Inside our cabin upnort we have a portable dishwasher that we never ever use. Except the other day we needed to.
Hooked it up to the faucet. Wife says to turn hot water on. I say turn the cold water on as the unit has a heating element and will heat the water. I put the hot water on anyway and let the unit run as we left to drive home. But I know I’m right.
Before I do any stupid experiments the next time I’m up there, what say you? The dishwasher will heat the water, right? Right!
Right?
It depends on the dishwasher. The instructions for a lot of them specify to turn on the hot water, and some (especially GE models) even recommend letting the water run until all of the cold water is flushed from the lines and the water runs hot before connecting the portable dishwasher to the sink. I’m guessing that their heating element is a bit undersized and won’t get the water hot enough if the dishwasher is fed straight cold water.
Without knowing the specifics of your dishwasher and what the manufacturer recommends, the safe generic approach is to always turn the hot water on.
In other words, unless you know for certain which type of dishwasher you have, your wife was right.
All the dishwashers I know run on the hot water, as hot water is really required for them to work. The heating element is there to keep it hot, perhaps boost it a bit, and to speed the drying. It is not intended to start with cold water. And yes it is important enough that many do recommend running the hot water in the sink first till hot water flows out.
Another factor is how cold is the cold water at the cabin.
My obnoxiously eco-conscious dishwasher runs on cold water only. But the so-called cold feed around here is about 68F. The cold feed in a “cabin upnort” might be a wee bit chillier. At which point the dishwasher would appreciate a little help with the input temp.
I’ve never heard of a portable dishwasher that didn’t need a hot water supply. Or any household dishwasher either. The heating element you see at the bottom of the washer is for drying.
I’ve never come across a dishwasher that required a hot water feed. All the ones I’ve ever seen only require cold, there simply isn’t a hot water infeed at all.
This could be a USA vs rest of the world thing of course.
I agree. I don’t like it when my wife leaves it connected overnight. Among other things leaving the hot water on at the faucet can eventually cause a sink sprayer attachment to leak, which happened to us. However, I have seen a portable get permanently installed with a direct attachment to the water supply and drain without problems.
Nope, mine clearly states in the manual that it should be plumbed into a cold water feed only.
This is by far the most common practice as I understand it, see here.
Must be a UK thing (or non-US thing). I’m not sure hot water is really needed, the detergent and spraying probably work well enough, and the dry cycle is hot enough to sufficiently sterilize the dishes in the end.
Very convenient if you don’t have a built in unit. There’s no room for a dishwasher under my counters so it was a portable or washing by hand. It provides a nice rolling countertop also. Some portables are top loaders which is very annoying, you can use the top for counter space, until you need to open the dishwasher. But you can put some huge pots into the top loaders.
I can’t help with the hot/cold water issue (what does the owner’s manual say).
However, I would be concerned about the age, and condition, of the hose between the dishwasher and faucet. Do you know the psi of your water supply? Hoses get old and crack. Or burst. :eek:
You left this old hose under pressure and drove away. Do you have a neighbor who could check on your cabin, and turn the water off? Is there a fishing hole nearby? I might be able to spend a week upnort checking your water pressure.
The dishwasher was brand new when we put it in the cabin 5 years ago and we’ve used it maybe 4 times. The hose is fine. You guys are getting a little weird about it.
But nice try to get into the cabin and drink my beer.