Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Smart Home
  3. News

This little machine can clean your clothes with 10 liters of water and no power

Add as a preferred source on Google

Update: The Drumi is finally in production as of late September, but without an exact ship date. Yirego, the company behind the electricity-free device, told us in late October that engineers are working to resolve final issues.

“No manufacturer has had any prior experience making a product like Drumi because it is so new and different,” Petal Wang of Yirego told Digital Trends in an email. The project is a great example of why crowdfunded projects take longer than expected to arrive — and sometimes don’t arrive at all.

Recommended Videos

Here’s our original article on the Indiegogo project, which we last revisited in July 2016:

For a lot of people we know, their unmentionables are sort of the limiting reagent in the laundry equation. They’ll hold off washing their clothes for weeks, until they absolutely have to in order to avoid being shunned from society. It’s either that or go out and buy more underwear.

Wouldn’t it be nice if you could just do a superfast load of laundry, with a few select items, so you could lengthen the time between loads? Pretty soon, you’ll be able to with a foot-powered machine that takes just a little water and no electricity. The 15-pound, 22-inch-tall Drumi takes five minutes, 10 liters of water, and a little bit of soap to clean five pounds of clothes, or about six to seven items. And now, the final design of the Drumi has been released and slated for delivery by early 2017.

To use it, you lift the plastic lid, add clothes to the drum, along with five liters of water, then close the lid and add the detergent to it. Pump the pedal for two minutes, then push the button to empty the soapy water. Add another five liters of water, pump the pedal for another two minutes, release the water, then pump for an additional minute to act as a “spin cycle.” The pumping motion turns the rounded drum, tumbling the clothes inside.

The updated design of the Drumi promises to improve the stability and overall efficiency, as well as the aesthetics of the device. We tested it out in late December of 2015, and found a few kinks yet to be ironed out. While the capacity of the little machine hasn’t changed, the Toronto-based product design company says it’s created “a better laundry experience.” Included in the new features are a new flat-topped lid and built-in measuring markers. Further, rather than a set of side handles, you can now pick up the Drumi by way of its aluminum top handle. Finally, the interior drum has now been made removable, which allows you to clean the Drumi between washes.

While the Drumi isn’t meant to be a replacement for a full-sized machine, it can conserve water and electricity. A standard washer uses 27 gallons (about 102 liters) of water per load, while an Energy Star model uses 14 gallons (about 53 liters). Using the Drumi as a secondary washer can reduce your carbon footprint by roughly 10 pounds a week, according to Yirego, the company that makes the Drumi. Obviously, it works best if you can pair it with a no-energy drying method, too, like, say, the sun.

Yirego expects the Drumi to appeal to apartment dwellers, new parents who frequently wash baby clothes, and even campers.

Between the Drumi, LG’s Twin Washer, and the Dolfi, pretty soon there will be no excuse for you to leave your stinky gym clothes unwashed in your bag.

Updated on 07-21-2016: Final design of the Drumi released.

Jenny McGrath
Former Senior Writer, Home
Jenny McGrath is a senior writer at Digital Trends covering the intersection of tech and the arts and the environment. Before…
Amazon’s Echo Hub just became the control freak your smart home needed
The Amazon Echo Hub showing the main screen.

Smart homes are supposed to make life easier. In reality, they often leave you juggling half a dozen apps just to dim the lights, check who’s at the front door, and figure out why the thermostat suddenly thinks you’re living in the Arctic.

That’s the problem Amazon’s Echo Hub has always tried to solve. It’s essentially a dedicated touchscreen for your connected home, bringing your lights, cameras, locks, thermostats, alarms, and routines into one place. Now, Amazon is giving that experience a significant refresh with a redesigned interface that feels like the smart home dashboard many people have been waiting for. The update is rolling out as a free software upgrade for existing Echo Hub owners, and while it doesn’t change the hardware itself, it may make the device much more useful day to day.

Read more
Amazon’s Sleep Studio feature turns Echo devices into a soothing sleep-bringer for kids
It brings bedtime stories, meditations, and calming sounds from Calm, Headspace, and Moshi to Echo Kids devices as part of the Amazon Kids+ subscription.
Amazon Echo Kids Sleep Studio featured

Amazon has added a new bedtime feature, called Sleep Studio, to its Echo Kids lineup. It gives children access to a curated library of sleep-focused content, including guided meditations, soundscapes, and stories from Calm, Headspace, and Moshi. The feature is included with Amazon Kids+, a subscription that comes bundled with Echo Dot Kids and Echo Pop Kids.

How it works

Read more
Apple Home app’s new AI superpowers are about to make your life easier
Apple Home App New features

At WWDC 2026, Apple showed off how Apple Intelligence is making its way into the Home app. While the Siri AI announcements stole most of the spotlight, these Home updates might be the ones that quietly make your day-to-day life easier. Here’s the lowdown on everything coming to the Home app with the iOS 27 update. 

Tired of notification overload?

Read more