+1. We'd have to upgrade our electric to accommodate an electric water heater and laundry set. |
I'm going to blow your mind. Refrigerators can run on natural gas. |
When I was growing up, we used to hang our wash on the line dryer in the back yard. |
Yes, I've seen propane powered refrigerators. They are generally meant for houses without electricity. |
Definitely the most economical and green method of drying laundry. Of course you have to plan laundry day around the weather forecast. Also, some HOAs do not allow outdoor clothes lines or drying racks, although I wouldn't turn you in if I saw one. |
Believe it or not, some states (like Maryland) are encouraging people to do this. |
Definitely for the off-grid crowd. The biggest problem is that they have to be vented to the outside just like any other gas powered appliance. |
Myth, not fact. Maryland's recommendation is for newly built housing, not older houses with existing appliances. |
Stop it. Burning natural gas directly in an appliance is more efficient than burning it in a power plant to generate electricity and then transporting it across the countryside to a transformer to a local distribution line to power a dryer (with line and efficiency losses all along the way). Indoor air quality is not an issue for a properly vented appliance (dryer or stove). If you want to “save the planet,” hang your laundry in an outside line. Otherwise, please educate yourself with something other than propaganda. |
Wrong. Gas appliances are bad. Science is real. |
Thank you dr fauci |
We didn't have dryers growing up. We dried our laundry outside. |
Ok, MAGA. ![]() |
This is a troll who keeps posting repeatedly. For fun, I suppose. They should probably work more hours. |
Op here. We had a washing board and did the same. Possibly why this fascinated me so much! I’m a first time homeowner learning all these tidbits. I spent more than 20 years in an apartment. |