Hello,
In the current kitchen trash chute thread, I came across the following quote:
Regarding laundry chutes, how do you handle hygiene? Are the pipes always made of antibacterial metal, or how do you clean them?
Nothing typically spills outside, but it’s also not the case that they are completely clean or free of dirt inside.
Thank you very much for your suggestions.
In the current kitchen trash chute thread, I came across the following quote:
Mycraft schrieb:
You always have to clean these from time to time, since something will occasionally spill or drip inside.
Wouldn’t a chute around the corner be more effective?
Regarding laundry chutes, how do you handle hygiene? Are the pipes always made of antibacterial metal, or how do you clean them?
Nothing typically spills outside, but it’s also not the case that they are completely clean or free of dirt inside.
Thank you very much for your suggestions.
ludwig88sta schrieb:
Well, that could actually be cleaned quite easily if needed. But in a two-story house with a basement, it gets more difficult to clean the exhaust duct from the bathroom on the first floor to the utility room in the basement.
A bit off-topic: for mechanical ventilation with heat recovery, there are specialized cleaning companies that inspect and clean the ductwork every few years, right?My heirs can take care of that. I don’t care about the exhaust air. There is a G4 and F7 filter before the supply air.fragg schrieb:
I don’t really care about the exhaust air. There is a G4 and F7 filter before the supply air.Strange – I would rather expect an F7 filter for the supply air and a G4 filter for the exhaust air.Bookstar schrieb:
A tumble dryer is rubbish; clothes get damaged and shrink. Nowadays, almost nothing should go in the dryer. But okay...I think we have a high-end dryer. Of course, it always pulls out some fibers, but by the time that noticeably affects the garments, they are already discarded anyway. Otherwise, nothing shrinks or gets damaged.
F
Fummelbrett!31 Jan 2020 11:51Our dryer is still quite new, only one year old – but it takes just 2 hours for a cupboard-dry program, and so far no laundry has been damaged, shrunk, or anything else. Only black cotton items, especially jeans, lose some color. The energy meter showed that it consumes about half a kilowatt-hour of electricity per load – which I find completely reasonable.
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