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Dishwasher Went Goofy

PAUL161

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Last night after dinner the wife turned on the dishwasher and all went well, for about 5 minutes and then it started to drain and wouldn't stop the cycle! It kept turning off and on by itself and wouldn't stop. This is a 5 year old Kitchen-aid, all I could think of was over a 1000 bucks for this thing and now I've got to get it fixed, OR replace! $$$! Since it didn't complete the first cycle, detergent was scattered in it, so the wife started cleaning it inside while I'm looking for parts and/or someone to repair it, my wife said, Look At This! She found a cashew nut caught under the floating drain senser. I had it unplugged so I plugged it back in and told her to see if it would work, knowing that it isn't my luck to get off so easily! Well, it started and worked perfectly through a normal cycle! Talk about getting off cheap! Just made my day! :encouragement: PJ
 
I like cashews.
 
Building our house 30+ years ago we were disusing the kitchen layout and the dishwasher location came up. I said do we need one as we are raising 2 dishwashers. It was some minutes before my wife and the guy helping build the house stopped laughing long enough to tell me we had to have a dishwasher.

They proved to be correct in their assessment.

On our second machine. We have a Bosch now.

David
 
If you spread out the births of your dishwashers you will find that as one move away another one is there to take the last one's place.
 
Building our house 30+ years ago we were disusing the kitchen layout and the dishwasher location came up. I said do we need one as we are raising 2 dishwashers. It was some minutes before my wife and the guy helping build the house stopped laughing long enough to tell me we had to have a dishwasher.

They proved to be correct in their assessment.

On our second machine. We have a Bosch now.

David

Bosch is what we have too - been running like a champ for 18 years with only need to occasionally clean the filter.
 
Well thank goodness it wasn't the washers fault and funny thing is, the wife rinses the dishes before putting them in. Found out 1 nut can mess up the works! That applies to a lot of things! LOL!
 
mehheh. One lousy cashew nut...

that machine is a whimp, Paul!

We had a neighbor a few decades ago who would: A) never eat leftovers, B) never pre-rinse dishes and C) stub out his apres dinner cigarette butts in his uneaten food. Their dishwasher (no remembering the brand) faithfully functioned on the diet for a couple years. I was amazed at his slovenly habits, but hey, "life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness", Right? When the poor machine finally refused to drain, we opened it up. Pump was FULL of cellulose fibers. Cleared that out and it worked fine the rest of the time they lived there.

We got a GE dishwasher second hand in 2000, it worked for about a decade. It now acts as a storage cupboard for mainly excess kitchen utensils and containers. With just me 'n Mits, dishes are no chore. I hand wash as we finish prep and after meals. Quick, easy and CHEAP.

I spend th' schekels for a replacement on CAB instead! :smirk:
 
We got a Bosch almost exactly 18 years ago too. Also a Bosch stackable washer and dryer but only about 10 years ago. All fine machines.
 

Sadly, as the author of the article found, industry shuffling and badge engineering has made it difficult to know just what you're getting behind the nameplate. These days you have to do some research or take what you get.

About 15 years back we swapped out our house's builder installed appliances. They were all low to mid priced Whirlpool and with cheesy build quality but adequate performance and had been reliable. The dishwasher was horribly loud but at least it hadn't broken.

The replacements were a mixed bag.

Bosch dishwasher. Made somewhere in Europe, forget where. Bought it because of their reputation for quiet. Not disappointed. We've been able to peacefully watch TV in the adjacent family room ever since. It did break about a year ago. Just the on/off button. Not even the electrical switch behind the button, just the plastic cap. Easy, cheap fix.

GE microwave/convection/vent hood. Good unit, very happy with operation. Two annoyances, though. Plastic louvered fascia grill held on by teeny, tiny plastic tabs. Broke twice. Easy to replace but there's little excuse. Only the smallest amount of extra material in two spots of the mold would have prevented the problem entirely. And the door handle was only anchored by one screw at the top. The unit is made to be mounted at eye level, so you always grab that handle at the bottom. Thus it flexes ever so slightly every time you open the door. Eventually fatigued and failed. Again, relatively simple fix, but it should have never happened in the first place. All they had to do was invert the design and anchor it at the bottom (or better yet, both).

Bosch oven. Made in Italy. Unit functioned well. Never any complaints about cooking performance. My only complaints were about the digital display. Resetting the clock was annoyingly non-intuitive (even for someone who never had problems setting VCR clocks). And the stupid thing wasn't bright enough to see in the daytime.

Bosch cooktop. Made in USA. Imagine that. Turns out Bosch had gotten into the American cooker business by buying a US company. (Thermador IIRC, but I cant remember for sure. I did see the exact same unit with the American company's nameplate back then when we were shopping.) What a piece of JUNK! First off, right out of the box it didn't work. Great, a unit shipped from the factory with non-functioning igniters. Idiots. The local factory service guy was good, though. I had to bring it in to him but at least he got it working straight away. The precision of assembly was awful. The valves were each pointing in a different direction and required completely different torque to operate. The ceramic coating wasn't fired correctly or something and spots just flaked off. I was soooooo glad to get that piece of @#$%^ out of my life when we did the remodel a few months ago. And did I mention that the silicone feet on the burner grates had to be replaced constantly?

At the remodel a few months ago we replaced the microwave/convection/vent with a Kitchenaid. I probably would have gone with another GE since I knew its quirks and was at least happy with its performance. But our new cooktop has higher output burners, the KA was specified for higher vent flow and I wanted as much airflow as I could get. Time will tell but early indicators aren't hopeful. Out of the box it was obvious the KA was sourced from some unknown offshore factory. The build quality is very poor and what little inadequate instructions were included were in pathetically bad Engrish. The whole thing reeks of cheesy import trash. I made sure to buy and store away extra backsplash tiles. If/when the thing craps out I'll just replace it, which would mean we'd have to re-do big sections of backsplash.
 
The wifes range and ovens are Electrolux and she loves them. The oven has roller racks and can be moved smoothly with very light pressure, a 25 pound turkey just glides on them. Their made very well. Couldn't buy a Electrolux dish washer at the time. PJ
 
Has anyone tried Fisher and Paykel appliances? A friends has one of their dishwashers that is a drawer type. Two drawers that pull out, one for smaller loads, or you can use the other for larger loads or both.
 
On a side note, F&P acquired a local manufacturer here in SoCal.

They shuttered the plants, laid everybody off and shipped all production and product development to Asia.
 
When we had the cabinets custom made for the kitchen, the wife had them make a special cabinet for the dish washer so it sets 15" above the floor. She can load it without bending down to the floor, everyone who has seen it said it's a wonderful idea. Looks nice also. Never seen one where it sets on a pedestal like some washing machines have, be easy in the manufacturing process. :rolleyes2: PJ
 
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