[Electronics-Talk] dish washers and labeling them

Tom Evans tevans2003 at sbcglobal.net
Mon Jan 30 00:04:25 UTC 2023


Ashley, my apartment specializes in cheap and old and I guess that’s good. I just looked and have a whirlpool with a big dial that I’ve probably had for seven years. I just listen for it to be done and to save the energy and making the dishes 2000° then I just unload it. I turn it until it starts at about 11 o’clock on the dial and away we go. I’ve recommended before for people to find that big warehouse that only sells supplies like dishwashers, ovens etc. and they can get anything as compared to a Home Depot with a kid who was just hired yesterdayAnd they’re flushing through what they make money on

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> On Jan 29, 2023, at 3:49 PM, Ashley Bramlett via Electronics-Talk <electronics-talk at nfbnet.org> wrote:
> 
> Hi all,
> 
> What dish models are somewhat accessible? We have one that is flat paneled; I live with sighted people and I’ve never started it.
> I guess the only way to make a dish washer semi accessible is to label it with loc dots or something; I say semi accessible because we cannot see what cycle its on or other things on the panel. 
> 
> We have a medium sized Maytag black dish washer. 
> 
> I have low vision and use that to determine what the dish washer is doing to some extent.
> Most dish washers have lights on them. Different lights mean different things. With low vision, I can only see them very close up. It has a small light for completing the dish washer cycle. 
> My job is often unloading the dish washer so I look for that little one light to indicate the cycle is done. Two lights would mean its still on the steam dry cycle. There is no  way to listen for it since the drying  cycle is quiet.
> 
> What do you do about using dish washers? Do you pick one with a flat panel and just label it?
> Did you buy a dish washer which beeps when it finishes running or something like that?
> 
> Gone are the days with buttons and knobs. When I was real young, we owned a dish washer with actual buttons and I think a knob or two. That was maybe 25 years ago! I’m a young adult still; but things have changed.
> Many of them have touch screens now adays which is not accessible.
> We need a panel with stable buttons that stay the same in order for labeling to make sense.
> 
> 
> 
> I have a feeling our dish washer will break in a year or two. When we bbuy a new one, I hope it will be accessible or at least something that can be labeled to make it semi accessible.
> 
> Thanks.
> 
> Ashley
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