Techsoma Homepage
  • Reports
  • Reports
Home Apps, Gadgets, Tools & Softwares

HOW EVERYDAY THINGS WORK:The Washing Machine For Beginners

From the outside, all it does is spin. Here is what is actually happening inside.

by Ifeanyi Abraham
March 24, 2026
in Apps, Gadgets, Tools & Softwares
Reading Time: 5 mins read
How washing machines work

A washing machine looks, from the outside, like a box that spins clothes around in water. If that is all it does, how exactly is it getting the armpit stains and collar grime out?

Spinning is not really the point. The spin is the last thing that happens, and it is mostly just wringing water out. The actual cleaning happened long before the drum started moving fast.

Water and detergent come in first

The machine pulls cold or hot water in through a valve at the back, depending on your cycle setting. The detergent you loaded into the drawer gets mixed into that water as it enters the drum. This is where the chemistry begins.

Detergent is not soap. It is a surfactant, which means it is a molecule with two very different ends. One end is attracted to water. The other end is attracted to grease and oil. When detergent hits a stain, the oil-loving end latches onto the grease, and the water-loving end stays attached to the water in the drum. As the water moves, it physically pulls the stain away from the fabric. Plain water alone cannot do this.

The drum does more than spin

During the wash cycle, the drum rotates slowly and repeatedly, back and forth rather than continuously in one direction. This tumbling motion lifts clothes up and drops them back into the water, over and over. That mechanical action works the detergent into the fabric, pushes it through the fibres, and dislodges dirt that has settled into the weave.

For collars, armpits, and heavily stained areas, this is where most of the work gets done. The repeated tumbling combined with the surfactant chemistry loosens the grime that has bonded to the fabric. The hotter the water, the more effective this process is, which is why heavily soiled items get a hot wash and delicate fabrics get a cold one.

Rinse cycles remove what the wash loosened

After the wash cycle, the dirty water drains and fresh water comes in. The machine rinses the clothes multiple times to remove detergent residue along with the dirt it captured. Detergent left in fabric irritates skin, makes clothes stiff, and over time damages the fibres. The rinse cycle is doing more work than most people give it credit for.

The spin is last and it is purely mechanical

Once rinsing is done, the drum spins at high speed, sometimes over 1,000 rotations per minute depending on the machine. At that speed, centrifugal force pushes water outward through the drum holes and into the outer tub, where it drains away. The clothes end up damp rather than soaking wet, which shortens drying time significantly.

The spin does not clean anything. It is a very fast, very efficient wringer. That is its entire job.

Techsoma Africa

So why do some stains survive?

Because not all stains are grease. Blood, wine, grass, and ink bond to fabric differently and sometimes require enzyme-based detergents that break down proteins rather than just lifting oil. Some stains also set when they dry, meaning the longer a stained item sits before washing, the harder the job becomes. A washing machine is a chemistry delivery system as much as it is a mechanical one, and the chemistry has to match the stain.

What the modes on your machine actually do

Every mode on a washing machine is a preset combination of three things: water temperature, drum movement speed, and cycle length. The machine is not guessing. It is running a specific programme calibrated for a specific type of fabric and soil level. Understanding what each mode does means you will stop using Cotton 60 for everything and wondering why your gym kit keeps shrinking.

Using a common 7kg washer-dryer as the reference point, here is what each mode is actually doing:

 

Mode Best for Temp Spin
Cotton Everyday shirts, bedsheets, towels. The machine’s longest and hottest cycle. 60°C High
Synthetics Polyester, nylon, and mixed fabrics. Lower temperature protects the fibres. 40°C Medium
Delicates Silk, wool, lace, and lingerie. Gentle tumble and cool water only. 30°C Low
Quick Wash Lightly worn items or a refresh cycle. Not for heavily soiled clothes. 30°C Medium
Drum Clean No clothes. Cleans the drum itself. Run monthly to prevent odours. 90°C High
Wash + Dry Full wash followed by a tumble-dry cycle. Reduce load by half for best results. 40°C Medium

 

Cotton is the machine’s workhorse setting. It runs long, hot, and with vigorous drum movement because cotton fibres can take the punishment. This is where heavily soiled items, bedding, and everyday clothes belong.

Synthetics uses a lower temperature because polyester and nylon soften and deform above 40 degrees. The drum still tumbles but more gently, and the spin speed drops to prevent fabric stress.

Delicates is the machine running at its most restrained. The drum barely agitates. The water stays cool. The spin is slow enough that the clothes exit damp rather than wrung. This is the correct mode for anything with a handwash label.

Quick Wash is not a cleaning programme. It is a freshening programme. At 15 to 30 minutes, it does not have enough time or heat to remove genuine dirt. Use it for lightly worn items that just need a rinse and a tumble.

Drum Clean has no clothes in it at all. It runs at 90 degrees with the drum full of water to scorch away detergent buildup, mould, and bacteria that accumulate inside the machine over time. Run it every month or two. Most people skip it entirely and then wonder why their clean clothes smell musty.

Wash and Dry is available on combo washer-dryer units. It runs a full wash cycle and then transitions directly into a heated drying cycle without any intervention. The important caveat: the drying capacity of most washer-dryers is roughly half the washing capacity, so a 7kg wash load needs to be 3.5kg or less for the drying to actually work. Overload it and the clothes come out warm and still damp.

From the outside, a washing machine is a box that spins things. From the inside, it is running a precisely sequenced combination of chemistry, heat, and mechanical agitation that most appliance adverts never bother to explain.

Now you know.

ADVERTISEMENT
Ifeanyi Abraham

Ifeanyi Abraham

Ifeanyi Abraham is a communications strategist, AI product specialist, and award-winning journalist shaping narratives at the intersection of technology, media,...

Recommended For You

The MacBook Neo
Apps, Gadgets, Tools & Softwares

Apple’s MacBook Neo Is the Affordable Student Laptop the Company Should Have Built Years Ago

by Kingsley Okeke
March 23, 2026

For years, the cheapest way into the Mac ecosystem was a $999 laptop. Apple has now cut that price nearly in half, and the implications go well beyond a single...

Read moreDetails
AirPods Max 2

Apple introduces AirPods Max 2 with advanced features

March 19, 2026
Samsung galaxy unpacked 2026

Everything Samsung Dropped at Galaxy Unpacked 2026 (S26 Prices in Naira + Key Features)

February 26, 2026
X for developers

Why Developers, Founders, and AI Builders Actively Use X in 2026

February 24, 2026
Saas-Subscriptions-are-Cracking-in-2026.webp

SaaS Subscriptions Are Cracking in 2026: Burner Emails, AI Agents, and the Alternatives Winning Now

February 24, 2026
Next Post
OpenAI Kills Sora: The AI Video App That Shook Hollywood Is Being Shut Down

OpenAI Kills Sora: The AI Video App That Shook Hollywood Is Being Shut Down

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

ADVERTISEMENT

Subscribe to our Newsletter

Recent News

OpenAI Kills Sora: The AI Video App That Shook Hollywood Is Being Shut Down

OpenAI Kills Sora: The AI Video App That Shook Hollywood Is Being Shut Down

March 24, 2026
How washing machines work

HOW EVERYDAY THINGS WORK:The Washing Machine For Beginners

March 24, 2026
Egypt Open RAN training and Angola Startups Bill give Africa a fresh tech boost

Egypt Open RAN training and Angola Startups Bill give Africa a fresh tech boost

March 24, 2026
Moniepoint acquires Orda Africa to give restaurants  a better way to sell and get paid

Moniepoint acquires Orda Africa to give restaurants a better way to sell and get paid

March 24, 2026
Halter cow collar

This Startup Put a $2B Price Tag on a Cow Collar. Africa Has 300M Cattle and A Herdsmen Crisis Linked to It.

March 24, 2026

Where Africa’s Tech Revolution Begins – Covering tech innovations, startups, and developments across Africa

Facebook X-twitter Instagram Linkedin

Quick Links

Advertise on Techsoma

Publish your Articles

T & C

Privacy Policy

© 2025 — Techsoma Africa. All Rights Reserved

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result

© 2026 JNews - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by Jegtheme.