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Part 2: Electrifying Laundry Day
Effective Yet Gentle
 A specialized scrub machine equipped with coarse brushes rather than corrugated steel. Savin Machine Co., Cleveland, Ohio, c. 1930 (740357). Photo courtesy of Imager.
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Motorized versions of the manually-powered rocker scrub board washer
appeared as early as 1911. These devices, however, did not offer the option
of varying the vigorousness of the scrubbing action the way they had ben with
its manual predecessors. The brisk motion of the motorized rocker was
appropriate for cleaning work clothes, but less so for finer textiles. Indeed,
scrubbing machines like this one tended to tear textiles and pop buttons. By
1918, another type of technological breakthrough occurred. Rinso invented
powdered detergents for domestic use. Detergents helped disperse dirt and
grime without scrubbing. This development contributed to the obsolescence of
the rough electric scrub board.
 A reversible Sultan wringer mounted on Maxwell's Washer and Wringer, St. Mary's, Ontario, c. 1920 (920132).
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Wringers, too, were powered electrically. The operator, however, lost a
degree of control with this technological advance. Open wringer gears that
could no longer be manually controlled were hazardous. Gears, therefore,
were sheathed in a sheet-metal housing.
Still, powered rollers damaged
buttons, tore textiles and mangled fingers. In time, manufacturers introduced
reversible wringers (920132). Overload safety mechanisms also protected
hands, garments and the electric motor (920131). For example, when
garments were too thick to pass through the two rollers, a hook connection on
the wooden bar above the top roller released. This prevented the wringer
from jamming and overloading the electric motor.
 
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