dishwashers are energy savers, so they use small pumps that usually either clean the top rack or the bottom rack but not both racks together that’s why it takes double and triple the time it took the old vintage units. Most dishwashers don’t use the electrolytes to soften the water just some European brands.
You guys are amazing and your english is perfect. I have often wondered about the internal workings of a dishwasher and how it actually cleans. I had a rough idea but you always wonder when you close the door and not being able to see it function you naturally wonder. Well I wonder no more thanks to your channel. Thankyou very much. Cheers Chris
Very interesting to see how it actually works. I have double sinks and use the plugs, wash in one and rinse with the other, dry in rack and total of 20L for 30min (excluding pot soak time with denture tablet, wait until not blue, then 5 minutes for pots).
@@k-leb4671 Depends on the dishwasher, you're probably right if it's a high quality/not cheap type which can be way out of budget for some. I'd love to have one like a bench top sort as I'm in a rental.
where I live, we handwash and it saves alot of water. we do not keep the tap running while sponging. there is a way of doing it to minimise water wastage. And yes, wear gloves to protect your hands from the harsh chemicals. If you have very little dishes to wash, its more hygienic to wash them up by hand manually instead of keeping dirty dishes in the dishwasher till its full load. And it does not take a long time even to wash a full load by hand. Very therapeutic in fact for some people and satisfying 😊
This is an amazing video! I really love seeing how they work and mechanism inside. I should try your tip. Hope you continue making new content. I found this video randomly on my recommendation. Hopefully, others are also getting them!
I loved this! I'm super fascinated by dishwashers. Dishwasher tablets contain enzymes which require time to work that's why the cycles are so long Eww no shoes!
Very interesting! I appreciate the work you went to for this video. Our dishwasher won’t fill with water. This was a big help to see where the water is supposed to come out. There is about a half inch of water settle in that area. Funny thing is is that the machine started sending out the emergency code after a complete wash..I’m not sure if it is possible for the pipes that lead to the dishwasher are frozen. House water is running but due to the temperature dropping into the teens this week, I’m wondering if the dishwasher pipes, as well as the water line to the fridge water dispenser is frozen. I’ve never seen this happen. Not sure whether to call for help or pray the pipes don’t burst.😢
Try draining that water and then reset your machine by turning off the power at the breaker. Wait for 5 minutes and then turn it back on. Go to dishwasher, choose a wash cycle and hit start... See if that works for you. Some washers will not start unless the water is drained first. Check and make sure your float isn't stuck as well since that's what triggers the switch for your drain pump to kick on.
First dishwashers. I use big plates in the wider spaces, in my mind the water has a better chance to get in there. Avoid the big plates being crammed together.
Would be really cool if dishwashers had a "knock" function like some expensive fridges so you can just look inside when you want to. Would be satisfying.
Wonderful video. By the way, you can use much less water hand-washing if you use a couple of tubs of water. Scrape the remaining food off, washing the first tub, rinse in the second. If you do that, hand-washing wins. I do like my dishwasher though.
For a small channel, you spent so much time and effort to make this interesting and original content. Thank you. I wish you a lot more success and views on CZcams, as you surely deserve it.
No jokes if they built a see through dishwasher I would be tempted to buy it. I think you might have started a trend as it looks so futuristic. Plus you can see how well your tableware is doing and it could be easier to diagnose issues. But i draw the line at shoes and hairbrushes in there lol 😅 x
do not use tablets, use powder. when you use dishwashing tablets and put it in the compartment and close the lid, you don't get any detergent when the machine does the pre-wash, just put the tablet in the dishwasher and you only get detergent when the machine does the pre-wash and the detergent is flushed out before the main wash starts. most machines have a lid with two compartments, one for the pre-wash and one for the main dish, both must be filled with powder according to the recommendation, if you don't have a compartment for the pre-dish, you pour a little on the dishwasher's door instead
This is indeed the video we've all been waiting for, whether we admit to it publicly, to ourselves only, or not at all. Thank you for going the extra mile by making the whole magical process as clear to see as possible too. Here comes the "but"... Why no mention of the other half of the way a dishwasher cleans the dishes? ENZYMES! Some of the quieter moments you fastidiously catalogue will have been for the enzymes to take effect, not just to drip dry the plates, for instance.
actually you can save water a lot by changing the way you wash the dish. i only turn the water two times, first when to scrap the plate and spoon, and second when to rinse the dish. people waste a lot of water because they still turn the water on when washing the dish.
Nicely done and interesting to see something like that only 1 tip: put products with tomato sauce and oil in the sink before rinsing, as this will clog the dishwasher
Some people just stick a camera in the dish washer to see how it works, you sir went above and beyond.
😂
i was thinking the same 😅
lol he literally made it transparent that itself needs understanding of the function of the device
yeahh.. he deserved a million subscribers
Huge project, just to satisfy our curiosité... Thank you, Nice job 👍👍
That brown 'gunk' that you referenced in the video are resin beads. They are used to attract the dissolved magnesium and calcium in the water via ion exchange. The water will come out the other end as soft water. It's non-toxic and from what I'm told, if you swallow the stuff it will act as an antacid. The salt is used to regenerate the resin by forcing the resin to release the captured hard water deposits. The injection of salt into the resin chamber must be occurring at some stage in the cleaning cycle and we haven't seen it yet. It must be part of the commands issued by the electronic board at some stage during the wash/rinse cycle. Home water softeners work on the same principle but the salt flushing is usually set to occur very late at night when nobody would be using the water.
You are right. The so called regeneration of the ion exchanger ("brown gunk") happens during the drying stage, but not in every wash cycle of the dishwasher (more like every 2nd, every 3rd and so on). How often the regeneration takes place depends on the hardness of the water, and with most dishwashers is set _manually_ via a menu setting. This is why it's important to have this setting where it needs to be at for the given hardness of the tap water. Many people never touch it, have hard water and then wonder why they have stains.
By the way, the dishes themselves never come in contact with the salt or it's brine at any time. It is purely for regeneration of the ion exchanger. The ion exchanger is where the softening magic happens and it works fine without salt until it is saturated and needs regeneration.
I can confirm because one of our filters broke and looked just like that. Thankfully it was contained and did not flow all of our house pipes. 😧 Phew!😅
nope, its dishwasher caviar. Thats how dishwashers breeding!
As a chemist I can say you are correct
Very strange, these UK machines are a bit odd. The way we have it in the US with just a motor heater and food chopper works perfectly, although salt would definitely help in harder water conditions. Excellent information!
This is some quality content... great detail, no clickbait -- just pure infotainment. thank you.
This man was fully dedicated (which is an understatement considering the work he put into this video) to educating all of us. Thank you sir 🫡
The wash starts at 8:40. thank you so much I wanted to know this for years this is very informative and interesting!
😊
pro tip, you can ad extension on chrome and it will show you the highlight of many videos(incuding this one)
Hi. Thanks for the well edited, dynamic video. I thoroughly enjoyed it
The brown stuff in the salt container is called "ionic echange resin". Essentially a dishwasher (or any water softener that uses salt) does not soften the water directly by means of salt, but rather by a ionic exchange process. In short, limescale (which is responsible for white marks on dishes) is calcium carbonate. The water softener job is to absorb calcium from the water molecules and release in its place another molecule, which in the case of a salt based softener is, you guessed it, sodium (I remember to the reader of the comment that salt is sodium chloride).
In short, water does NOT flow from the valve, through the salt container, into the wash tub. This would cause water to be salty and create rust spots on cutley, metal and leave a nasty white residue on the dishes and the inside of the machine. What happens istead is that water flows through the valve, into the resins (which are separated from the salt reservoir by means of a solenoid valve) and finally into the machine.
Now, you may wonder, what is salt used for then? Well, these resins can't accumulate calcium ions forever and will eventually get full. Salt is then used every X liters of water filled (which the electronics can detect by means of that little spinny thing - a flowmeter - mounted on the heat exchanger or by means of software guesses based on how long the fill valve has remained open) to regenerate the resins. In this process, called "regeneration", water flows from the valve, through the salt container, thorugh the separating valve, into the resins and finally is immediately drained out by the drain pump. A series of water fills where the pump still remains active is then used to rinse out any salt residue from the resins.
Hope this comment was useful to someone. Cheers
Great explanation
thanks for the explanation
👏👏👏👌👌
Yeah i totally get it...
The brown stuff and salt are there because they just need to be... Ok.
Ok i'll try interpret this for everybody. Salt gets rid off limescale? Brown resin gets rid of salt?
@@DlcEnergy Brown resin removes limescale from water, salt removes limescale from resins
In the stores back int he 1970's they often had dishwasher display models with clear fronts that would be running. It was an effective way to catch the attention of shoppers.
🤩
I saw one just a few years ago!
It has been many decades since I've seen it, but I once saw a manufacturer make their dishwasher frame clear and run it in the store so you could watch its action as a marketing tool. Never seen that since.
I remember that. I think these were at stores like Sears and Montgomery Wards. Very cool and as a kid I was fascinated.
I saw one in Japan only a few years ago. It was a small tabletop one, though.
They should ONLY make this kind i think
@@chuck1804 such products gonna be too loud, as you cannot make sound-absorbing layers transparent
11:58 A little tip from someone who works in the hospitality industry.
Place cutlery in cutlery baskets with the handles facing upwards.
This means you don't have to touch the eating part to take the cutlery out, which means you get fewer germs on the cutlery.
Apart from that: Great video - keep it up!
your suggestion is against dishwasher instructions, but tbh I had the same thoughts and tried to wash as you said, and it resulted that some stuff remained dirty in Eco mode, which I'm always using (safes a lot of water and electricity which is expensive in Poland)
Oh no, I mustn't consume all those 4 germs!
Finally the best video for visually understanding the workings of a dishwasher is here... Many have put cameras inside for demonstration but a fully transparent dishwasher is something on a totally different level.
Awesome job 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
What I like most about dishwashers is that they are more efficient than washing by hand, apart from the fact that you save a lot of water. One of the best inventions.
Hand washing is more efficient
If you use a scrub pad
@@simcore999bernard6 Compared to a dishwasher? No.
Compared to hand washing without a scrub pad, yes.
That bucket collecting the water coming out of the dishwasher didn't fill up. It was surprising to see such a small amount of water being used for cleaning dishes.
@@Rhaspun In fact, there are also dishwashers that are even better at saving water, since they have special filters that clean the water and reuse it. Right there it guarantees great water savings.
@@Eze91tif i remember correctly, some dishwashers save the last rinse water on the side since its practically clean water. And uses it as pre wash in the next cycle.
Thank you for this video. I used to be a customer service for Bosch dishwasher before but this is the first time I ever see the inside when this is in action.❤
An incredible engineering/reverse engineering project and an excellent presentation.
No one searched for this 😂
I did 😱
No one searched for but everyone need this 😅
I did
Me did. Saw an animated tik tok of it and was like “lemme see a live version”
I did
Thank you, CZcams algorithm, for suggesting this video to me.
Lovely video. Glad you added shoes, combs and miscellaneous items in the end to demonstrate how effective the dishwasher is at cleaning random household items. More people need to know this. Also people need to run cycles accordingly and not run steam/heat cycles with delicate items.
I love the commitment you've put into this video. Please carry on your good work
Applause for an outstanding job! I’ve always wanted to see this process!! Truly, this is great info. Bravo from Sacramento for going above-and-beyond!!
It took forever but finally someone made the video. You even made comparison vs manual. Thanks for the video.
Well done 👍 I appreciate the effort and time you spent on this project, educating all of us on how this machine works. Very interesting.
Must say, running dishes in the washer, then opening it to let the steam wash over my face as a child. Smelling that clean chemial smell while feeling my pores open. Theres a reason I was eager to be the one to fill and run it as a kid. Just the scent of dish detergent triggers something in my brain. Such nostalgia
Explanatory videos are always welcome.
Thank you!
Nerd curiosity… I loved!
But the comparison was not totally fair because ‘no one’ leaves the tap open during manual dishwashing but only to remove the soap foam, and with hot water only during winter.
Clearly you are not me, and I’m sure I am not alone. This dishwasher seems very small compared to the standard 24” x 24” in North America. Is this a standard size in the country where the video was made?
@@michaelratcliffe7559 it looks like a 6 place model rather then the usual 12 place
I remember going into a furniture and home appliance store with my mom one day. They had a see-through dishwasher on display and I was fascinated. Thanks for doing this so I can see it all again!
Stunned by the thoroughness of your experiment. It answered every question I had, including whether the dishwasher uses more water than handwashing. Thanks - and you have a new subscriber!
This video is so well made. Thank you! ❤
I was skeptical and rarely used it.
Now i am convinced and shall use it regularly..thanks for the video .
Wow, appreciate you doing so much to explain us everything in detail.
You don't need to "rinse off the large impurities". If they will go down the plughole in your sink then your dishwasher will deal with them just fine. Pre-rising your plates and dishes before you put them in the dishwasher is totally unnecessary and wastes water. The dishwasher is very efficient with water compared to washing by hand, so just tip/scape your leftovers into the bin and put your dishes in the dishwasher.
I think it is still good to at least brush off the bigger parts of food remain. I believe this will prolong the lifetime of the machine.
Large chunks of food (ie meat or fat) will take a long time to dissolve down the dishwasher drain and cause a stinky smell. For this reason there is an important step not many of us know: clean your dishwasher! Take the bottom tray out and unscrew the screen in the floor of the DW. I’ve found food and labels (ie stickers from the bottom of mugs or jar labels) inside clogging the holes making the machine less effective bc dirty water won’t fully drain.
Incredible work to show what is not possible to see in action when we use the machine.
Great video production and very informative. Thanks for the good work 😊
Well done. I appreciate the effort you put onto this experiment.
Thank you, really appreciate the effort the team put into this experiment and I enjoyed watching it very much. 👍👍
Very well detailed and top notch quality production. Thank you so much for your efforts
Awesome video! I love everything about dishwashers! Greetings from Brazil ❤🇧🇷
WOW WOW and WOW all the work you lads did to produce that video WOW!!!!👍👍 That was ONE very expensive dish washing session!
Years ago, dishwashers were pressure washers they clean the dirtiest dishes in a very short period of time because they had very large pumps and used enough water required by these pumps.
Now the dishwashers are energy savers, so they use small pumps that usually either clean the top rack or the bottom rack but not both racks together that’s why it takes double and triple the time it took the old vintage units.
Most dishwashers don’t use the electrolytes to soften the water just some European brands.
most if not all European machines have water-softening capabilities
They don’t make em like they used to
They clean just as well. Just use a ton less energy and water. What you lose out on is time. @@ayeitzdj
*All European brands
Never seen a European dishwasher without a salt reservoir, even the most cheap dishwashers have them here.
This video is so underrated, this guy went above and beyond
You guys are amazing and your english is perfect.
I have often wondered about the internal workings of a dishwasher and how it actually cleans.
I had a rough idea but you always wonder when you close the door and not being able to see it function you naturally wonder.
Well I wonder no more thanks to your channel. Thankyou very much.
Cheers Chris
Robot vaccum, dishwasher, and clotheswasher. Cant live without these 3
I always wanted to know how it works and looks from inside. Finally watched it today. Thanks for the upload.
Very interesting to see how it actually works.
I have double sinks and use the plugs, wash in one and rinse with the other, dry in rack and total of 20L for 30min (excluding pot soak time with denture tablet, wait until not blue, then 5 minutes for pots).
20 litres is still more than a good dishwasher will use.
@@k-leb4671 Depends on the dishwasher, you're probably right if it's a high quality/not cheap type which can be way out of budget for some. I'd love to have one like a bench top sort as I'm in a rental.
You convinced me to buy a dishwasher😅
Great Video. Informative and Entertaining.
where I live, we handwash and it saves alot of water. we do not keep the tap running while sponging. there is a way of doing it to minimise water wastage. And yes, wear gloves to protect your hands from the harsh chemicals. If you have very little dishes to wash, its more hygienic to wash them up by hand manually instead of keeping dirty dishes in the dishwasher till its full load. And it does not take a long time even to wash a full load by hand. Very therapeutic in fact for some people and satisfying 😊
You all deserve more visibility on this platform.
感谢你非常用心的制作视频,还特别改装并拆解了一台洗碗机,让大家了解了洗碗的工作流程。
This is an amazing video! I really love seeing how they work and mechanism inside. I should try your tip.
Hope you continue making new content. I found this video randomly on my recommendation. Hopefully, others are also getting them!
Amount of work you done for this video is awesome. All the best
I loved this! I'm super fascinated by dishwashers.
Dishwasher tablets contain enzymes which require time to work that's why the cycles are so long
Eww no shoes!
Something I thought I’d never want to know 😄very interesting! Thank you! ☺️
Excellent, dedication towards ur work is very inspiring ❤️
Very interesting! I appreciate the work you went to for this video. Our dishwasher won’t fill with water. This was a big help to see where the water is supposed to come out. There is about a half inch of water settle in that area. Funny thing is is that the machine started sending out the emergency code after a complete wash..I’m not sure if it is possible for the pipes that lead to the dishwasher are frozen. House water is running but due to the temperature dropping into the teens this week, I’m wondering if the dishwasher pipes, as well as the water line to the fridge water dispenser is frozen. I’ve never seen this happen. Not sure whether to call for help or pray the pipes don’t burst.😢
Try draining that water and then reset your machine by turning off the power at the breaker. Wait for 5 minutes and then turn it back on. Go to dishwasher, choose a wash cycle and hit start... See if that works for you. Some washers will not start unless the water is drained first. Check and make sure your float isn't stuck as well since that's what triggers the switch for your drain pump to kick on.
I always wanted to see this. Thanks!
The way you stacked wet dishes on top of each other to “dry” them made me want to fry my eyes in olive oil
Adorable, yet fascinating video!
if you go on with such of these ideas, u will be successful. i wish u the best. greetings from Germany
You are the best! Respect !!!
I've always wanted to see this! Thanks!
This video deserves millions views.
Thanks Bro for such a great innovation and great effort to show all the people's how actually dishwasher works from inside.
Hats off ❤❤❤❤❤❤😊😊😊😊😊😊
Bloody excellent video. Well done
First dishwashers. I use big plates in the wider spaces, in my mind the water has a better chance to get in there. Avoid the big plates being crammed together.
This channel is going to explode, if you keep making quality videos like this one. Subscribed!
Hope you’re gonna do a video like this again, this was so original and informative
this very useful video explain everything about that dishwasher
OMG lot of hard work 👍👍👍
Would be really cool if dishwashers had a "knock" function like some expensive fridges so you can just look inside when you want to. Would be satisfying.
Awesome video which was very interesting. Thank you!
Wonderful video. By the way, you can use much less water hand-washing if you use a couple of tubs of water. Scrape the remaining food off, washing the first tub, rinse in the second. If you do that, hand-washing wins. I do like my dishwasher though.
The brown stuff is ion exchange resin that softens the water, the salt recharges the resin
For a small channel, you spent so much time and effort to make this interesting and original content. Thank you.
I wish you a lot more success and views on CZcams, as you surely deserve it.
He is from Ukraine and his main channel is not small. This is just english translation video
The way he puts Z in words with T. Adorable, but also a challenge for non native speakers.
Excellent video. Super interesting.
No jokes if they built a see through dishwasher I would be tempted to buy it. I think you might have started a trend as it looks so futuristic. Plus you can see how well your tableware is doing and it could be easier to diagnose issues. But i draw the line at shoes and hairbrushes in there lol 😅 x
This is a first class video. Very educational
This is a very cool video, I have always been interested about what goes on in my dishwasher :)
do not use tablets, use powder. when you use dishwashing tablets and put it in the compartment and close the lid, you don't get any detergent when the machine does the pre-wash, just put the tablet in the dishwasher and you only get detergent when the machine does the pre-wash and the detergent is flushed out before the main wash starts. most machines have a lid with two compartments, one for the pre-wash and one for the main dish, both must be filled with powder according to the recommendation, if you don't have a compartment for the pre-dish, you pour a little on the dishwasher's door instead
Wow, really impressive work for your first video. Keep it up! I'm subscribed
Very hardworking man. Thanks for your hardwork. Liked and subbed
Excellent informative video after a long time..
Hats off to your efforts!!!
Amazing start for a new channel! Subscribed! I wish you success and I'm waiting for your next video!
That was amazing! Thanks for this video!
Nice content. Thank you. Very informative.
Amazing project!
Fantastic job, congrats!
IMPORTANT! Be mindful of the heat and washing non dishes! You may melt your crocs or other soft plastics!!
Great effort, thanks.
just for this informational video alone, I subbed to you. really quality video, I am shocked that you only have 4,2k subs
I always had a hunch that hand-washing plates & cutlery made for a more cleaner end result.
This video proved it.
Очень интересно, ребят! Такой объем работы, да ещё такого качества! И сколько людей теперь будет спать спокойнее с этими знаниями 😁
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Very good and informative..glad found your video
I have a Logik LDW2PB20N benchtop dishwasher. It has a glass front that shows you everything without having to rebuild one.
Can't imagine this is the only video in your channel
Hope to see more from your channel in the future
This is indeed the video we've all been waiting for, whether we admit to it publicly, to ourselves only, or not at all.
Thank you for going the extra mile by making the whole magical process as clear to see as possible too.
Here comes the "but"...
Why no mention of the other half of the way a dishwasher cleans the dishes?
ENZYMES!
Some of the quieter moments you fastidiously catalogue will have been for the enzymes to take effect, not just to drip dry the plates, for instance.
actually you can save water a lot by changing the way you wash the dish. i only turn the water two times, first when to scrap the plate and spoon, and second when to rinse the dish. people waste a lot of water because they still turn the water on when washing the dish.
These all manufacturers must create a glass windows large enough to see how dishes are being washed just like front loading washing machine
Nicely done and interesting to see something like that
only 1 tip: put products with tomato sauce and oil in the sink before rinsing, as this will clog the dishwasher
Very nice and with lot of passion ❤😮🎉🎉😊