excellent , progress is being made :cool: The wife would be much happier when this is all finished , you won't have to worry about all the clothes on the floor to trip over. :eek:
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excellent , progress is being made :cool: The wife would be much happier when this is all finished , you won't have to worry about all the clothes on the floor to trip over. :eek:
Holy Toledo Tony .... That's a bucket load of bearers & joists you've got there :eek: ....
For the final finish .... Would you like samples of porcelain tiles with glass splashbacks :D
https://www.aulro.com/afvb/
https://www.aulro.com/afvb/
That Front Loader .... Try using the "Quick wash" setting on cold water ... Use 1/2 the washing powder recommended
You might notice that the difference between the Longest cycle & the shortest cycle is ... longer extended rinsing time
For greasy clothes ... Add 3/4 of the soap recommended with a water softening agent ... Still on the cold / Quick wash setting
You can load em up max, with shirts / jocks & socks .... But ...
Don't load em up "maximum full" with the heavy articles such as jeans & towels
The machine should have it rapped up in 35 minutes
Mike
:)
That's a nice laundry in the pic:) Cant see the second pic:confused:
My wife likes the front loader so it's just me;) I just cant come to terms with it shaking the house so much my computer screens even wobble and the office is four rooms away:eek:
Hopefully it will improve with all that timber under the new floor. We are going to top it, put trays in the drains, add a waterproof membrane and then fix out. All the old cabinets are going back in with a new kick in place.
Should last for years I hope.
Actually ... Both of those Laundries in the pics are useless / unworkable ... The second one is only a "sample cut style" pic
They are not my design /// pics are nipped off the net /// they just look "pretty" ... I only put them up as most laundry areas are neglected in design and practicability /// hoping to inspire you for a selection of fashionable materials & layout
Mike
;)
be careful putting a frontloader on a plinth. a front loader has a very heavy counterweight in the bottom to compensate for out of balance spinning and if the supports on the plinth arent strong enough to support the weight it will come crashing down. My frontloader has out of balance sensors which stop the machine, reverse it slowly and allow clothes to redistribute themselves then start up spin cycle again. Like anything else ,pay the dollars, get the goods. Ours is a top level ssamsung, had it over 5yrs used nearly every day and has only had a belt replaced and a small water leak repaired. A number of our friends have bought the same machine and theyre still our friends.....