jr2712
Well-known member
I think I found the easiest (At least to me) way of keep clean the Maytag filter: I just wipe it with a damp 3M Microfiber cloth right after the end of the last load. All hair, lint and scum comes quick and easy.
Did you miss the part in my post where I actually did this over 30 years ago as a teenager and f-ed up the filter???A needle will not distort the very tough, rigid material the filter is made from. Maybe if you hammered a 16 gauge nail into them? But not a thin needle, by hand.
Well, there's a few threads here about me recently modifying my Maytag - adding a "warm rinse" button, which I prefer over the original forced cold rinse.I think your water temp is too cold or you're using way too much fabric softener. I never once had a filter caked up with fabric softener in 40 years of using these machines. I used Downy over 18 years ago and the filter was always clean at the end of the cycle. That was on insanely hard water getting as high as 33 grains during the summer months and before I had a tempering valve.
You’ve must’ve been using an ice pic.Did you miss the part in my post where I actually did this over 30 years ago as a teenager and f-ed up the filter???
Been there, done that, got the t-shirt. Trying to prevent others from making the same mistake.
No, glass head pin needles like this:You’ve must’ve been using an ice pic.
CLR is good to use to clear out the hoses pump impellors, and anywhere the water flows.Mine,built in ‘84, came from friends who did not know about the secret, hidden, unmarked filter on top of the agitator. They got it used and of course never knew it was there. Obviously I didn’t know about it either, until I came here. Of course it was stinking!
Mine is now about 2/3 clear and useable, the rest still clogged with mineral deposits. I’ve thought to maybe soak it in CLR? Eventually I’ll try some of the ideas here, especially the one that made it look brand new, and didn’t damage it.
Keith
It appears that I, and I suspect others, have noticed a repeated hatred/bias in your posts towards top load washing machines.Clogged agitator, mount filters, etc.
This is one of the major problems with top loading washers. They require such huge quantities of detergent and hot water to use them effectively, this is why the only way I’ll use a top load washer today is if I can use this huge investment of hot water and detergent by running it into another washer and washing a second or third load. This is the way top loader washers were designed to be used. They’re an out crop of wringer washers. People never threw the water away after one run of a wringer washer.
John L