![]() Now, going back to ‘innovation’, with the introduction of SmartThings Home earlier this year, Samsung are striving to tick all the green boxes with helping punters achieve a truly energy-efficient home – something useful to people in the UK right now. What’s more, Samsung’s machines are also designed with one eye on aesthetics, which may seem a little beyond the remit of a clothes-churner, but adding rather than detracting from the décor of your kitchen is always a good thing.Īs far as I can work out, there are currently about 25 different Sammy models available to the UK market, with prices starting at a quid under £400 for the 7kg capacity Series 5 WW70TA046TE/EU Ecobubble, rocketing up to the £970 for the Bespoke AI 11kg Washing Machine Series 8 featuring more bells and whistles than the annual International Morris Dancing Convention, so quite a bit of choice for those with moderately deep pockets. Samsung has an excellent reputation in this arena, renowned for the reliability of its models, alongside the company’s vast investment in staying ahead of the cleansing curve when it come to innovation. ![]() Both produce a staggeringly vast array of varying products for the domestic market, from phones to fridges to flatpanel TVs and, more importantly right now, award-winning washing machines. ![]() Where civil blood makes civil hands unclean.” Indeed, almost uncannily akin to all that but on the scene of Asian innovation, South Korea is king, and the Capulets and the Montagues, dignity-alike in this awful Seoul-based simile, are undoubtedly LG and Samsung. On a personal note, I have relied on the services of a Miele machine to keep me in crisply clean clothes for the best part of 15-years (and it wasn’t even a new machine when I got it) and it has never let me down.Īlmost inexplicably para-harking back to Romeo and Juliet again: “ Two households, both alike in dignity, in fair Korea, where we lay our scene. ![]() Prices for Miele washing machines start at £600 for the entry level WCA030 WCS Active and thunder upwards to £2800 for the all-singing, all-dancing wonder washer that is the WWV 980 WPS Passion. What’s more, with many models offering automatic, optimal dosing of detergent, cleaning protection against viruses and even smart-control operation through system app, you can relax safe in the knowledge that once you’d stuffed the drum full, you can leave the Miele to work it all out for itself, wash whatever is in at an exacting equilibrium of maximum efficiency for both stain-removal and eco-friendliness, whilst constantly keeping you up to date with its progress via your smartphone screen, regardless of where you are. Indeed, built to last and almost to impress, with freestanding and integrated models on offer, there’s something for every kitchen or laundry/utility room with aesthetics that, if you were some oddly sentient kitchen appliance, you would not kick out of bed. With machines that average out a lifespan of some 20-years, Miele may be at the pricier end of the spin-wash spectrum, but that’s because they run and run far longer than the false-economy you can be lured into with cheaper options. Today, Miele is renowned worldwide for the high-end high-quality of its domestic appliances, garnering all manner of industry awards each year for the almost unrivalled amount of innovation it pours into each new model. Headquartered in Gütersloh (Goo-tas-low), Germany, Miele has been doing the rounds as an appliance manufacturer since 1899, churning out cream separators and, erm, butter churns and an early type of washing machine, before finally unveiling its first fully automatic washing machine in 1956.
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