My husband and I think the dishwasher is wonderful. There have been tremendous improvements over the years since they first came out. Some say you no longer have to rinse but I don't want unnecessary food scraps clogging the washer and old habits die hard. But it is no longer the scrubbing I gave with the old washers, it is just a quick run under the tap. We have never actually bought a new one, we always wait till someone is moving and wants to get rid of the portable type on wheels that you just attach the hose to your sink when you want to use it. We ensure that it is a fairly recent model that is in good working order and we don't end up paying much for it, so you save money this way also besides that the newer ones seem fairly efficient in the use of water. Since we don't have a truck we were lucky that the last owners of it actually delivered it for us and all we had to buy was the appropriate sink adaptor for our faucet, under $10.00. A lot of people want to give away built in models but we checked and they often cut wires etc. to remove them and you have to pay alot for someone who knows wiring, plumbing and carpentery. Companies will charge a lot for the machine either second hand or new to cover this and then claim that they don't charge much for installation if you buy from them. The one we got is fairly new with no problems and we didn't pay much for it. We did see some fairly new ones for free in the papers also but you have to be fast and have your own truck or trailer to go right away and pick them up usually. But people will tend to hold ones for you that you agree to pay something for so you can get some local guy with a truck to get it for you. Of course you usually have to pay him something to.
You never saw glasses and crystal come so clean and shining from handwashing, and in todays machines you can wash your good parragon bone china dishes safely as long as you get one that has a range of settings from heavy pots to fine china. We had some parragon packed away for years in storage etc. and hand washing just didn't want to get all the heavy dust stain off. Maybe alot of soaking would of worked but we just right away decided to pop the whole set in the dishwasher and they came out smooth and sparkling clean in one go, shining like new. You couldn't put these in the original dishwashers, they would have gotten broken. I am so happy and my husband is so thrilled that he is popping every dish and glass mug crystal in the house in and thrilled with it and he doesn't feel that he is washing dishes. I am even thinking about putting ornaments in and even royal dolten figurines, because it is so gentle on them and everything is shining like new.
It saves time because you just pop them in and can go about doing something else while the machine is running. Some cycles are long, some short depending what you set it for. You can also wait to run it until it is full and you don't have dishes and bowls all over you counters and in your sinks.
Small amounts can be cleaned at a time but why waste the water. The instructions said no plastic but on the fine dish cycle we put our microwave plastic in that we use to cook with in the microwave and they also came out like new, I didn't recognize them. I thought they might melt from the heat but they didn't. I was also surprised that it doesn't use up all your hot water. When my husband was handwashing
dishes and there were clothes in the washing machine in the past, if I tried to take a shower and he was turning the taps on and off for the dishes, I would have sudden cold and hot water changes in the shower that were dangerous in the past. The dishwasher was on instead recently while the clothes washer was on and although I noticed some changes in the water in the shower it wasn't so dramatic or dangerous. Of course I guess always best not to be running any other water when showering, but in real life in hectic households this is not always the case. Hope this helps.
Also, since we move fairly often we can leave the dishwashers behind and keep getting even newer models for us at our new locations and not feel like we lost money on the deal and thus also allows for paying for a smaller moving van. Sometimes, we've taken one with us for a couple of years and being portable this is easily done too. The portable ones with the wood tops, also serve to give you extra counter space in the kitchen. Whereas built ins lose you counter space.