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From the page: "Xeros Ltd. is on the verge of saving us a LOT of water. Their new washing system (prototype stage) uses nylon beads to tumble wash clothes with 90% less water than conventional washers. The machine also uses significantly less detergent and eliminates the need for tumble... more
Reviewed by thetechguru2006 Jul 01, 01:21pm ( 24 reviews ) • inhabitat.com
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- Reviews of the site
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Reviewed by CandySkunk on Aug 03, 9:52pm
wouldn't those plastic things get stuck in your clothes?
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Reviewed by br79 on Aug 03, 10:01am
cool idea for an almost waterless washing machine.
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Rated by WordsnCollision on Jul 05, 7:29am
Xeros, doesn't use Xenon, not made by Xerox, approved by Xenu.
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Rated by 84productions on Jul 01, 11:57pm
Inhabitat & Virtually Waterless Washing Machine Cuts Water Use...
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Rated by downgoesfrazier on Jul 01, 10:51pm
Been waiting for this kind of advancement.
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Rated by VengeanceNow on Jul 01, 5:03pm
Virtually Waterless Washing Machine Cuts Water Use by 90%
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Rated by madhollywood on Jul 01, 4:38pm
Dang is right! I wonder if this could solve the CA water shortage in one fell swoop.
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Rated by QuentinsOnTheWay on Jul 01, 4:22pm
would love to see these become readily available
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Rated by thetechguru2006 on Jul 01, 1:21pm
From the page: "Xeros Ltd. is on the verge of saving us a LOT of water. Their new washing system (prototype stage) uses nylon beads to tumble wash clothes with 90% less water than conventional washers. The machine also uses significantly less detergent and eliminates the need for tumble drying. They claim that if all the homes in the US switched to their system, the carbon offset would be like taking 5 million cars off the road and it would save 1.2 billion tons of water per year - the equivalent of 17 million swimming pools. Dang!"