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7/12/2025, 5:46:23 AM
>>2930720
Dish washers have "garbage disposals" built in
You can totally hook up a dishwasher if you have a kitchen sink, all you need is a threaded tee fitting to go between your hot water supply and faucet, and then you can just stick the drain hose into the sink. Wire a 3 prong cord to the dishwasher so you can plug it into an outlet. The hard part is that dishwashers are typically designed to physically mount to the underside of a counter top, this prevents it from tipping over when you try to open the door. You can try to attach something to the back to weigh it down though. It's going to look janky, unless you build a cabinet for it specifically. You're not going to be able to add it to your existing cabinets without some non-temporary demo work.
Or you can just buy a camper/RV style dish washer that just sits on your counter top. I've used one of these and they work well for a single person, but can be tricky to hook up to a water supply because of the (usually) non-standard inlet.
Dish washers have "garbage disposals" built in
You can totally hook up a dishwasher if you have a kitchen sink, all you need is a threaded tee fitting to go between your hot water supply and faucet, and then you can just stick the drain hose into the sink. Wire a 3 prong cord to the dishwasher so you can plug it into an outlet. The hard part is that dishwashers are typically designed to physically mount to the underside of a counter top, this prevents it from tipping over when you try to open the door. You can try to attach something to the back to weigh it down though. It's going to look janky, unless you build a cabinet for it specifically. You're not going to be able to add it to your existing cabinets without some non-temporary demo work.
Or you can just buy a camper/RV style dish washer that just sits on your counter top. I've used one of these and they work well for a single person, but can be tricky to hook up to a water supply because of the (usually) non-standard inlet.
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