spin-cycle
Member
Hello All.
First post here, reading a bit, seems like a suitable and interesting pursuit for me after next house move, Will need more space for this hobby for sure.
I am attached to my original to me A712 Maytag washer new to me from right around 1988 or so. I really want to keep it, hopefully so it out lasts me!
But there is an issue...First the good news it agitates with no problem.
Sorry for the longer post, trying to offer the what seem to be needed pieces of info to be specific enough about the issue.
It recently developed an issue. It started out as tub with clothing and wash water would trip the thermal protector in the motor when it tried to get the spin cycle started. Got some guidance from a friend in a distant city and ended up swapping the clock mechanism on the control panel, and the motor (but not at the same exact time) as that is what the trouble shooting flow chart started called for, so I am told. Pulled the motor (2 speed 1/3 hp), and no load testing it seems to do exactly what it is supposed to do when doing this simple test, forward and reverse fine. Got second motor (1 speed 1/2 hp) and figured out the wiring so it works on a regular wash cycle. I believe the slower speed is used for "delicate" cycle, so no loss to me, in all the time owned never used that cycle.
Same problem will get only a few seconds into the spin cycle and the thermal protector in the motor does it's protection thing and stops everything.
I looked in to bearings next thinking I may be going in the wrong direction on the electrical side. I checked out the small bearing above the belt driven pulley directly under the brake assembly, it seems in good shape, repacked or should I say added some new grease. Then the fun began to get to the 62mm diameter spin bearing above the brake assembly. I am in a bit of a cramped work space so I have do it where is, can't tip machine back and I do not have the special brake tool to make life easy, but got the brake assembly off, pulled the shield on the bearing, it looked and felt good, and added grease, as a test to see if that helped, not really, Replaced bearing with new exact model that was there, NTN brand. No change.
What appears to be aluminum sleeve under the tub seal shows it will readily move when I lightly used a long screwdriver as a probe, so I figure it is not seized or corroded in place, no sign of tub leakage ever in all the years.
So I am scratching my head to see what to do next.
I did try this, small load of 6 cotton T-shirts, using near the minimum setting for water. As expected, agitates fine, enter spin cycle - will not spin as above. So I tried to reduce the load the machine has to get spinning, removed the T-shirts squeezing the water out, (did not get to where I was real aggressive on this as I do want to wear these T-shirts...), then manually removed all the water I can possibly get out of the wash tub. Evenly distribute the 6 now still fairly wet T-shirts and see if it will complete the spin cycle. The machine did spin with this tiny load with the reduction in weight by removing the water. In further testing it seems that getting even this tiny sized load to finish spin calls for a large current - enough to trip a sensitive 15 amp breaker on a surge protector this was plugged into. With a tiny load, manually drained, the machine draws high current but for a brief enough period of time the 10-12 seconds or so and the the current comes down as the little bit of water in the tub, mostly in the t-shirts, is spun out, and by then the tub is up to the spin rotation speed and the current is much lower all the way to the end of the cycle.
I truly appreciate any comments, particularly from those ho have been here and solved it. This is a challenge I do need help with.
Thanks in advance for the assistance.
First post here, reading a bit, seems like a suitable and interesting pursuit for me after next house move, Will need more space for this hobby for sure.
I am attached to my original to me A712 Maytag washer new to me from right around 1988 or so. I really want to keep it, hopefully so it out lasts me!
But there is an issue...First the good news it agitates with no problem.
Sorry for the longer post, trying to offer the what seem to be needed pieces of info to be specific enough about the issue.
It recently developed an issue. It started out as tub with clothing and wash water would trip the thermal protector in the motor when it tried to get the spin cycle started. Got some guidance from a friend in a distant city and ended up swapping the clock mechanism on the control panel, and the motor (but not at the same exact time) as that is what the trouble shooting flow chart started called for, so I am told. Pulled the motor (2 speed 1/3 hp), and no load testing it seems to do exactly what it is supposed to do when doing this simple test, forward and reverse fine. Got second motor (1 speed 1/2 hp) and figured out the wiring so it works on a regular wash cycle. I believe the slower speed is used for "delicate" cycle, so no loss to me, in all the time owned never used that cycle.
Same problem will get only a few seconds into the spin cycle and the thermal protector in the motor does it's protection thing and stops everything.
I looked in to bearings next thinking I may be going in the wrong direction on the electrical side. I checked out the small bearing above the belt driven pulley directly under the brake assembly, it seems in good shape, repacked or should I say added some new grease. Then the fun began to get to the 62mm diameter spin bearing above the brake assembly. I am in a bit of a cramped work space so I have do it where is, can't tip machine back and I do not have the special brake tool to make life easy, but got the brake assembly off, pulled the shield on the bearing, it looked and felt good, and added grease, as a test to see if that helped, not really, Replaced bearing with new exact model that was there, NTN brand. No change.
What appears to be aluminum sleeve under the tub seal shows it will readily move when I lightly used a long screwdriver as a probe, so I figure it is not seized or corroded in place, no sign of tub leakage ever in all the years.
So I am scratching my head to see what to do next.
I did try this, small load of 6 cotton T-shirts, using near the minimum setting for water. As expected, agitates fine, enter spin cycle - will not spin as above. So I tried to reduce the load the machine has to get spinning, removed the T-shirts squeezing the water out, (did not get to where I was real aggressive on this as I do want to wear these T-shirts...), then manually removed all the water I can possibly get out of the wash tub. Evenly distribute the 6 now still fairly wet T-shirts and see if it will complete the spin cycle. The machine did spin with this tiny load with the reduction in weight by removing the water. In further testing it seems that getting even this tiny sized load to finish spin calls for a large current - enough to trip a sensitive 15 amp breaker on a surge protector this was plugged into. With a tiny load, manually drained, the machine draws high current but for a brief enough period of time the 10-12 seconds or so and the the current comes down as the little bit of water in the tub, mostly in the t-shirts, is spun out, and by then the tub is up to the spin rotation speed and the current is much lower all the way to the end of the cycle.
I truly appreciate any comments, particularly from those ho have been here and solved it. This is a challenge I do need help with.
Thanks in advance for the assistance.