US20080256722A1 - Method for rinsing fabric in a washer and washer adapted to carry out this method - Google Patents

Method for rinsing fabric in a washer and washer adapted to carry out this method Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US20080256722A1
US20080256722A1 US12/053,667 US5366708A US2008256722A1 US 20080256722 A1 US20080256722 A1 US 20080256722A1 US 5366708 A US5366708 A US 5366708A US 2008256722 A1 US2008256722 A1 US 2008256722A1
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
water
fabric
rinsing
wash chamber
speed
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Abandoned
Application number
US12/053,667
Inventor
Stefanie Oberkirsch
Sarah Ihne
Raveendran Vaidhyanathan
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Whirlpool Corp
Original Assignee
Whirlpool Corp
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Whirlpool Corp filed Critical Whirlpool Corp
Assigned to WHIRLPOOL CORPORATION reassignment WHIRLPOOL CORPORATION ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: IHNE, SARAH, OBERKIRSCH, STEFANIE, VAIDHYANATHAN, RAVEENDRAN
Publication of US20080256722A1 publication Critical patent/US20080256722A1/en
Abandoned legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D06TREATMENT OF TEXTILES OR THE LIKE; LAUNDERING; FLEXIBLE MATERIALS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • D06FLAUNDERING, DRYING, IRONING, PRESSING OR FOLDING TEXTILE ARTICLES
    • D06F37/00Details specific to washing machines covered by groups D06F21/00 - D06F25/00
    • D06F37/02Rotary receptacles, e.g. drums
    • D06F37/04Rotary receptacles, e.g. drums adapted for rotation or oscillation about a horizontal or inclined axis
    • D06F37/08Partitions
    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D06TREATMENT OF TEXTILES OR THE LIKE; LAUNDERING; FLEXIBLE MATERIALS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • D06FLAUNDERING, DRYING, IRONING, PRESSING OR FOLDING TEXTILE ARTICLES
    • D06F35/00Washing machines, apparatus, or methods not otherwise provided for
    • D06F35/005Methods for washing, rinsing or spin-drying
    • D06F35/006Methods for washing, rinsing or spin-drying for washing or rinsing only
    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D06TREATMENT OF TEXTILES OR THE LIKE; LAUNDERING; FLEXIBLE MATERIALS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • D06FLAUNDERING, DRYING, IRONING, PRESSING OR FOLDING TEXTILE ARTICLES
    • D06F37/00Details specific to washing machines covered by groups D06F21/00 - D06F25/00
    • D06F37/02Rotary receptacles, e.g. drums
    • D06F37/12Rotary receptacles, e.g. drums adapted for rotation or oscillation about a vertical axis
    • D06F37/16Partitions
    • DTEXTILES; PAPER
    • D06TREATMENT OF TEXTILES OR THE LIKE; LAUNDERING; FLEXIBLE MATERIALS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • D06FLAUNDERING, DRYING, IRONING, PRESSING OR FOLDING TEXTILE ARTICLES
    • D06F39/00Details of washing machines not specific to a single type of machines covered by groups D06F9/00 - D06F27/00 
    • D06F39/08Liquid supply or discharge arrangements

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to a method of rinsing fabric in a washer having a wash chamber rotatable about a horizontal axis comprising the step of adding water to the wash chamber and spraying the rinse water by recirculating it onto the fabric while spinning the wash chamber at a speed to effect a centrifugal force on the fabric such that the fabric will not tumble within the wash chamber as it spins.
  • An object of the present invention is to provide a method as stated at the beginning of the description that does not have the above drawbacks, while keeping water consumption comparable to that of the recirculation method already known.
  • FIG. 1 is a time chart of the rinse cycle of a washing machine according to a preferred embodiment of the present invention.
  • the preferred method according to the invention comprises a final rinse where water is no longer recirculated and sprayed on the clothes, while clothes are tumbled in an increased amount of rinsing water compared to the previous rinsing step in which recirculation of rinsing water was carried out. If for instance there are three rinse cycles, the recirculation of water will be carried out in the second rinse and optionally also in the first one, but not in the last one where the amount of used rinsing water will be higher than that of the previous cycle.
  • the rinse with recirculation can be done with a small water amount, typically 5 litres for a load of 5 kg of laundry instead of a normal amount of about 10 litres.
  • the water is pressed through the laundry by acceleration of the drum until the laundry forms a ring on the drum surface.
  • the recirculated water is sprayed onto the laundry ring to achieve good distribution of the water through the laundry.
  • spray we mean every possible way in which the water is fed onto the laundry ring, independently on the way it is fed, either by gravity or by a water nozzle under water pressure.
  • the drum is slowed down to normal tumbling movement to allow the rinsing water (which is continued to be sprayed) to access fibres of laundry in an uncompressed state.
  • the rotation of the drum is reversed between the spinning step and the tumbling step.
  • the process of recirculating and accelerating the drum can be repeated several times until the rinsing water is saturated with detergent.
  • the washing machine according to the invention is preferably provided with a sensor (turbidity sensor, capacitive detergent concentration sensor, and conductivity sensor) which is capable of detecting when the rinsing water is substantially saturated with detergent.
  • the same sensor can be used in order to assess the optimal number of rinsing cycles.
  • the last rinse cycle is done with a normal tumbling movement, no recirculation, and an increased water amount since water has been saved in the previous rinse cycles.
  • the spinning speed of each rinsing cycle depends on the drum diameter, and it is preferably of about 80 to 85 rpm for approximately 548 mm drum diameter or of about 65 to 75 rpm for approximately 480 mm drum diameter. Centrifugal force must be strong enough so that laundry stops its tumbling movement inside the drum. Laundry must form a ring clinging to the inner drum wall, but speed must be safely below “critical speed”. “Critical speed” is the speed corresponding to the resonance frequency of the wash unit. Every time the appliance goes through critical speed, there is strong noise and vibration. Appliance lifetime is shortened if it goes through critical speed often. Moreover speed should be as low as possible to avoid excessive suds creation. Excessive suds leads to bad rinse performance, difficult draining at the end of the rinse cycle and, in the worst case, oversudsing of appliance, with suds being pressed outside through the soap dispenser.
  • the number of “accelerate+recirculate” repeats is preferably comprised between around 2 and 12 in order to achieve saturation of liquor with detergent, where about 12 repeats are used in case of large soakable washload (in washer drums having a diameter of about 548 mm) with high dosage of high-foaming detergent, and where about 2 repeats are used with small load (up to approx. 15% of rated capacity) and moderate dosage of low-foaming detergent.
  • Load amount/soakability can be detected by measuring motor torque in acceleration ramp and use flowmeter to measure water amount, or by measuring gradient of water take-up (water level decrease after filling) with analogue level sensor. Foaming can be detected with analogue level sensor or optical (turbidity) sensors.
  • the recirculation system has the advantage that such a sensor can be mounted to the tub outlet or recirculation hose.
  • rinse sensors In an appliance without recirculation, rinse sensors must be mounted to the tub wall. This is expensive and often reduces stability of the tub (turbidity sensor needs hole in tub wall with several cm diameter).
  • the design of a washing machine according to the present invention implies that highly concentrated liquor is recirculated. There is therefore a high risk of suds creation in such a design.
  • Water ring means that while the drum is spinning, the water that is pressed out through the drum holes cannot be drained off by the pump fast enough. Therefore it forms a rotating ring at the outside of the drum, leading to bad draining, noise, and vibration of the machine. This happens when a water-saturated large soakable load is accelerated to high speeds too fast, or the draining rate of the drain pump is too low since the pump is too weak or the pump is blocked with foam, fluff or foreign bodies (buttons, coins), or the outlet geometry is unsuitable.
  • the drum speed On the y-axis is reported the drum speed, while in the intermediate and lower part of the drawing the status of the recirculation pump and the loaded water are reported respectively. On x-axis time is reported. On the left portion of the diagram (last but one rinse cycle), with an amount w 1 of rinsing water the drum speed is changed from s 1 (tumbling speed) to s 2 tumbling speed for two times. Between recirculation phases (times t 1 and t 2 ) the drum is tumbled without recirculation and with inverted direction.
  • the drum is rotated in alternating directions: at speed s 1 counterclockwise for some seconds and, after a pause of some seconds, at speed s 1 clockwise for some seconds.
  • the drum is stopped, the rinsing water w 1 is pumped out and fresh water is added to the tub, so that at time t 4 the total water loaded in the tub in the last two rinse cycles is w 2 (where added fresh water in the last rinse cycle is w 2 ⁇ w 1 , which is higher than w 1 ).
  • the drum is rotated at tumbling speed s 1 (last rinsing cycle) in alternating directions up to time t 5 when water is pumped out and the final spinning cycle is started.
  • recirculated rinse according to the present invention is that in case of warm rinse (often applied in washers sold in US), the recirculated water can transfer the heat of the inlet rinse water to the laundry. Heat distribution is therefore more even and the heat of the inlet water is reaching the laundry surface much faster than in traditional rinsing. Thus the desired rinse result can be reached faster.

Abstract

A method of rinsing fabric in a washer having a wash chamber rotatable about a horizontal axis comprises the step of adding water to the wash chamber and spraying the rinse water by recirculating it onto the fabric while spinning the wash chamber at a speed to effect a centrifugal force on the fabric such that the fabric will not tumble within the wash chamber as it spins. The method further comprises at least a last rinsing step in which the rotating speed of the wash chamber is such that the fabric tumbles within the wash chamber and in that the rinsing water is not recirculated and sprayed onto the fabric.

Description

    BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
  • 1. Field of the Invention
  • The present invention relates to a method of rinsing fabric in a washer having a wash chamber rotatable about a horizontal axis comprising the step of adding water to the wash chamber and spraying the rinse water by recirculating it onto the fabric while spinning the wash chamber at a speed to effect a centrifugal force on the fabric such that the fabric will not tumble within the wash chamber as it spins.
  • 2. Description of the Related Art
  • The above method is known as “recirculation method” and was designed for reducing water and energy consumption of European domestic washers. One of the above methods is disclosed by U.S. Pat. No. 5,191,668.
  • As a matter of fact water consumption of European domestic washers has continuously decreased over the last decades mainly due the cost of supply water, the energy cost for heating such water and to environmental issues. By introducing a recirculation rinse the water amount to be used in each rinsing step was greatly reduced, because it was no longer necessary to have an amount of water sufficient to guarantee wetting of clothes in the drum when tumbling, since the water was sprayed on the clothes when these latter were maintained by centrifugal force against the circular wall of the drum.
  • On the other hand, beside the actual reduction of water consumption, consumers are increasingly complaining about laundry feeling soapy after wash, laundry crackling with foam residual after wash, spots of insoluble compounds (zeolites) on the laundry, and eczema from residual detergent on the fabric.
  • All the above negative effects are mainly due to a too high residual concentration of detergent in the rinsing water (including zeolites usually contained in detergent formulations), to laundry fluff, to chunky food particles, to sand and rust articles from plumbing. All these substances are brought back onto the clothes through recirculation. Therefore recirculation is rarely implemented in modern washers mainly because of added cost of parts, difficulty to draw benefit from it because specific cycle layout is required to avoid drawback of soil/detergent redeposition on laundry and drawback of suds.
  • SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
  • An object of the present invention is to provide a method as stated at the beginning of the description that does not have the above drawbacks, while keeping water consumption comparable to that of the recirculation method already known.
  • According to the invention, the above object is reached thanks to the features listed in the appended claims.
  • BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
  • Some embodiments of the invention will now be described by way of example with reference to the attached drawing, wherein:
  • FIG. 1 is a time chart of the rinse cycle of a washing machine according to a preferred embodiment of the present invention.
  • DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
  • The applicant has surprisingly discovered that by slightly modifying the known recirculation rinse method it is possible to avoid the above problems, while maintaining a good rinsing efficiency and a reduced consumption of water.
  • The preferred method according to the invention comprises a final rinse where water is no longer recirculated and sprayed on the clothes, while clothes are tumbled in an increased amount of rinsing water compared to the previous rinsing step in which recirculation of rinsing water was carried out. If for instance there are three rinse cycles, the recirculation of water will be carried out in the second rinse and optionally also in the first one, but not in the last one where the amount of used rinsing water will be higher than that of the previous cycle. The rinse with recirculation can be done with a small water amount, typically 5 litres for a load of 5 kg of laundry instead of a normal amount of about 10 litres. During rinsing the water is pressed through the laundry by acceleration of the drum until the laundry forms a ring on the drum surface. The recirculated water is sprayed onto the laundry ring to achieve good distribution of the water through the laundry. With the term “sprayed” we mean every possible way in which the water is fed onto the laundry ring, independently on the way it is fed, either by gravity or by a water nozzle under water pressure.
  • Preferably, the drum is slowed down to normal tumbling movement to allow the rinsing water (which is continued to be sprayed) to access fibres of laundry in an uncompressed state. Preferably the rotation of the drum is reversed between the spinning step and the tumbling step. The process of recirculating and accelerating the drum can be repeated several times until the rinsing water is saturated with detergent. The washing machine according to the invention is preferably provided with a sensor (turbidity sensor, capacitive detergent concentration sensor, and conductivity sensor) which is capable of detecting when the rinsing water is substantially saturated with detergent. The same sensor can be used in order to assess the optimal number of rinsing cycles. The last rinse cycle is done with a normal tumbling movement, no recirculation, and an increased water amount since water has been saved in the previous rinse cycles.
  • The spinning speed of each rinsing cycle depends on the drum diameter, and it is preferably of about 80 to 85 rpm for approximately 548 mm drum diameter or of about 65 to 75 rpm for approximately 480 mm drum diameter. Centrifugal force must be strong enough so that laundry stops its tumbling movement inside the drum. Laundry must form a ring clinging to the inner drum wall, but speed must be safely below “critical speed”. “Critical speed” is the speed corresponding to the resonance frequency of the wash unit. Every time the appliance goes through critical speed, there is strong noise and vibration. Appliance lifetime is shortened if it goes through critical speed often. Moreover speed should be as low as possible to avoid excessive suds creation. Excessive suds leads to bad rinse performance, difficult draining at the end of the rinse cycle and, in the worst case, oversudsing of appliance, with suds being pressed outside through the soap dispenser.
  • According to the tests performed by the applicant, the number of “accelerate+recirculate” repeats is preferably comprised between around 2 and 12 in order to achieve saturation of liquor with detergent, where about 12 repeats are used in case of large soakable washload (in washer drums having a diameter of about 548 mm) with high dosage of high-foaming detergent, and where about 2 repeats are used with small load (up to approx. 15% of rated capacity) and moderate dosage of low-foaming detergent.
  • Load amount/soakability can be detected by measuring motor torque in acceleration ramp and use flowmeter to measure water amount, or by measuring gradient of water take-up (water level decrease after filling) with analogue level sensor. Foaming can be detected with analogue level sensor or optical (turbidity) sensors.
  • Even if an “accelerate+recirculate” methodology of rinsing is the preferred one, permanent recirculation without any slowing down can be used for small loads.
  • In order to determine when we have achieved saturation of the rinse water with detergent, it is possible to use either a lookup table linking the number of “accelerate+recirculate” repeats with the detected load amount/soakability and/or the presence or absence of foam, or a sensor (of the type already mentioned) to detect when the detergent concentration stays near-constant from one repeat to the next.
  • The recirculation system has the advantage that such a sensor can be mounted to the tub outlet or recirculation hose. In an appliance without recirculation, rinse sensors must be mounted to the tub wall. This is expensive and often reduces stability of the tub (turbidity sensor needs hole in tub wall with several cm diameter).
  • The design of a washing machine according to the present invention implies that highly concentrated liquor is recirculated. There is therefore a high risk of suds creation in such a design.
  • There is also a high risk of water ring. “Water ring” means that while the drum is spinning, the water that is pressed out through the drum holes cannot be drained off by the pump fast enough. Therefore it forms a rotating ring at the outside of the drum, leading to bad draining, noise, and vibration of the machine. This happens when a water-saturated large soakable load is accelerated to high speeds too fast, or the draining rate of the drain pump is too low since the pump is too weak or the pump is blocked with foam, fluff or foreign bodies (buttons, coins), or the outlet geometry is unsuitable.
  • To solve the above problems while keeping a low cost of the recirculation pump, it is suitable to apply a pump with around 4 l/min to 6 l/min draining rate for a sump (free liquor) volume of around 4 l.
  • Moreover, a fluff filter and foreign body trap is incorporated in the body of the drain pump. Further features and advantages of a rinse method according to the present invention will be clear from the following detailed description, given by way of non limiting example, with reference to the attached drawing which shows a speed profile of the last two rinse cycles according to the present invention, together with the recirculation pump status (on/off) and with the total supply of fresh water to the tub.
  • With reference to the upper part of the drawing, on the y-axis is reported the drum speed, while in the intermediate and lower part of the drawing the status of the recirculation pump and the loaded water are reported respectively. On x-axis time is reported. On the left portion of the diagram (last but one rinse cycle), with an amount w1 of rinsing water the drum speed is changed from s1 (tumbling speed) to s2 tumbling speed for two times. Between recirculation phases (times t1 and t2) the drum is tumbled without recirculation and with inverted direction. This means that the drum is rotated in alternating directions: at speed s1 counterclockwise for some seconds and, after a pause of some seconds, at speed s1 clockwise for some seconds. At time t3, after and intermediate spin for removing rinse water from clothes, the drum is stopped, the rinsing water w1 is pumped out and fresh water is added to the tub, so that at time t4 the total water loaded in the tub in the last two rinse cycles is w2 (where added fresh water in the last rinse cycle is w2−w1, which is higher than w1). Then the drum is rotated at tumbling speed s1 (last rinsing cycle) in alternating directions up to time t5 when water is pumped out and the final spinning cycle is started.
  • Another further advantage of recirculated rinse according to the present invention is that in case of warm rinse (often applied in washers sold in US), the recirculated water can transfer the heat of the inlet rinse water to the laundry. Heat distribution is therefore more even and the heat of the inlet water is reaching the laundry surface much faster than in traditional rinsing. Thus the desired rinse result can be reached faster.

Claims (5)

1. A method of rinsing fabric in a washer having a wash chamber rotatable about a horizontal axis comprising:
the step of adding water to the wash chamber and spraying the rinse water by recirculating it onto the fabric while spinning the wash chamber at a speed to effect a centrifugal force on the fabric such that the fabric will not tumble within the wash chamber as it spins, wherein
that it comprises at least a last rinsing step in which the rotating speed of the wash chamber is such that the fabric tumbles within the wash chamber and in that the rinsing water is not recirculated and sprayed onto the fabric.
2. The method according to claim 1, wherein the water amount added in the last rinsing step is higher than the water amount used in the previous rinsing steps.
3. The method according to claim 1, wherein that in each rinsing step with recirculation of rinsing water the washing chamber is accelerated to the speed to effect a centrifugal force on the fabric and it is then slowed down in order to allow tumbling of the fabric, such alternating acceleration and slowing down being repeated several times in each rinsing step.
4. The method according to claim 3, wherein the alternating sequence of acceleration and slowing down of the wash chamber is repeated from about 2 to 12 times.
5. The method according to claim 3, wherein it comprises detecting the detergent concentration in the rinsing water, the last rinsing step being carried out when such detergent concentration is lower than a predetermined value.
US12/053,667 2007-04-18 2008-03-24 Method for rinsing fabric in a washer and washer adapted to carry out this method Abandoned US20080256722A1 (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
EP07106394.5 2007-04-18
EP07106394A EP1983088A1 (en) 2007-04-18 2007-04-18 A method for rinsing fabric in a washer and washer adapted to carry out this method.

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US20080256722A1 true US20080256722A1 (en) 2008-10-23

Family

ID=38537624

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US12/053,667 Abandoned US20080256722A1 (en) 2007-04-18 2008-03-24 Method for rinsing fabric in a washer and washer adapted to carry out this method

Country Status (2)

Country Link
US (1) US20080256722A1 (en)
EP (1) EP1983088A1 (en)

Cited By (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20100132127A1 (en) * 2008-11-28 2010-06-03 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Washing machine and control method thereof
US20110016639A1 (en) * 2009-07-23 2011-01-27 Lg Electronics Inc. Control method of a laundry treatment machine
US20110016638A1 (en) * 2009-07-23 2011-01-27 Lg Electronics Inc. Washing machine and washing method
EP2602380A1 (en) * 2011-12-08 2013-06-12 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd Washing machine with conductivity sensor and method of controlling rinsing cycle
US20150299926A1 (en) * 2014-04-21 2015-10-22 Lg Electronics Inc. Washing method
US20160053422A1 (en) * 2014-08-19 2016-02-25 Lg Electronics Inc. Washing machine and method of controlling the same
KR20160044901A (en) * 2014-10-16 2016-04-26 엘지전자 주식회사 Washing machine and Controlling method for the same
WO2022231405A1 (en) * 2021-04-28 2022-11-03 삼성전자주식회사 Washing machine and control method thereof

Families Citing this family (15)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US9416478B2 (en) 2009-03-31 2016-08-16 Lg Electronics Inc. Washing machine and washing method
AU2010214203B2 (en) 2009-02-11 2013-08-22 Lg Electronics Inc. Washing method and washing machine
US10533275B2 (en) 2009-07-27 2020-01-14 Lg Electronics Inc. Control method of a laundry machine
US9234307B2 (en) 2009-07-27 2016-01-12 Lg Electronics Inc. Control method of a laundry machine
US9822473B2 (en) 2009-07-27 2017-11-21 Lg Electronics Inc. Control method of a laundry machine
US9695537B2 (en) 2009-07-27 2017-07-04 Lg Electronics Inc. Control method of a laundry machine
ES2755887T3 (en) * 2009-08-11 2020-04-24 Lg Electronics Inc Laundry machine
EP2305873A1 (en) 2009-09-30 2011-04-06 Electrolux Home Products Corporation N.V. A washing machine and method for collecting foreign objects within a washing machine
US8776297B2 (en) 2009-10-13 2014-07-15 Lg Electronics Inc. Laundry treating apparatus and method
EP2516718B1 (en) * 2009-12-23 2016-05-04 LG Electronics Inc. Washing method and washing machine
US9732457B2 (en) * 2009-12-23 2017-08-15 Lg Electronics Inc. Washing method and washing machine
DE102010042514A1 (en) * 2010-10-15 2012-04-19 Henkel Ag & Co. Kgaa Method for controlling a washing machine
KR101506146B1 (en) * 2012-02-03 2015-03-26 삼성전자 주식회사 Washing machine and control method thereof
EP3064631B1 (en) 2015-03-05 2017-12-20 Whirlpool Corporation A method for rinsing fabric in a washing machine and washing machine using such method
JP6820460B2 (en) * 2017-02-24 2021-01-27 パナソニックIpマネジメント株式会社 Washing machine and its control device

Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US5191668A (en) * 1992-01-02 1993-03-09 Whirlpool Corporation Spin method of rinsing fabric in a horizontal axis washer
US5233718A (en) * 1992-01-02 1993-08-10 Whirlpool Corporation Tumble method of rinsing fabric in a horizontal axis washer
US20060070409A1 (en) * 2003-01-22 2006-04-06 Dieter Grimm Washing machine with sensor means
US20060185403A1 (en) * 2003-04-22 2006-08-24 Mugihei Ikemizu Washing machine

Family Cites Families (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US5345637A (en) * 1993-04-27 1994-09-13 Whirlpool Corporation High performance washing system for a horizontal axis washer
US7966684B2 (en) * 2005-05-23 2011-06-28 Whirlpool Corporation Methods and apparatus to accelerate the drying of aqueous working fluids

Patent Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US5191668A (en) * 1992-01-02 1993-03-09 Whirlpool Corporation Spin method of rinsing fabric in a horizontal axis washer
US5233718A (en) * 1992-01-02 1993-08-10 Whirlpool Corporation Tumble method of rinsing fabric in a horizontal axis washer
US20060070409A1 (en) * 2003-01-22 2006-04-06 Dieter Grimm Washing machine with sensor means
US20060185403A1 (en) * 2003-04-22 2006-08-24 Mugihei Ikemizu Washing machine

Cited By (14)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20100132127A1 (en) * 2008-11-28 2010-06-03 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Washing machine and control method thereof
US9187856B2 (en) * 2009-07-23 2015-11-17 Lg Electronics Inc. Washing machine and washing method
US20110016639A1 (en) * 2009-07-23 2011-01-27 Lg Electronics Inc. Control method of a laundry treatment machine
US20110016638A1 (en) * 2009-07-23 2011-01-27 Lg Electronics Inc. Washing machine and washing method
US8978423B2 (en) * 2009-07-23 2015-03-17 Lg Electronics Inc. Control method of a laundry treatment machine
EP2602380A1 (en) * 2011-12-08 2013-06-12 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd Washing machine with conductivity sensor and method of controlling rinsing cycle
CN103161051A (en) * 2011-12-08 2013-06-19 三星电子株式会社 Washing machine with conductivity sensor and method of controlling rinsing cycle
US20150299926A1 (en) * 2014-04-21 2015-10-22 Lg Electronics Inc. Washing method
US9909246B2 (en) * 2014-04-21 2018-03-06 Lg Electronics Inc. Washing method
US20160053422A1 (en) * 2014-08-19 2016-02-25 Lg Electronics Inc. Washing machine and method of controlling the same
US9982381B2 (en) * 2014-08-19 2018-05-29 Lg Electronics Inc. Washing machine and method of controlling the same
KR20160044901A (en) * 2014-10-16 2016-04-26 엘지전자 주식회사 Washing machine and Controlling method for the same
KR102196184B1 (en) * 2014-10-16 2020-12-29 엘지전자 주식회사 Washing machine and Controlling method for the same
WO2022231405A1 (en) * 2021-04-28 2022-11-03 삼성전자주식회사 Washing machine and control method thereof

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
EP1983088A1 (en) 2008-10-22

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US20080256722A1 (en) Method for rinsing fabric in a washer and washer adapted to carry out this method
US7146669B2 (en) Method of operating a domestic appliance
US8978423B2 (en) Control method of a laundry treatment machine
US9121122B2 (en) Washing machine and control method thereof
US20140021140A1 (en) Method for controlling dehydration or water removal in drum washing machine
RU2461676C2 (en) Method of washing machine control (versions)
US20140041728A1 (en) Laundry treating appliance and method of detecting oversuds
EP2960363B1 (en) Method for washing laundry in a laundry washing machine and laundry washing machine
KR20140019553A (en) Method and device for preventing bubble back flow of drum type washing machine
EP3931388B1 (en) A method for washing laundry in a laundry washing machine and laundry washing machine implementig the method
EP2868793A1 (en) A method for improving washing performances of a washing machine and horizontal axis washer using such method
EP3064631B1 (en) A method for rinsing fabric in a washing machine and washing machine using such method
US20230399785A1 (en) Washing machine appliance load type detection
RU2585716C2 (en) Method for activation of detergent in washing machine or washing-drying machine
KR102320897B1 (en) A method of the laundry treating apparatus
US10119215B2 (en) Spin wash
KR20070073134A (en) Method controlling washing of washing machine
CN117364409A (en) Control method and device of washing machine, washing machine and storage medium
KR100778703B1 (en) Method for saving rinse of drum type washing machine
KR20120109172A (en) Method for controlling dehydration in drum type washing machine
CN113474506A (en) Method for washing laundry in a washing machine and washing machine implementing the method
TH10280B (en) How to spin a washing machine Spin in a washing machine, a horizontal axis.
TH16993A (en) How to spin a washing machine Spin in a washing machine, a horizontal axis.
TH11770EX (en) High-performance washing process for vertical washing machines.

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
AS Assignment

Owner name: WHIRLPOOL CORPORATION, MICHIGAN

Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNORS:OBERKIRSCH, STEFANIE;IHNE, SARAH;VAIDHYANATHAN, RAVEENDRAN;REEL/FRAME:020689/0662

Effective date: 20080211

STCB Information on status: application discontinuation

Free format text: ABANDONED -- FAILURE TO RESPOND TO AN OFFICE ACTION