M for an A806 is 1971.
Y is November.
Y is November.
Ok gotcha. Thank you. I'll test them tomorrow and let you know.November, 1971.
The yellow/black and grey wires are the connections we'll be dealing with on the water level pressue switch. You can either remove the wires and tape them together (making sure they have good contact) or run a jumper wire to them. If the machine fires up in the area(s) it's acting dead, you need a new water level switch. If not, we'll keep diagnosing.
So I am just getting around to hooking it back up and testing it. I taped the wires together and it moved to agitate. My question now is...I removed the pressure switch blew in it and covered the hole with my finger after the click. It stays engaged until I remove my finger. If the pressure switch was bad would the click drop even if I had the hole covered?November, 1971.
The yellow/black and grey wires are the connections we'll be dealing with on the water level pressue switch. You can either remove the wires and tape them together (making sure they have good contact) or run a jumper wire to them. If the machine fires up in the area(s) it's acting dead, you need a new water level switch. If not, we'll keep diagnosing.
Yes, after the washer has filled and after the machine has stopped when it should be agitating.Do I do this after the water has filled?
Sorry I just edited that comment.Yes, after the washer has filled and after the machine has stopped when it should be agitating.
The electrical contacts inside the pressure switch are pitted or worn. It's a sealed unit that's unserviceable.I taped the wires together and it moved to agitate. My question now is...I removed the pressure switch blew in it and covered the hole with my finger after the click. It stays engaged until I remove my finger. If the pressure switch was bad would the click drop even if I had the hole covered?
That is amazing. I wish I was having the same luck. I ordered that pressure switch off eBay. Hooked it up and nothing. Taped my wires back together just to make sure and it starts right up. At least on my other pressure switches I could get water to run just not agitate. The new switch has continuity between 16 and 7 when under pressure. Which 16 is where the grey wire was plugged in and 7 the brown. However, the wiring diagram is showing completely different placementNothing made today beings to equal this type of build quality, durability, and reliability. It's worth every second and every penny keeping these older machines going. I saved 4 of these sets from going to the crusher and have used one set for almost 20 years now. Not bad for a free 50 year old washer/dryer that almost met its maker.