$75 for the pair, like having a license to steal

Automatic Washer - The world's coolest Washing Machines, Dryers and Dishwashers

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Mark:

If there is one thing I've learned from buying appliances on Craigslist, it is this:

If the photo and description leave any doubt whatsoever whether the appliance is White or Almond -

It's Almond. :)
 
I'm just thankful to see a craigslist seller who's wise enough to advise that both machines are electric, just in case anyone might be looking for a gas washer.
 
. . . over Miami

Mark, weren't those gasoline washers though?  I knew about those, but figured that probably the only group of people who did were all members here!  If the wringer pictured above runs on LP or natural gas, it's the first one I've ever seen.
 
I was just trying to introduce a bit of snark.  Sorry if it irritated anyone.

 

But now you have me thinking....

 

It would be kind of fun to retrofit a gasoline Maytag with an engine that ran on LP or Natural gas.  I will do some research to see if those Briggs and Stratton 4 cycle engines can be converted.  Oh Ben...I think we have a project! :)
 
Wow a Gasoline Washer or NG or LP

Now that is a horse of a different color for certain...so for places off the grid with no electrical connection from utitlties..sounds like the Twilight Zone episode where the earthlings landed on the planet of GIANTS in the attick of the old lady which somebody said was Agness Moorehad (later Grandma Andora on Bewitched) That would have been perfect for a gasoline powered washer or ng or lp. Very cool idea be great to have a video of them.
 
Gasoline operated wringer washers were once commonplace in rural areas before the days of rural electrification.  I know for a fact that two sets of my great-grandparents had Maytag Grey-Ghosts with gasoline multi-motors.  Maytag switched over to using a standard-issue Briggs and Stratton 2 HP 4 cycle gasoline engine in about 1960 and continued to produce gasoline powered wringers on order (I believe it was only the N towards the very, very end) up until nearly the end of production in 1982.

 

Here's a YouTube video I found of a 1927 Maytag washer powered by a multi-motor.  The gray tube you see is the exhaust line.  All Maytag washers with gasoline engines had about a 10 foot metal exhaust tube that you could thread out a window or door if you wanted to use the washer indoors in inclement weather.

[this post was last edited: 9/19/2013-22:49]

 

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