Excellent price! I normally buy them when they are on special for $6.50 or so. Eco friendly and washes well enough.
Ecostore Lemon Dishwasher Powder - 1kg - $4.50 + Delivery ($0 with Prime/ $39 Spend) @ Amazon AU
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Reject Shop powder is $2/kg
WAIT!!! I have been paying $4 in Coles and no told me!!!
$4.05 with subscribe and save
How much is the Aldi one?
That doesn’t look like an eco product.
Apples and oranges.Yeah but this one actually works.
You're comparing Apple with Avocado here.
My wife does not allow putting our young baby's dishes in the dishwasher because of the dishwasher powder not being 'friendly' enough for baby.
Now I can!
The coles one does not contain "Does not contain chlorine bleach". Can you please advise what harmful substances it contain?
Apple and Avocado are both food and can help to fill your tummy. They are both not harmful, but they are different things and have different nutrients and hence not comparable.
Likewise for the dishwasher.
I think the conversation should stop here. You can choose what you like to buy, it is your own choice
That's a different brand, possibly with different ingredients, and can not be purchased with free delivery with Prime. Not a valid reason to neg the deal.
What a silly comment. They most certainly do not come from the same place — not even the same country of manufacture. The mods ought to replace your party hat with a dunce hat.
Even more silly is the comment above asking to advise what harmful content the Coles one has.
Amazon is matching Woolworths who have reduced the price to $4.50.
Would be OK if you stack with 10% cashback later today and use S&S to bring the price down to ~$3.70/kg.
Great thanks❤️
Their washing powder is cheap on amazon too.
How do these powder products compare to tablets?
We've been thinking of giving it a go, but the Choice review gave all the powders quite low scores. (I'm more interested in personal experience than Choice reviews though.)
Does Choice load the prewash with powder as well when they do the comparisons?
Not sure, I can't see that mentioned anywhere.
I do now know that they import standardised pre-stained plates from a factory in the Netherlands for their testing though. #funfact
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ll6-eGDpimU&t=2583s, bit long but well worth it.
CHEAPER and equally good. Allows you to dose according to dirty level of dishes.
I always used tablets because I just assumed that powder was a huge pain.
More recently it became hard to get good tablets for cheap so I tried the powder and separate rinse aid (also from Reject Shop.)
I have not had any issues and on my dishwasher the cycle is actually slightly shorter when it detects rinse aid in the dispenser.
I use it and it works just as well as the finish tablets I was using previously, less etching on the glassware as well - though that's more due to the correct amount of detergent being used now rather than too much being drained after the first cycle.
For an excessively in-depth review of how tablets work vs powder, check out: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ll6-eGDpimU
In my opinion it's better to use powder, although slightly annoying compared to just popping in a tablet.
The main reason is that tablets aren't used in the pre wash cycle, so you're effectively using the pre wash cycle with plain water when it should be used with detergent.
If I use tablets it's only on the quick setting which will avoid a pre wash.
Much better result with powder because you can add it in the first rinse cycle to remove most grease/oil/fat before the main wash cycle starts. It's cheaper too.
If your dishwasher doesn't have two dispenser doors, one for each cycle, just throw some powder at the bottom of the door for the first rinse cycle and put the rest in the tablet dispenser for the main wash cycle.
At the end of the day, regardless of powder vs. tablet it's mostly just the same sodium carbonate and sodium percarbonate concoction sometimes with additional additives such as sodium citrate. Tablets have the disadvantage of unnecessary additives such as the coating, dyes for marketing effect, etc.
Tablets are just powder combined with rinse aid, you're paying for convinience and nothing else.
Just curious, how many washes can 1kg of dishwashing powder do? I've only ever used tablets.
I am a heavy user (minimum twice per day and max 5 times per day). I need 2kg per month.
me too, i average 3 times a day. i have never used powder before.
DO TRY IT. At worst you will lose $4.
Restaurant?
Restaurant?
Not judging, but I am curious what scenarios call for using twice a day or even up to 5 times a day? This is coming from someone who lives alone so my perspective is obviously skewed
Brekky (usually cooked with messy egg etc), lunch and Dinna. If cooks something fancy like Eclairs or something something then one moar. If guests come to eat said Eclair n home made noodals, then one moar.
I don't wash anything by hand. Nothing.
Any good can someone do some research for me
how does this compare to Aldi tables?
I've used both Aldi powder and tablets, the tables just work way better than powder
Need to sprinkle a wee bit of powda on the inside and most of it in the dispenser.
Noobs don't know this.
I failed the dishwasher unit at uni so I didn't know this either
HAHAHAHA!
This is the only powder we use…. so awesome!
This is the worst powder I have ever used. Have to load heaps of it (including pre-wash) and still doesn't perform anywhere near a single Finish tab.
INTERESTING! How about Coles powda?
Its pronounced "pau-dere"
Haha that's too OG for ma hood.
How does this compare to Aldi Logix Platinum Dishwashing Tablets 40pk? 40 doses for $7.69 and never had dirty dishes afterwards. This works out to $4.50 for 51 doses.
think the amazon stocks are sold out. showing 12.95 now.
that was quick! missed out
What is this? Since when dishwasher uses powder?
damn ordered it yesterday, haven't shipped yet…cancelling and rebuying!