it's fine to have, or not have, some of the common household appliances depending on one's preferences and living situation.
β call all destroyer, Friday, June 12, 2020 1:18 PM (four months ago) bookmarkflaglink
― call all destroyer, Wednesday, 21 October 2020 18:15 (five years ago)
I don't have a dishwasher or garbage disposal and do not feel a need for them.
― sarahell, Wednesday, 21 October 2020 18:29 (five years ago)
call all otm
― fretless porpentine (Ye Mad Puffin), Wednesday, 21 October 2020 18:39 (five years ago)
(fwiw I'm jus playin my parents have always had a dryer even tho I wonder why)
― Its big ball chunky time (Jimmy The Mod Awaits The Return Of His Beloved), Wednesday, 21 October 2020 19:32 (five years ago)
In 20 years weβll be all nostalgic about having fridges. And food to put in them.
― Li'l Brexit (Tracer Hand), Wednesday, 21 October 2020 19:39 (five years ago)
FWIW, in the same week my dryer stopped spinning (after I already repaired it once four weeks ago), washer kept leaving stink on clothes, and fridge started to give out (have been having problems since we moved in and have already had someone come and try to fix), so I am literally getting new all three the same day. New house problems
― longtime caller, first time listener (man alive), Wednesday, 21 October 2020 20:09 (five years ago)
And for some reason the fridge space between the cabinets is the dimensions of almost no fridge on the market currently -- all are either 1-2 inches too tall or much too small. I bought an LG that was the closest to maximizing the space that I could but wastes like three inches of width.
― longtime caller, first time listener (man alive), Wednesday, 21 October 2020 20:10 (five years ago)
yeah i think i bought four appliances in one trip the weekend after we closed. the fridge lasted another year and then i replaced that too before it reached a catastrophic stage.
― call all destroyer, Wednesday, 21 October 2020 20:20 (five years ago)
Welcome to Australia, they just build the fridge holes any size they want, and then the fridges come from a mixture of overseas markets with different standards, I wouldnβt be worrying about 3 inches.
― American Fear of Scampos (Ed), Wednesday, 21 October 2020 20:20 (five years ago)
it's fine to have, or not have, some of the common household appliances depending on one's preferences and living situation.β call all destroyer, Friday, June 12, 2020 1:18 PM (four months ago) bookmarkflaglink
i used to agree with this but the planet is quite literally dying and if you have the space then you should spend 3 minutes a week hanging your socks up.
valid exceptions, i'm sorry i don't make the rules: your dryer is electric and your electricity is renewable (e.g. Seattle). you need to do laundry every day (e.g. kids, job). it rains all the time (e.g. Seattle).
― π ππ’π¨ (caek), Wednesday, 21 October 2020 20:21 (five years ago)
i will never forget a nominally liberal american telling me my house in the UK looked like "the barrio" because i line dried my clothes. ton of class stuff and a lot of "i'm sorry but this is how i prefer to live my life" in the way americans think about this.
― π ππ’π¨ (caek), Wednesday, 21 October 2020 20:22 (five years ago)
or you were just talking to an asshole
― call all destroyer, Wednesday, 21 October 2020 20:23 (five years ago)
other valid exception obviously: you don't have outside space.
― π ππ’π¨ (caek), Wednesday, 21 October 2020 20:24 (five years ago)
no it was an american
in London i didn't have outdoor space for years but still didn't have a dryer (because virtually no one has a dryer in London). and it rains all the time. is it as easy as popping the clothes into a dryer? fuck no. is it fine? of course it's fine.
― Li'l Brexit (Tracer Hand), Wednesday, 21 October 2020 20:35 (five years ago)
if you get one, get an electric one and pay the utility company extra for green power.
β π ππ’π¨ (caek), Thursday, 22 October 2020 4:23 AM
hold up, there are non electric dryers?
― micah, Wednesday, 21 October 2020 20:44 (five years ago)
It might be regional within the US but most dryers here are natural gas in my experience. Itβs cheaper to run in $ but more carbon (depending on how youβre electricity is generated potentially quite a lot more).
― π ππ’π¨ (caek), Wednesday, 21 October 2020 20:49 (five years ago)
To be clear: all of them use electricity to turn the fan. A gas dryer uses gas for heat.
I presume an "electric dryer" here means one that also uses an electric heating element.
― fretless porpentine (Ye Mad Puffin), Wednesday, 21 October 2020 20:52 (five years ago)
Iβve never lived anywhere that had a gas dryer
― sound of scampo talk to me (El Tomboto), Wednesday, 21 October 2020 20:53 (five years ago)
FWIW, in justifying my appliance purchases I (1) have little kids and (2) live in a place where it is not infrequently humid enough for clothes to take multiple days to dry.
― longtime caller, first time listener (man alive), Wednesday, 21 October 2020 20:54 (five years ago)
also I do plan to add solar once I replace my roof in a couple years
― longtime caller, first time listener (man alive), Wednesday, 21 October 2020 20:55 (five years ago)
i'm a dryer nazi but i should be honest that it's not actually a huge deal in terms of the average american's carbon footprint (0.2%!). it's a bigger fraction (1 or 2%) of your footprint if you live in a city and don't fly very often. but still, it's not the end of the world.
narrator: it was the end of the world.
― π ππ’π¨ (caek), Wednesday, 21 October 2020 20:56 (five years ago)
this is a great todo list for a new homeowner imo (it works for renters too, but most of it makes more sense if you own a single family home):
https://erikareinhardt.com/personal-climate-action
― π ππ’π¨ (caek), Wednesday, 21 October 2020 20:57 (five years ago)
I'm also pretty intense about keeping the thermostat low, turning off lights, etc.
― longtime caller, first time listener (man alive), Wednesday, 21 October 2020 20:57 (five years ago)
My dryer died and I got a collapsible drying rack - even indoors everything dries quicker than I expected. Sheets are a bit of a nightmare, though.
― Donald Trump Also Sucks, Of Course (milo z), Wednesday, 21 October 2020 20:58 (five years ago)
xp to self there's some magical thinking about electric cars in there, but otherwise its solid
― π ππ’π¨ (caek), Wednesday, 21 October 2020 20:59 (five years ago)
live in a place where it is not infrequently humid enough for clothes to take multiple days to dry.
I have a lot of clothes that I have to line dry because they are fancy or fussy fabrics that dryers do bad things to, and I don't want to spend the money or increase the use of toxic chemicals of dry cleaning these garments. In winter, and when it is rainy/humid, it will take several days for things to dry, because I avoid using central heat and just use space heaters when needed.
― sarahell, Wednesday, 21 October 2020 21:05 (five years ago)
all of that would be fine if it wouldn't mean literally having multiple racks of clothing/linens/towels drying pretty much at all times.
― longtime caller, first time listener (man alive), Wednesday, 21 October 2020 21:07 (five years ago)
Iβve never had a dryer in London. Everyone dries clothes on racks next to a radiator, or uses the airing cupboard where the boiler or immersion tank lives. Lots of those have slatted shelving where you can hang towels. For sheets, I just sling them onto doors and theyβre always dry within a couple of hours, even when it rains.
― santa clause four (suzy), Wednesday, 21 October 2020 21:09 (five years ago)
I've read through the piece linked by caek, and I feel like there's a sizable omission. Can't tell from the data presented, but this doesn't appear to factor in the environmental costs of the production and distribution of the better options. The message seems to be "replace all the yucky stuff now."
Sometimes I have seen comparisons of (say) a gas car vs. an electric car, and they apparently imagine a world where the former vanishes from your driveway (magically) and the latter appears (magically). But that's not the case!
The old car gets transported somewhere and either keeps getting used, or needs to be disposed of. Those processes have environmental impact, sorry.
The new car took energy and raw materials to manufacture. Count those too, please. Energy was involved in building a dealership, selling you the car, and getting it to you. Count those too, please.
Ditto appliances. Has there been a good cradle-to-grave, life-cycle comparison of keeping an existing appliance (and running it into the ground) vs. replacing it with a shiny new one that is "better" in terms of day-to-day running?
Let's say you have a 20-year-old washing machine that works fine. You could replace it tomorrow with something more efficient, and pat yourself on the back for saving the planet... while ignoring the energy expenditures and environmental impacts of manufacturing it and getting it to you. Surely in some cases it works out better if you keep it?
― fretless porpentine (Ye Mad Puffin), Wednesday, 21 October 2020 21:22 (five years ago)
totally and good point. i've tried to come up with my own numbers for that stuff but it's extremely difficult. i'm taking things like that more as "when the time comes" rather than throw all my stuff in the ocean and buy new stuff.
― π ππ’π¨ (caek), Wednesday, 21 October 2020 21:24 (five years ago)
I've never been anywhere as damp as the UK eitherMaybe if we all got dryers it wouldn't be so damp any more?!
We may have had this discussion before, but I'm sure loads of my clothes bought in the UK say 'do not tumble dry' whereas similar ones bought in the US don't have that - even if it's the exact same sort of clothing.
― kinder, Wednesday, 21 October 2020 21:24 (five years ago)
weird! most of my clothes (bought in the US) are either "lay flat to dry," "dry clean only" or "tumble dry low" -- it's probably different for men's clothes (and maybe kids' stuff) but rarely do I see a woman's garment with tags that essentially say, "machine dry the fuck out of me at extra high heat"
― sarahell, Wednesday, 21 October 2020 21:43 (five years ago)
def notice a lot more of my wife's clothing than mine says do not tumble dry when I do laundry
― longtime caller, first time listener (man alive), Wednesday, 21 October 2020 21:44 (five years ago)
Everyone dries clothes on racks next to a radiator, or uses the airing cupboard where the boiler or immersion tank lives. Lots of those have slatted shelving where you can hang towels. For sheets, I just sling them onto doors and theyβre always dry within a couple of hours, even when it rains.
Interesting! I wonder if y'all keep your homes significantly warmer than I do? And also have fewer clothes? Or do laundry a lot in smaller loads? ... We did have a thread a while back about differences in washing machines in the UK vs. US?
― sarahell, Wednesday, 21 October 2020 21:48 (five years ago)
I lie actually, I did have a dryer in my old house but it worked so rarely it was a gamble whether it would stop after 10 mins or not. I'm not anti-dryer, btw, particularly for sheets. And I occasionally put a dehumidifier on if I have loads of laundry to dry, so that's just as bad.
― kinder, Wednesday, 21 October 2020 22:03 (five years ago)
Caek
i'm taking things like that more as "when the time comes" rather than throw all my stuff in the ocean and buy new stuff.
Understood, and you're cool, but Reinhardt is ambiguous, seeming to say both things:
These must all be replaced, and as soon as possible...
Vs.
you need to replace all burning with electricity now.
Methinks if I have a ten-year-old Civic Hybrid (and I do), it makes more sense to run it to death, then sell it for scrap, than to go out and buy the latest Tesla (ha, like I could).
Even if the day-to-day carbon footprint of owning the Tesla were "better," there are other factors in play. The manufacture, marketing, sales, and delivery of the Tesla are not without impact.
Also? Where I live, a plug-in electric car is... powered by coal. It's not like you are plugging it into a magical outlet filled with pixie dust and liberal dreams.
The electricity that charges those batteries mostly comes from fucking fossil fuels, so the namby-pamby sweater-vest wearing poetry-professor vegan e-car driver who smugly disparages "gas-guzzlers" maybe needs to take the sanctimony down a notch.
(I say, as I sanctimoniously bike to the grocery store.)
― fretless porpentine (Ye Mad Puffin), Wednesday, 21 October 2020 22:11 (five years ago)
generally speaking, mass produced grid electricity yields less pollution per mile in an EV than is produced by an ICE (hence EVs having "equivalent MPGs" of 100+). i think that's true even if the power source is coal. it's definitely true of natural gas.
but yeah in the particular case of cars the advice is not good on more than just cost of production. EVs produce just as much particulate air pollution as ICEs and hybrids. they're not going to improve general health in cities at all. and car ownership leads pretty directly to hollowing out of mass transit, which drives people into the suburbs, which is one of the worst thing policy makers can do if they want to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases.
― π ππ’π¨ (caek), Wednesday, 21 October 2020 22:33 (five years ago)
i still think it's a good article for getting a back of the envelope idea of what are the biggest contributors in your life and which of them in principle have fixes.
― π ππ’π¨ (caek), Wednesday, 21 October 2020 22:37 (five years ago)
thereβs a thread for the EV arguing: why donβt you drive an EV?
― sound of scampo talk to me (El Tomboto), Wednesday, 21 October 2020 23:08 (five years ago)
ok but is there a thread to revive when you link to that thread?
― π ππ’π¨ (caek), Wednesday, 21 October 2020 23:12 (five years ago)
Iβm just trying to drive more traffic to I Love Cars (see what I did there).
― sound of scampo talk to me (El Tomboto), Wednesday, 21 October 2020 23:21 (five years ago)
Buying A House With No Dryer Update.
Sellers countered. We signed. I will soon own no dryer.
Oh and the washing machine is outside, which I kind of love because you can't do that shit in crappy climates.
― mom tossed in kimchee (quincie), Thursday, 22 October 2020 00:44 (five years ago)
Congrats!
― The Beige of Dadz (Sufjan Grafton), Thursday, 22 October 2020 00:45 (five years ago)
We produced zero offspring and thus I am not gonna feel too bad about getting a dryer if I want one. Carbon pittance compared to having kids tbrr.
xpost thanks! I think! We land in SB on Sunday :)
― mom tossed in kimchee (quincie), Thursday, 22 October 2020 00:46 (five years ago)
What about pony
― sound of scampo talk to me (El Tomboto), Thursday, 22 October 2020 00:47 (five years ago)
Pony will be living 13 minutes away from new house.
Our plan is to go live with him should the questionable foundation fail.
― mom tossed in kimchee (quincie), Thursday, 22 October 2020 00:54 (five years ago)
Pony is flying to California on Air Horse One btw
― mom tossed in kimchee (quincie), Thursday, 22 October 2020 00:55 (five years ago)
lol, congratulations!
― call all destroyer, Thursday, 22 October 2020 00:58 (five years ago)