Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I just removed the GE medallion from my dishwasher door and covered it with Miele sticker I made myself. My friends will be so impressed. Now I have a dishwasher that does an excellent job of cleaning my dishes and drying them. It's fairly quiet and maintenance free. But the best thing? It's a Miele! Now I'm going to slap a BMW sticker on my Honda so I won't feel out of place driving in your neighborhood.
You need to get a life lady, instead of sock puppeting on a thread about dishwashers.
I have a life. A tiny part of it is making fun of snobs.
You sound jealous. A Miele cleans better than a GE. People don’t buy Miele for the name only. But you wouldn’t know that since you sound poor.
Also, wanting quality furnishings and appliances I still not snobbery.
It’s just that we are richer than you.
And you are NOT a snob? LOL OMG. OK, got it. And how does it clean better? My dishes come out sparkling clean and dry with no water spots. They can't get cleaner than that. Unless the Mile empties itself, puts the dishes away, and loads the next batch for me, the only added value is the snob appeal. And even some of you rich snobs are saying they don't dry the dishes.
Try not to pity us poe folks and our sub-standard brand appliances too much. Don't we suffer enough already by the shame of not driving a BMW and living in an overpriced DC suburb full of other snobs married to men who couldn't put air in their tires, check their own oil, or run a lawn mower if their life depended on it? Yes, I'm just jealous that you can hire people to do all those things for you. At least you sstill get to wipe your own butt. Or do you?
BTW, softened, mineral free water makes more of a difference to clean dishes and laundry than any high grade appliance. Short of installing water treatment, I did see a Bosch dishwasher with it's own softening system that really impressed me. That really is an added value although one that shouldn't be necessary. Seriously, dishwashers heat and spray water then bake the dishes dry. Other than buttons and digital displays replacing dials, the tech hasn't changed in 5 decades.