1966 Kenmore coin operated washing machine

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Again, GREAT save Marty!   That coin-op KM is very unique and really cool!  

 

Interesting there is no "control panel / back splash" type of thing like on all other coin-op washers I've seen.

 

How does it look on the under side?   Lightly or heavily used?

 

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Did you get those pink Frigidaire coin-op twins after all?

 

Kevin

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Marty -

That machine is in really nice shape! Someone took care of it, which is obvious.

This is quite a bit like the machines that I remember as a kid, though I'd have sworn that the coin mechanism was on the right side. There were several side by side so I could have easily brain-jumbled that.

The machines I saw had little metal "consolettes" on the back, which were simply thin brushed metal plates that stood up a few inches so the machine wasn't back-less. Some of Kenmore's entry-level home washers had these too. They may have said something like "SEARS Kenmore Automatic Washer" on them but not much more than that. I do not recall the medallion however.

There can't be many of these hanging around!! Sears made an effort to market their coin-op units in the 1980s, and they were including them in the home catalogs, but they seem almost non-existent now.

Is that one of those double-coated gray tubs? It looks good with the black RS in the center.

Were there more of these? Where there was one, there are/were usually others!

Gordon
 
Definitely a rare bird---with an off-balance buzzer, even. Can you imagine what a laundromat full of these puppies would sound like? The buzzer on our 1960 Model 80 used to make me jump...and I was used to it! These machines were no stranger to the the out-of-balance load.

Cool find! You get bonus points for this one.
 
1966 Kenmore Commerical Washer

Cool save Marty, that has to be a very rare machine today, even in its day Sears did not get much of the coin-op machine sales. 

I would bet that the switch for water temperature was supposed to be a knob and someone replaced it with a toggle switch, it would be easy to see if you check the parts list. The round medallion on the left side had been used on basic home models since the mid 1950s, very cool.

 

Gordon that is indeed the gray double coating on the wash basket, that was a really good coating that they used and the ones that we saw in the early 80s also had this extra coat on the inside of the outer tubs, we should order some of these tubs, LOL.

 

I still have a customer that has a pair of mid 80s KM commercial washer & dryer in a small 6 unit apartment building near Dupont Circle in NW Washington DC. I get a call every few years to fix something on them. It is usually a problem with one of the coin slides or complaints about the speed of the gas dryer because of it having a 30 foot long vent, but the machines have had surprisingly few problems.

 

Out of balance BD KMs, if the machine is properly installed and leveled it should seldom ever trip the OOBS. I always thought it interesting that WP built millions of BD washers for Sears with an OOBS and millions of WP branded washers and only a few WP machines ever ever came with an OOBS, and those were all TOL machines before 1962. In reality the OOBS was just an unnecessary sales gimmick that Sears tried to convince its customers was necessary, I must have removed several hundred of them from Sears washers.
 
@ Unimatic 1140

Yep.... Same Here!!!

I knew Sears were making and marketing Coin-Op Washers, but not as far as the mid 1960's, although, I did see a vintage Sears Coin-Op Washer before (many years ago in South Carolina), but the one I saw had a Backsplash Panel on it, and the Coin Shute was actually on the right. It had a lid handle on it similar to this one, but I also think that THAT model was either a late 1960's to early 1970's model.

Nothing like the Kenmore Coin-Ops I've been seeing since the 1980's....

--Charles--
 
I had a similar Kenmore washer, home version that we brought back from Tulsa, OK some years ago. I've never seen a KM coin-op this age, KM's are very rare in the coin-op wild around here. Maytag had that all pretty well locked up for many years.

Great find - Love the emblem with a light.
 
@ Gansky1

Same here about the emblem.

I guess that the 1966 Kenmore Coin-Operated Washer is a 1-Speed/1-Cycle Number. Because if this was a 2-Speed Washer, then I guess that would've been indicated somewhere on the machine, right??

As for dominance of the Coin-Op Market, seeing a Coin-Op full of Kenmore Machines would've been a rare breed indeed. Back in the day, where I am from, they were usually full of Norges, Maytags or Speed Queens, with Maytag or Speed Queen usually dominating the market.

--Charles--
 
In NJ when I was little most of the coin-ops were solenoid Speed Queen. Down the Jersey shore I remember Speed Queens and some beautiful coin-op Frigidaire. One laundromat I remember had Unimatic coin-ops, this was the first and last time I had ever seen a Unimatic in action. The next time I would see a Unimatic wouldn't be for 25 years later!

Florida laundromats had many Super-Duty Frigidaire 1010rpm spin coin-op washers.
 

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