Hell yes, brother. I use your channel to compare buying home appliances for maximum comfort. You always give that detailed user experience review. Very good shit
I bought a John Lewis branded 7Kg heat pump tumble dryer in 2015 and i have been very pleased with it, I don't know who actually made it. Over the last few weeks I haven't had to use it because of the nice weather but when it rains our clothes are washed, dried and back in the wardrobe in a few hours.
@@lords-electrical Thanks, I didn't know it was Zanussi/AEG, in fact i didn't know that Zanussi & AEG were now the same manufacturer !! but anyway, I also have a Zanussi ceramic hob electric oven & a Zanussi dishwasher, I've had the cooker for over 10 years and it is still working OK, I like Zanussi products.
Cheers from the States. I'm interested in the differences between our appliances and those in the UK, aside from sizing. Most Americans have vented dryers without heat pumps. I'm interested in a more efficient dryer because we are beginning to have electric price differentials here.
Hi I have bought this recently can you please let me know how does the care programme runs . I have been having sign on display for a while but manual book is little confusing. Kindly guide me on this
I have a new Samsung heat pump dryer and the matching washer and one feature I did not realise they had was that they talk to each other. 😀 When you move the clothes from the washer to the dryer, the dryer suggests the best drying option based on all the settings and data from the washer. Crazy stuff 😄
Have you figured out how to display all the icons long enough to select them (eg the child lock,etc) or am I missing something obvious ? The fluff filter is in 2 parts. Thanks for the video. ggggwwww at 20.56 BST on Thursday the 22/2/24.
We have a Bosch exxel condenser dryer and it’s very old but still it runs as smooth as day 1. Surprisingly quiet as well for its age. Beko heat pump will be our next dryer.
Would you recommend this model for mainly bedding drying? I’ve been looking around for heat pump tumble dryers and people have recommended reverse action tumble dryers. I was just wondering if specifically I should be looking for that or if a tumble dryer like this would be perfect regardless.
Hi. Does it leave water in the bottom filter after it has flushed the condenser. I had a very expensive Siemens Avantgarde, cost over £1000, it left water in the bottom filters, and I ended up buying a wet & dry vacuum cleaner to suck it out. The Senior engineer came out and said it was normal, but not ideal in my opinion. Siemens very kindly refunded my money for it, and I also bought the washer to match, and very pleased with it, although I was told it was actually made by Haier under license.I am thinking of buying an AEG heat pump tumble dryer, but can’t justify paying over £1200 for it, thanks, Paul
I've just purchased this model. I'm confused with instructions re water container. Do you only take the little black stopper out from back of water tank if. You are using a drain kit with machiine
In North America, our clothes dryers seem to have to be vented to the outside. Do dryers in Europe just recycle the exhaust air back into tumbler? Or do you also have to exhaust the air to the outside of the residence?
You can buy both here depending on where you want to place it, I have a condenser type and just empty the water tank and clean the fluff as normal . I give it a deep clean once a year
@@terrysidhu1078 Thank you….I did a bit more research on “ventless” condenser dryers and indeed they are now available in North America. Makes a lot of sense for high rise condominium buildings here in our big cities. Also, they seem to be much more energy efficient.
That is good to know, the machine in question is quite new and with 0 reviews, I am in the market for a new dryer and didn't know if this is the sensible one to buy.
Hi mate, if you remove the bottom panel to expose where the heat exchanger is, is there a removable filter in there too? I know on the old model it was completely sealed off with no filter, but believe this model has as extra filter type thing in front of the heat exchanger that’s removable and can also be cleaned. Appreciate the video and any feedback pal 👍
Just had a look and it is a sealed unit with no access available unfortunately. I normally prefer the models where you have access to the filters and heat exchange unit for cleaning purposes.
Ah that’s a shame. How important would you say it is to have a self cleaning model? I’m looking to purchase a heat pump tumble dryer but am concerned about not being able to remove the heat exchanger for cleaning. I know on the models that have access to it (non self cleaning models) you can clean the very front of the heat exchanger but what about the rest of it getting clogged up with crap with no way of cleaning it other than taking the dryer to bits and washing it that way.
@@est9949 Bought an LG self cleaning model in the end. Don’t like not being able to clean the heat exchanger, will start clogging up and result in poor efficiency and premature death of the tumble dryer and therefore is false economy in my opinion. Good for manufacturers and retailers pockets as you’ll have to buy a new one more often. Have also heard Bosch self cleaning models are notorious for clogging up regardless, but LG ones seem to be good from what I’ve read. Mine’s great just don’t overfill it or your clothes won’t dry properly.
As an American, I don't understand this heat pump and condenser dryers. Are they strictly for energy efficiency? Typically we'd let a big pile of dirty linens accumulate before doing a large load, and 40 minutes for the whole lot is typical for a dryer (more than 2kg). 2 and a half hours would be absurd for drying only. Our dryers just heat the drum and vent the moisture to the outside.
don't waste time trying to understand this "technology",its total junk,runs for hours and hours and never gets things properly dry, stick with the good old conventional machines that get a load dry in 30 minutes.
Electricity is cheap in the States of America, so nobody seems to care about the efficiency of appliances. So, go for the typical huge top-load high-speed dryers.
Hell yes, brother. I use your channel to compare buying home appliances for maximum comfort. You always give that detailed user experience review. Very good shit
Great tutorial on the Bosch tumbler dryer. Thank you so much for this!
Glad it was useful thanks for the feedback 👍
Great video, one small correction, I think the condenser wash happens about 4 times throughout the cycle, but I could be wrong
I bought a John Lewis branded 7Kg heat pump tumble dryer in 2015 and i have been very pleased with it, I don't know who actually made it. Over the last few weeks I haven't had to use it because of the nice weather but when it rains our clothes are washed, dried and back in the wardrobe in a few hours.
Over the years The majority of the John Lewis models have been made by the Zanussi / aeg group
@@lords-electrical Thanks, I didn't know it was Zanussi/AEG, in fact i didn't know that Zanussi & AEG were now the same manufacturer !! but anyway, I also have a Zanussi ceramic hob electric oven & a Zanussi dishwasher, I've had the cooker for over 10 years and it is still working OK, I like Zanussi products.
excellent video, wish all reviews for things I want were like this. lol
Thank you for the kind feedback glad it was useful for you
Cheers from the States. I'm interested in the differences between our appliances and those in the UK, aside from sizing. Most Americans have vented dryers without heat pumps. I'm interested in a more efficient dryer because we are beginning to have electric price differentials here.
Hello i have one question cupboard and iron sign is not showed at display i have the dryer and struggling with this dryer
Not gonna lie, you are the Eminem of reading model numbers. MC PIRI PIRI
Hi I have bought this recently can you please let me know how does the care programme runs . I have been having sign on display for a while but manual book is little confusing. Kindly guide me on this
Does the water cleaning of the machine only work when you use the water drain hose ?
How do you go about solving the CRE message on the display for this model?
I have a new Samsung heat pump dryer and the matching washer and one feature I did not realise they had was that they talk to each other. 😀
When you move the clothes from the washer to the dryer, the dryer suggests the best drying option based on all the settings and data from the washer. Crazy stuff 😄
Lg does to and bosch too since years welcome in 2020
Che poi le lavatrici samsung sono pure pessime, io me ho una e non vedo l'ora di liberarmene.
Is there a way to connect the hose to kitchen sink drain?
Is there a video or explanation for clearing the annoying "Cre" code. It started showing up a week after we got it. Thanks!
Have you figured out how to display all the icons long enough to select them (eg the child lock,etc) or am I missing something obvious ? The fluff filter is in 2 parts. Thanks for the video.
ggggwwww at 20.56 BST on Thursday the 22/2/24.
We have a Bosch exxel condenser dryer and it’s very old but still it runs as smooth as day 1. Surprisingly quiet as well for its age. Beko heat pump will be our next dryer.
Great video
Can you show the Fisher and Paykel
I love instructions. For household appliances that is. Not for live. 😉
Would you recommend this model for mainly bedding drying? I’ve been looking around for heat pump tumble dryers and people have recommended reverse action tumble dryers. I was just wondering if specifically I should be looking for that or if a tumble dryer like this would be perfect regardless.
Great help . Thankyou
Glad this was helpful for you, thanks for the feedback 👍
Thank you for your video. I read the series 4 has a show drying rack. Does the series 6 also have this?
Hello! Do you know how to enter service menu on Bosch WTX87EH0EU, please?
How to fix cre code???
Hi. Does it leave water in the bottom filter after it has flushed the condenser. I had a very expensive Siemens Avantgarde, cost over £1000, it left water in the bottom filters, and I ended up buying a wet & dry vacuum cleaner to suck it out. The Senior engineer came out and said it was normal, but not ideal in my opinion. Siemens very kindly refunded my money for it, and I also bought the washer to match, and very pleased with it, although I was told it was actually made by Haier under license.I am thinking of buying an AEG heat pump tumble dryer, but can’t justify paying over £1200 for it, thanks, Paul
Wouldn’t trust AEG, £1000 washing machine lasted 6 days, AO took it away and replaced with a Miele
I've just purchased this model. I'm confused with instructions re water container. Do you only take the little black stopper out from back of water tank if. You are using a drain kit with machiine
In North America, our clothes dryers seem to have to be vented to the outside. Do dryers in Europe just recycle the exhaust air back into tumbler? Or do you also have to exhaust the air to the outside of the residence?
You can buy both here depending on where you want to place it, I have a condenser type and just empty the water tank and clean the fluff as normal . I give it a deep clean once a year
@@terrysidhu1078 Thank you….I did a bit more research on “ventless” condenser dryers and indeed they are now available in North America. Makes a lot of sense for high rise condominium buildings here in our big cities. Also, they seem to be much more energy efficient.
How does the dryer handle anti-tangling since it doesn't seem to have the reverse tumble action?
A lot of dryers will not be reverse tumble but will use specially designed paddles inside to help rotate the clothes to help reduce the tangling.
That is good to know, the machine in question is quite new and with 0 reviews, I am in the market for a new dryer and didn't know if this is the sensible one to buy.
Thanks for the video mate! have you got a shop by any chance?
Yes we have a couple of shops, 1 in Leicester and 1 in Rugby in Warwickshire.
What's the difference from WTWH7660GB ? Is one model an older one?
The WTW model is an older version of this model.
Hi mate, if you remove the bottom panel to expose where the heat exchanger is, is there a removable filter in there too? I know on the old model it was completely sealed off with no filter, but believe this model has as extra filter type thing in front of the heat exchanger that’s removable and can also be cleaned. Appreciate the video and any feedback pal 👍
Could be the serie 8 that I am thinking of. Not sure if this model has one too.
Just had a look and it is a sealed unit with no access available unfortunately. I normally prefer the models where you have access to the filters and heat exchange unit for cleaning purposes.
Ah that’s a shame. How important would you say it is to have a self cleaning model? I’m looking to purchase a heat pump tumble dryer but am concerned about not being able to remove the heat exchanger for cleaning. I know on the models that have access to it (non self cleaning models) you can clean the very front of the heat exchanger but what about the rest of it getting clogged up with crap with no way of cleaning it other than taking the dryer to bits and washing it that way.
I have the very same question. Have you figured it out?
@@est9949 Bought an LG self cleaning model in the end. Don’t like not being able to clean the heat exchanger, will start clogging up and result in poor efficiency and premature death of the tumble dryer and therefore is false economy in my opinion. Good for manufacturers and retailers pockets as you’ll have to buy a new one more often. Have also heard Bosch self cleaning models are notorious for clogging up regardless, but LG ones seem to be good from what I’ve read. Mine’s great just don’t overfill it or your clothes won’t dry properly.
I have an error code on my Bosch series 6 - CRE and I’m unsure what to do?
What is the Error code?
CrE
4:13 when hell freezes over
It says CrE
Explain the child lock
As an American, I don't understand this heat pump and condenser dryers. Are they strictly for energy efficiency? Typically we'd let a big pile of dirty linens accumulate before doing a large load, and 40 minutes for the whole lot is typical for a dryer (more than 2kg). 2 and a half hours would be absurd for drying only. Our dryers just heat the drum and vent the moisture to the outside.
don't waste time trying to understand this "technology",its total junk,runs for hours and hours and never gets things properly dry, stick with the good old conventional machines that get a load dry in 30 minutes.
Electricity is cheap in the States of America, so nobody seems to care about the efficiency of appliances. So, go for the typical huge top-load high-speed dryers.
All high end dryers have interior light, Its nothing new