Thank you for the kind comments, everyone! I smiled reading through all the comments knowing that the set has made many of you as happy as they have made me.
The more I learn about what goes on with restoring them makes me appreciate them so much more
Henry - When I first found this site back in August 2004 I would marvel over Robert's 1957 Lady K restoration photo guide, and walked through it several dozen times over the following years. I told myself then that if he could do that I knew eventually I could do the same. And thus, a passion ensued.
Who would have thought that regular 3 in 1 oil would provide superior results?
Dan - certainly not me, or at least not before I figured out what the actual viscosity of the 3-In-One was. There are a few pneumatic tool oils that fall in the 15 to 20 range that I would have liked to have tried but time was starting to run out during the testing phase. Maybe the next collector could give a few a whirl. You should pick up a bottle of GL-1 90w oil. I would love to hear your thoughts.
the writing which had to have taken hours alone to accomplish
Mike - oh goodness, the time! LOL I learned with the Bendix restoration write-up that it is easier and better to write the full thread offline, over the course of several days. It provides the time to make necessary edits, revisions, and additions, however it appears I would still benefit from a true editor.
I really enjoyed the added short clip of the agitation with the lint filter accessory attached on the agitator
Christina - I'm so glad you caught that small clip! The filter dramatically changes the sound, especially for partial loads where the turbulence can be drastic.
Can’t wait to see you tear into that Kenmore combo
John - me too! There is a basement laundry room restoration and 5 other machines that need small attention before I get into the full teardown of the '71 LK combo. It's the next big one and I'm looking forward to collaborating with you and John E on that one.
Ben