Why do washing machines often say 1 min left, but that 1 minute lasts 5 or more minutes?

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Why lie about that

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25 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

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Anonymous 0 Comments

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Anonymous 0 Comments

The last stage of a normal wash cycle is a spin to press most of the water out of the clothes. Modern washers have sensors (usually for weight) to measure when the intended amount of water has been removed from the clothes. If this takes longer than expected, it keeps running until it’s done. 

Modern dryers have humidity sensors which check whether (nearly) all the moisture has been removed. Similarly, if this takes longer than expected, it keeps running until it’s done. 

Anonymous 0 Comments

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Anonymous 0 Comments

That last minute is the tail end of your spin and drain. The centrifugal force of spinning basically “wrings out” the water from your clothes while running the drain pump.

Modern washing machines (and dryers) are equipped with sensors to know how much water is in the machine. The models I service use an air pressure sensor, which senses pressure differences when water is added or drained from the tub. The timer is the process of the timed elements of the wash. Certain phases of the cycle end when a sensor tells it that the machine is clear for the next phase, which is not determined by the timer. If you pay attention during the whole cycle, the timer will skip around, mainly between phases of the cycle.

Source: am maintenance tech. Yes, I actually fix my residents issues. I also cut my paint around outlets and hinges.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Similar to this, your printer isn’t smart enough to know exactly how much toner / ink is left. It just approximates based on a preset coverage percentage. Never replace your toner or ink until it is 100% empty. Your device may say “toner low” for 6 months depending on usage.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Your experience may vary, but my washing machine started doing this when the drain had a sock blocking it. It expects the water to drain in this set amount of time but it doesn’t, and the cycle will not end until enough water has drained. If your washing is coming out wetter than expected, or if it is just taking a long time, I would look into how to service the drain. Or get it serviced by a professional.

Anonymous 0 Comments

My newer AEG machine uses the last minute to loosen up the clothes after spinning. Sometimes it takes 5-10 seconds, sometimes it takes about a minute or longer.

My dish washer (Siemens) always jumps from 2 to 0.

Software.

Anonymous 0 Comments

The stages mostly aren’t actually timed. They run until a sensor reads some value and then move to the next. For the last stage, it’s spinning out excess water. It keeps doing that as long as it’s getting out water at a certain rate.

Anonymous 0 Comments

It’s kinda like w/your wife, but in reverse…”Honey, I swear, that was a solid 5-minutes!”, wife, “hmmm…more like 1-minute!”