Affinity Washer threw a strut (I think). Fix it or chuck it?

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joeekaitis

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Our Frigidaire Affinity washer (LTF6000S, sold only at Lowe's) was washing a load of towels and underwear (much less than the claimed capacity of 22 bath towels) when it make a loud bang and began banging even worse as it tried to spin up. I stopped the washer and noticed that the drum had dropped below the door opening. Fortunately, it was the end of the cycle and the load was shaken out enough to go in the dryer.

Naturally, it's out of warranty so what do I do? Is the usual cost of such a repair low enough to justify it or will it be half the price of a new one?

Thanks in advance, any experts out there.
 
...noticed the drum had dropped below the door opening...

Hi Joe, if it's anything like my Frigidaire Gallery washer (older, smaller door), the whole wash tub assembly is suspended by 4 springs above and 2 "shocks" below. From your decription it sounds like one of the springs broke.

If you are at all handy, pull the machine out, remove the top and look down inside. You will be able to see the tub assembly and the suspension springs and if any of them are broken.

Kevin
 
YAY!!

Prior to the mishap, were you happy with the machine's cleaning ability?

I have neighbors with a new Affinity and they love it. However, I think everyone "loves" their first front loader when they see how much drier the clothes are spun and how their drying time shortens, as well as less wear and tear on the clothes, and laundry that seems to be, well, cleaner. In addition, because I bought my FL during the late winter when I wasn't watering the yard, I could see drops in both my water and gas bills (gas savings due to less hot water used plus shorter gas dryer times).

I have a stack of white shop towels from Costco that I use for cleaning or working around the house. The first time they were washed in my 2140 FL (Frigidaire), they came out bright white (using Hot wash and normal HE detergent), as if bleach had been used...it wasn't. I was astounded at the difference.

Of course, the same people who love their FL may fall somewhat out of love when the spider breaks after five years, compared to the old TL that ran 10-20 years.

Knowing that my spider may break someday, I keep tabs on the latest Frigidaire models, because my machines are in a stacked configuration. If my 2140's spider goes, I would need to replace it with another stackable Frigidaire in order to re-use my gas dryer, which still works fine. The choices would be another 2140, a 2940, or an Affinity. Of the four model levels of Affinity, two (can't remember the model numbers) are stackable and two are not stackable.

So, are you otherwise happy with your model? How old is your machine and what's the model number?
 
PassatDoc:

It's been a real champ at cleaning, and I never really stuff it full. I can't see how you could put in 22 bath towels, which every brand claims for their Electrolux-built 3.5 cubic foot front-loaders. I was washing 5 bath towels, 3 face cloths, 3 dish towels, a few dish cloths and some underwear (yes, with hot water and chlorine bleach, so no "Remind me NEVER to eat at YOUR house!" jokes), and that fills up the drum without cramming and packing.

So, maybe you CAN wash 22 bath towels with some pushing and shoving, but what they DON'T tell you is to have a replacement spring on hand. ;)
 
My towel loads are similar to yours. I remember seeing the "22 Towels" display in the dealer's. However, they were small sized bath towels, the kind we'd get in P.E. in middle and high school. I buy the large Costco towels (not the bath sheets) the ones that are Egyptian cotton and retail for like $7 each. I can do 4-5 of those plus hand towels plus dish clothes and it's full.

For perm press cycle, since most of my work clothes are from LL Bean with the all cotton/no wrinkle finish, roughly five pairs of trousers and five long sleeve shirts are a full load.

The 3.5 cu ft capacity was "large" when I bought it, when only WP offered anything larger (3.7-3.8 cu ft) in the Duets. Now it's on the small size of the capacity scale for US sized washers, HOWEVER if you look at a traditional standard 27W x 27D x 36 H inch footprint, it's about the biggest capacity around. I have to stack my machines (code-required steel/concrete bollard sits in front of washer space, as this is rear wall of garage, and would block an FL door) in what originally was the dryer space.

The larger capacity washers get the extra space by being deeper and/or taller. Some of the machines are nearly 40" tall, which when stacked would result in controls being 6'8" off the ground!! I'm average height, and for shorter persons it would be untenable. Depth is not an issue for me, with laundry in the garage, but for people with closet installations, or with a laundry room door that swings close to the machine, a deeper machine may not work. I believe the 4.0 new Bosch machines that stack (controls were removed from top to front panel) are only 38" tall resulting in only a 6'4" stack (vs. 6'1" stack now)

For that reason, I am glad that one manufacturer recognizes the need for special installations, either stacked or not extra-deep. If everyone moved to 4-4.5 cu ft machines up to 32" deep and 40" high, I'd be out of luck when my current machines need replacing. Also, since stacking kits generally accommodate only the same company's dryer feet, I would not be able to re-use my existing dryer with a different make of washer, should the washer break beyond repair. Why pay another $1000 for a dryer when the existing one works? Many people here have mismatched side by side washers and dryers, but when you stack the machines you have to

A friend of mine recently chose her new Kenmore FLs on the basis of machine depth. Some of the deeper machines would block her laundry room door from opening (in to the room), and even with the Kenmores there is less than an inch clearance. Once the door is closed or opened fully, there is plenty of room, but the architect who designed the house in the 1980s assumed that washers would always be only 27" deep. She was willing to sacrifice on depth in order to avoid a costly reworking of the door frame.
 
I ended up with an Affinity pair for exactly the reason stated above. My laundry area is designed for machines that are 27" deep. Otherwise I would have brought my Duet pair with me when I moved. Duets are far superior in performance--particularly in rinsing--and versatility.

When it's time for another FL purchase (and since I own an Affinity that time will most assuredly come sooner rather than later, I'm afraid) I'm hoping that they will have managed to get larger capacities out of machines that have the standard 27" depth footprint, and I absolutely will steer clear of Frigidaire. There's a reason why they're the cheapest priced of the larger capacity FL machines.
 

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