Lex Foutish
Registered User
- Messages
- 825
Not if they are on a studded partition wall.Is that not what radiators are for?
I suppose that'd work too if you turned on the rads in all the rooms to take a full load and didn't mind burning oil unnecessarily. I dont know about your house but, in mine, my rads downstairs go cold a while after I've turned the heat off! I reckon they'd dry a lot faster on the airer in the middle of the room with the warm air about them than they would on a cold rad.Is that not what radiators are for?
Anyone notice increased moisture/condensation in the room during "drying days"?
I can't understand why anyone would choose to dry clothes indoors, whether on a radiator, clothes airer or in a tumble dryer. My washing goes straight out on to the line where they dry without using electricity unnecessarily or making my house look like a laundry! Absolutely nothing beats the smell of laundry fresh from the line.
Not if they are on a studded partition wall.
I suppose that'd work too if you turned on the rads in all the rooms to take a full load and didn't mind burning oil unnecessarily. I dont know about your house but, in mine, my rads downstairs go cold a while after I've turned the heat off! I reckon they'd dry a lot faster on the airer in the middle of the room with the warm air about them than they would on a cold rad.
But each to their own....
I have, I started to get damp coming up the walls in my spare room where I used to have my airer
Anyone notice increased moisture/condensation in the room during "drying days"?
You put them on rads completely wet?would that not cause condensation damp/mold? I dry on line and in wet weather on a bath airer and when almost dry I air them on rads. am I wrong?as for me, I use the rads
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