Fisher & Paykel Dishwasher Cycles Explained
Getting the most from your machine starts with understanding fisher-paykel dishwasher cycles and settings — the right program for the right load saves energy, protects delicate items, and delivers cleaner results. Modern Fisher & Paykel dishwashers offer between 5 and 8 wash cycles depending on the series, and each is optimized for specific load types, soil levels, and time constraints. The manufacturer’s Fisher & Paykel user guide for your model lists exactly which programs your unit includes.
Auto Cycle
The default for everyday loads. Fisher & Paykel’s AquaSensor technology measures water turbidity (cloudiness) during the pre-rinse and adjusts temperature, water volume, and cycle time automatically. For most households, this is the only cycle you need. Typical run time: 95–135 minutes.
Heavy Cycle
Designed for pots, pans, and baking dishes with baked-on food. Uses hotter water (up to 151°F) and extended wash times. Don’t use this for everyday loads — it uses significantly more energy and water than Auto.
Normal Cycle
A fixed-temperature, fixed-time cycle for moderately soiled everyday dishes. Unlike Auto, it doesn’t adjust based on soil level. Best when you know the load is consistently moderate.
Delicate/Glass Cycle
Lower water temperature (104°F) and reduced spray pressure protect wine glasses, fine china, and crystal. Run time is shorter since less heating is needed.
Express/Speed60 Cycle
A 60-minute cycle for lightly soiled dishes when you’re short on time. Uses more water and energy per minute to compensate for the shorter duration. Best for rinsed dishes that just need sanitizing.
Rinse & Hold
A quick cold rinse without detergent. Useful when you’re building up a full load over the day and want to prevent food from drying onto dishes.
Half Load
Available on select models. Reduces water and energy usage when you’re running a partial load. Load dishes in either the upper or lower rack (not both) for best results.
Modifier Settings
Sanitize
Raises the final rinse temperature to 155°F to eliminate 99.9% of bacteria. Adds about 10 minutes to the cycle. NSF-certified on most Fisher & Paykel models.
Extra Dry / fan-assisted drying
On Series 9 and Series 11 models, fan-assisted drying uses a heated drying cycle to absorb moisture and convert it to heat, delivering bone-dry results — even on plastics. On Series 7 and below, Extra Dry extends the heated drying phase.
Delay Start
Delays the cycle start by 1–24 hours. Useful for running the dishwasher during off-peak energy hours or having it finish right when you wake up.
Tips for Best Results
- Use Auto for 90% of your loads — it’s more efficient than manually selecting cycles
- Don’t pre-rinse dishes; detergent enzymes need food soil to activate
- Load according to your manual — improper loading causes most performance complaints
- Use the rinse aid dispenser; it’s essential for drying performance and spot-free results
- Clean the filter regularly to maintain drainage and wash quality
If a specific cycle isn’t performing as expected, or if the dishwasher is throwing error codes, check our error code directory or schedule a diagnostic visit.
Mastering fisher-paykel dishwasher cycles and settings: key takeaways
Lean on Auto for the vast majority of loads, save Heavy for genuinely baked-on messes, and reach for Delicate or Glass only when crystal and stemware are involved. Pairing the Sanitize or fan-assisted drying modifiers with the right base cycle is where Series 9 and 11 units really shine. If a program runs but cleans poorly or stalls, that’s a sign to look past settings — book professional service for a closer look.
Keeping cycle performance consistent on your Fisher & Paykel dishwasher
Even the smartest cycle can’t overcome a clogged filter or empty rinse-aid reservoir, so keep both in check and the AquaSensor will read soil levels accurately on every Auto run. Spinning the spray arms by hand now and then confirms nothing is blocking water from reaching the upper rack.
If a cycle ever forces a parts conversation, jot down the model and serial number from the rating plate on the inner door edge first. That number lets a parts supplier match the exact control board or sensor your Fisher & Paykel dishwasher uses, avoiding a wasted trip on the wrong component.