2010 Admiral-pool washer and dryer

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kenmoreguy64

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Jan 30, 2008
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Location
Charlotte, NC
I have been intrigued by inexpensive washers for quite some time. I remember in high school in the 80s when an appliance store in Denver would advertise in the Rocky Mountain News every couple days - they'd offer either an absolute BOL GE single cycle washer or a Frigidaire. Both were offered at $249.99 and were single knob models. I was fascinated by them. Kenmore and Whirlpool had them too, but they were more expensive.

Fast-forward to 2010 when I saw a thread on here about two months ago discussing the merits of an Admiral washer available at Home Depot. Not a BOL machine in the same sense as the one-cycle wonders I mentioned above, but the machines went on sale again for $259 ($239 for the electric dryer), so their prices anyway are reminscent of 28+ years ago. $498 for a decently featured washer/dryer pair in 2010 amazed me, so in a weak moment, I hit the 'buy' button online.

The machines arrived yesterday. Not sure what I'm going to ultimately do with a brand new washer and dryer when I'm accustomed to using machine 30 years old or older, but they should be fun.

For now they're staying in their boxes. Pics to follow....

Gordon
 
The Local ABC Warehouse still has one of these for sale at $197.

I've always had a special love for BOL appliances myself! This Roper has one water level and one temperature. There is no hot water inlet. :)

pulsator++4-19-2010-09-20-58.jpg
 
Bol is the way to go

Maybe the Roper is the way to go. You could use a "y" adapter and attach the cold inlet to hot and cold and use the knobs on the "y" to select your water temperature. No more automatic lowering of the hot water temp, if that's what you want.
 
I wanted one of those Roper machines, and the first time the Admirals were on sale I said "no", but the overall value just astounded me. There is a dealer in Charlotte which has offered the Ropers, but when I tried to buy one they wouldn't sell them. I found a store in Atlanta that had them, but they were $298.

I was amazed that is has only one inlet valve, and yes, as Martin says above, you have total control of temperatures that way. I'd still like one of these Ropers....
 
Jamie -

One of the cooler things about that Roper is they have a seldom seen agitator - it's shorter than the usual one-piece straight vane or surgilator, and has these massive fins on the top, just under the water surface.

Gordon
 
Nice machines, Gordon! They're definitely all Whirlpool under the hood and well equipped for the price. Anyone on a budget looking for a decent washer-dryer pair would be advised to take a close at these. I like the layout of the consoles. They're attractive, uncluttered, and easy to read. It appears the wash machine also has a two-speed motor, which accomodates most washing needs. Wow! I can't get over the value, either!
 
Kewl.. and a pretty good buy it would seem.

So Gordon, are these going to be "time capsules" staying packed away in the boxes, only to surface many, many years after the this type of water hording, agitator machine has been extinct???

Kevin
 
Rob - I thought of you and your Kenmore 500 fiasco when reading the owner's manual for this machine. It has the three 'every-day' cycles, but the Gentle cycle doesn't seem gentle to me. It runs with high-speed agitation apparently, and the only thing on the machine that uses the low-speed motor capability is the spin in the Perm Press cycle. I will yield to Whirlpool's near 30-years of history with these machines and figure they know what they're doing, but I don't know why you'd offer a machine with a Gentle cycle and it operate at warp-speed agitation. Seems to me that the Regular cycle should be termed "Heavy Duty" and the Gentle should wash on low-speed and be called Normal/Gentle depending on the time setting. This is how my 1993 Kenmore is set-up and that seems to make more sense. This may not have worked for Kenmore though (not sure how consumers reacted to that set-up), as using the low-speed Normal cycle on high water levels is very unremarkable. I learned to use Normal for medium loads, and Heavy Duty for full loads. Using a medium water level with high-speed agitation results in dizzying turn over.

The owner's manual for this washer is underhelming to say the least. Nothing in the manual applies to this machine, and all the comments are in generalities, including the explanation of cycles. It says that not all features are found on every model, so perhaps my actual results will be better or different! I am going to have a bit of separation anxiety from the Belt-Drives if I begin to use this machine on a regular basis.

Kevin -

I don't know about these babies. If they remain in my garage instead of going to storage, they'll likely be unboxed and used this summer. I think curiosity is eventually going to get the better of me. If I put them away, then yes, one day 10 years from now they could be making their debut.

What would be fun is to bring my 1993 DD out of hybernation again and compare it side by side to this washer in terms of noise, etc. People seem to be saying that DDs have become louder, and perhaps they have. A relatively unused 17-year old DD would be cool to compare to a 2010 DD.
 
Gordon that is a fun washer nice man...
On gentle cycle since it washes fast does it pause and agitate again ?
My friends have time share at the shore at the end of summer,
We have a Whirlpool BOL mode down there and on the short cycle it does the wash and pause feature.
Here is the machine.

aldspinboy++4-19-2010-19-28-39.jpg
 
Manuals/Tech Sheets

The owners manuals and tech sheets for the new machines are awful. Like you said everything is a general description. Maybe that is why they are paying us for Customer Instruct call now.
 
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