NHdisneylover
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Feb 26, 2007
- Messages
- 18,122
You guys are putting a lot of trust in your mechanical products.
Washers spring leaks, hoses break, motors burn up. Dryers are pumping in 220 volts into a large metal box with massive heat elements that rely completely on a revolving drum that is usually driven by a tiny little elastic band that can and does break on occasion. The clothes stay in one spot and can catch fire, if stationary. Leaving the house while either of those are operating, can create one heck of a surprise when you return home or (hopefully) wake up in the morning. Just saying!
They do have safety shut offs and they are pretty reliable, but, it is also a man made device that I do not trust completely. Course this is easy for me to say because I am single, and do one load of wash per week, everything included...never sort and have never had a problem.
I suppose, but the odds of an issue with a well maintained and properly ventilated appliance are very low--so I will take the risk.
I have dealt with three water damage situations n homes that i have lived n (one was water in the upstairs that came through to my basement apartment, others were my homes):
2 times the little hose running to a toilet broke and water just keep going out of that (this is what had 5 inches of standing water in my basement apartment in addition to the damage in the apartment it was in and about three inches of standing water in a basement of a house we owned in Detroit).
Once the; line to the icemaker in the fridge burst.
None of those are really thing you can turn off when you leave the house--unless you just shut off the water main when you leave.