1) An experimental microwave clothes dryer heats neither air nor cloth.
2) Rather, it heats water on clothes, thereby saving electricity and protecting delicate fibers by operating at a lower temperature.
3) Microwaves are waves that usually heat metal objects, but developers of a microwave dryer are perfecting a process that will prevent thin metal objects such as hairpins from heating up and burning clothes.
Which of the following, if true, most strongly indicates that the process, when perfected, will be insufficient to make the dryer readily marketable?
(A) Metal snap fasteners on clothes that are commonly put into drying machines are about the same thickness as most hairpins.
- if so, then the dryer would be marketable when the process is perfected
(B) Many clothes that are currently placed into mechanical dryers are not placed there along with hairpins or other thin metal objects.
- if so, then it's not a problem even when the process is not perfected
(C) The experimental microwave dryer uses more electricity than future, improved models would be expected to use.
- it doesn't matter if the dryer uses more electricity than future models. The end point is, even with this current model, it already uses less electricity than conventional dryers. Thus, it would still be more efficient and economical.
(D) Drying clothes with the process would not cause more shrinkage than the currently used mechanical drying process causes.
- This only states that no performance is sacrificed in the new dryer. A plus point, in fact for making the dryer marketable.
(E) Many clothes that are frequently machine-dried by prospective customers incorporate thick metal parts such as decorative brass studs or buttons.
I'll go with E. The process only involves not heating up thin metal objects. No mention is made of thick metal parts, so we do not know how the dryer will behave when such metal objects are thrown in along with the clothes.