My husband takes great pride in his
family tradition of thriftiness. I have to admit, that can wonderful.
We have genuine antique glass door knobs throughout the house,
salvaged from alleys throughout the city. I can always find a twist
tie or small piece of string when I need them. Our bank account is
healthy.
But sometimes frugal crosses the line
into stingy.
When I was pregnant with our first
child, my husband remodeled our kitchen. It was tiny before, and not
much bigger afterward – maybe 125 square feet – but when he was
finished I had drawers to store things, shelves to store more
things, and he had somehow made room for a dishwasher. It wasn't
quite top-of-the-line, but a generous gift from my Aunt P made it
possible for us to buy a really nice machine. It had a disposer in
the bottom so stray food particles would be ground up and washed
away. The top rack was adjustable. The flatware basket was in the
door and could be removed for easy emptying. Boy did I love it!
Bottles, high chair parts, daily dishes – my miracle machine could
handle anything. So when we moved to our next house five years later,
there was no question: we brought the dishwasher with us.
Two years ago I started noticing a
little grime on my dishes. I took the dishwasher apart (thank
goodness for internet DIY instructions) and found a couple pieces of
broken glass and some bone bits in the bottom. I emptied a clogged
filter then put everything back together. Sure, the (now eight year
old) dishwasher was a little noisier than when we first got it, but
considering how often we ran the thing, it was doing pretty well.
Except, it wasn't. Gunk started building up. I was having to rinse
glasses before I put them away. I took it apart again but found
nothing.
We spent $100 to have an appliance
repairman take a look. He found nothing.
My mom learned that dishwashing soaps
had been reformulated to remove phosphates. I switched brands, then I
switched again. Noisier, dirtier. Over time the top rack broke, and
we jerry-rigged a repair. Some of the rubber coating on the racks
peeled off. We tried a second appliance repair place. Another $100,
glasses still grimy, plates not quite clean.
I started making noises about replacing
the dishwasher. I began reading reviews, assessing features. DH
finally heard and in May I came home from work to find a gaping hole
where the dishwasher had been.
There were three salvaged machines on
the back porch.
He installed the first one in June. It
didn't work. After three days of tinkering it was returned to the
back porch. The second didn't work, either. The third turned on and
filled, but wouldn't drain.
The kids learned how to manually wash
up. I did a lot of grilling to minimize dishes.
Mid-July I brought in Ken. Our favorite
repair guy, he'd fixed our fridge when a stray magnet caused the
motor to burn out. Ken came out, tinkered and futzed with number
three. He left and came back to replace the mother board. He checked
the plumbing. He visited three times (for only $175 total), but never
could get it to work. In the end it was exiled to the back porch with
the other two.
Two months had passed. DH was out of
used dishwashers. He offered our original troublemaker to Ken in
trade. Ken agreed. He came back
one more time, with a low-end machine of his own. He installed it,
plumbed it, ran it. No matter that there was no sanitize cycle. Who
cared about a pre-rinse stage. We had a dishwasher!
The kids and I had gotten into a
routine. We continued to wash the dishes by hand, afraid to jinx
ourselves. Finally, realizing that school was about to start, I
decided to switch back to mechanized cleanliness. DH was not happy.
Before I could wash the first load, he asked when Ken was going to
have the original dishwasher repaired and installed.
I gaped. Why, I asked, if we were just
having the original repaired, would we have gone through all that
nonsense with the other four? I was fine with the bare-bones box
under the counter. It washed, it drained, it was installed. DH would
have none of it. He thought I wanted our first dishwasher. By mid
August Old Faithful was back in place. Ken had taken it apart as best
he could, cleaned out the filters and washed the hoses. I sadly gave
Ken a final check for $75 and fearfully loaded it up. My fears were justified.
So now, for the low, low price of $450
in repairs I have my ten-year-old dishwasher back under the counter.
Sure, it's a little ghetto with the zipties holding the top rack
together, and the rust streaks where the protective rubber is gone.
And yeah, we have to rinse the dishes both before and after we run
the machine. But we're a thrifty family, and I'm not putting any more money into this. Although I
might spend $25 on a good counter-top dish rack. Doing the dishes by
hand builds character. Right kids?
Have you read Suburban Correspondent's string of posts on her dishwasher travails? You are not alone.
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