FINALLY! I've been researching videos focused on heat pump dryer reviews. YOU, SIR, are the FIRST reviewer who specifically explained WHY a heat pump dryer should NOT be placed in a cold room. My current "laundry room" is an unheated outdoor aluminum shed, where the winter temperatures can get as low as, or below 20˚F ( -6.666˚C). I DO have a 2nd bedroom in which no one has slept in since I purchased this house 7 years ago. There's room in that bedroom for a heat pump dryer. Thank you, Wade. You've answered my biggest question and effectively ended my search. 💕
Great explanation, thank you. One thing which would be helpful for your next video is maybe mention fabric care as a lot of women would make their decision based on whether their gentle fabrics would be damaged more by a condenser compared to a heat pump for example. Thank you again.
Best is Vented, unless you don't have a vent outlet or sth. Vented is the fasted one to dry and affordable. Condenser and Heat Pump both are too slow.. might as well just dry them outside unless you don't get much sunlight where u live
@@George-r8b9j Vented is much lower btw. Maybe even half.. compared to a vented dryer they are slower. For vented they just remove the moisture.. for condenser they have to do extra work to condense the water and it's not as fast as just venting it out. .
If you haven't got a lot of money to spend on a tumble drier, you should buy the more expensive heatpump drier because you will save a fortune in electricity costs as it uses 3x less energy.
IMO the video would have been a lot better if it contained some more detailed and factual information, like how long they'd take on average for the same load, what the power consumption would be, etc. You could even take it a step further and put head to head models from different price brackets, ie best budget, mid, and premium picks... Basically, turn it into a more proper review of various models. The video would have taken more prep work, but the result would have been a lot more valuable information. The info this video has is useful, but frankly, it is nothing more than the main points on any website you get when you google "vented vs codenser vs heat pump dryer".
Heat pumps have sensors and stop after clothes are dried…while condenser dryers have fixed time programs so they take long and use lot of heat so some type of fabrics get damaged while with heating pumps everything is more safe
Utterly nonsensical explanation of how a heat pump dryer works. The air goes through both sides of the heat pump, it is completely a closed loop. The cold side of the heat pump condenses the moisture (and quite well since it is below ambient air temperature) and this air goes right into the hot side and back into the drum. It's less heat overall and more gentle on clothes but takes more time. I know that Miele has an extra radiator for the hot side to release some heat into the room, maybe some other brands have this as well.
FINALLY! I've been researching videos focused on heat pump dryer reviews. YOU, SIR, are the FIRST reviewer who specifically explained WHY a heat pump dryer should NOT be placed in a cold room. My current "laundry room" is an unheated outdoor aluminum shed, where the winter temperatures can get as low as, or below 20˚F ( -6.666˚C). I DO have a 2nd bedroom in which no one has slept in since I purchased this house 7 years ago. There's room in that bedroom for a heat pump dryer. Thank you, Wade. You've answered my biggest question and effectively ended my search. 💕
WOW!!😮 you broke it down so good!, I subscribe😃😁🫡🫡🫡🫡
Thank you 😃
thank you so much for a very simple and precise explanation!
Great explanation, thank you. One thing which would be helpful for your next video is maybe mention fabric care as a lot of women would make their decision based on whether their gentle fabrics would be damaged more by a condenser compared to a heat pump for example. Thank you again.
Russel Brand sells washer dryers now?
Best is Vented, unless you don't have a vent outlet or sth. Vented is the fasted one to dry and affordable. Condenser and Heat Pump both are too slow.. might as well just dry them outside unless you don't get much sunlight where u live
How is the drying quality? Does it provide crispy dry cloths?
@@shiplu.mokaddim crispy? If it’s auto stop then normal dry (fully dry) not crispy damaged.
@@notmimul I read 1 hour to fully dry for condenser that is not slow, even 3 hours is not slow.
@@George-r8b9j Vented is much lower btw. Maybe even half.. compared to a vented dryer they are slower. For vented they just remove the moisture.. for condenser they have to do extra work to condense the water and it's not as fast as just venting it out. .
Been using a "fusion dryer" for 5 years, works great and energy is free.
😂 you legend
i prefer the condencer dryer to be honest.
This is the opposite of the lords electrical asmr experience.
Haha, sorry i am oppositeto his channel. I love Andrews videos, top guy 👍
Thank you. You answered all my questions!
excellent and informative. Ty
Do heat pump dryers release moist air into the room?
How much slower is a heatpump dryer vs vented dryer comparing same load?
It could take twice as long to do the load 👍
Can you put a dryer in the garage?
If you haven't got a lot of money to spend on a tumble drier, you should buy the more expensive heatpump drier because you will save a fortune in electricity costs as it uses 3x less energy.
Very helpful. Thanks.
Thank you
IMO the video would have been a lot better if it contained some more detailed and factual information, like how long they'd take on average for the same load, what the power consumption would be, etc. You could even take it a step further and put head to head models from different price brackets, ie best budget, mid, and premium picks... Basically, turn it into a more proper review of various models. The video would have taken more prep work, but the result would have been a lot more valuable information. The info this video has is useful, but frankly, it is nothing more than the main points on any website you get when you google "vented vs codenser vs heat pump dryer".
Thanks for your comment 👍 I may do another more detailed review
Great video!
Thanks!
Condenser vs heat pump. On average how much longer are we talking?
❤
Good
Jonathan Davis sells electronics now? :))
I need one my outdoor garage which one is best
Vented if its in a non heated room 👍
Heat pumps have sensors and stop after clothes are dried…while condenser dryers have fixed time programs so they take long and use lot of heat so some type of fabrics get damaged while with heating pumps everything is more safe
You are wrong. Condenser does have sensors. LG condenser tumble dryer has it
condenser and vented have had sensors for years
Hair, beard, glasses and then chest hair.
Always go for a tumble dryer that has the capability to dry your clothes
Your welcome
Hahaha
Sooooo none of them then.. 😂😂😂😂
talk us through or SHOUT us through?
Utterly nonsensical explanation of how a heat pump dryer works. The air goes through both sides of the heat pump, it is completely a closed loop. The cold side of the heat pump condenses the moisture (and quite well since it is below ambient air temperature) and this air goes right into the hot side and back into the drum. It's less heat overall and more gentle on clothes but takes more time. I know that Miele has an extra radiator for the hot side to release some heat into the room, maybe some other brands have this as well.