

Because Japanese homes are typically small, you'll seldom find a dryer accompanying the family washing machine, thus resulting in a sea of clothesline-dried laundry covering entire neighborhoods. The archaic practice of drying one's clothes outside--even in the winter, rain and during pollen season--makes even less sense in the technology forward confines of Japan. The Somela Fast Dehydrator offers a solution to this chink in Japan's tech armor by providing a tiny drying solution that acts fast.
The device can dry clothes in just 3-5 minutes and doesn't use heat that might damage delicate items. The only problem is that this is a device that requires some manual interaction, including holding clothes while the device pulls, so unless you have a few extra hours on hand to dry items one-at-a-time, letting Japan's pollutants into your air-dried clothes might actually be the more attractive solution. If, on the other hand, you're not afraid of some good old-fashioned labor, the Somela can be yours for 18,000 yen ($173) here.
Via Rakuten
By okeribok at 4:05 AM ON 05/01/08
Looks an awfull lot like a regular centrifuge, like these by AEG (http://www.aeg-electrolux.de/node145.asp?CategoryID=159) that have been in production since the bronze-age.
By Brewski5 at 6:18 PM ON 05/01/08
From the description, sounds like an old wringer/washer, without the washer part.
By Ledroit at 4:46 AM ON 05/08/08
Do you send me a compleet documentation and the price here in Belgium Europe?
Ledroit:
Do you send me a compleet documentation and the price here in Belgium Europe?...More »