An Easy Combo Travels East to Maryland

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

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Agreed, the belt, indeed!

Long enough for jump rope or hop-scotch!

 

John, everybody wants more paragraphs, please.

 

Being an Easy, does it spray rinse or tumble flush rinse with the drain open? What is the cycle sequence?

 

What does the acc/decelerated spin sound like? On a scale of 1 to 10, how cool is this machine? And where does it fit in your hierarchy of machines?

 

 

 
 
Fun trying to figure the mechanism. Looks like, the spin motor is also a reduction pulley for tumble. So it turns all the time too, just not under its own power. The tumble motor drives it through a one-way clutch so if the spin motor wants to go faster it can while the tumble/pump/fan motor continues at 1750.

This is rather clever, as the amount of torque the clutch has to pass is much less than it would be if the one-way clutch were on the tub shaft like it is in a Westy transmissionless. Many here know, a one-way clutch is either all or none. It slips virtually 100% in one direction and 0% in the other. Like a bicycle hub.
 
John

Congrats on the Easy Combo find out of Oregon!

I also did not know that Easy made a combo. What a beautiful machine and in such good shape. I think you paid a fair price and that was very generous of you to give the guy more than he was asking.

I too hope to see it in person some day at your museum. I'm glad it ended up in a good home.

Patrick
 
Before the electronic controlled motors were introduced, most washers here with high speeds had separate motors for washing and spinning. I love the sound when the spin motor takes over from the wash motor.

I guess you would say those were three motor machines, because there was always a separate motor on the pump too.
 
The Easy Drying System

This Easy as mentioned earlier is the vented electric drying model, they also made water cooled condenser models and gas heated vented models. The machine has a powerful blower and two 2500 watt elements, for normal dry settings it uses both elements for the fine fabric setting it only uses one element. Inside the outer tub the intake for the exhaust blower is covered with a fine mesh SS screen mounted between the 9 and 11 o'clock area. This screen collects lint during the dry cycle and the lint stays there till the next time the machine is used. When the next load is started the lint stays on the screen through the wash cycle and the first rinse and as the first rinse is draining the machine will do a brief spin and spray water into the machine at the same time, this causes the lint to be flushed off the screen. It is really dramatic to see all the lint suddenly flushing out the drain hose and harmlessly down the drain, it is one of the most effective self-cleaning filters I have ever seen.

 

The only problem the dryer has because our building only has 208 volts the dryers heaters only put out 3,750 watts of heat instead of the full 5,000. I am going to solve this by mounting a KA KD 17 drying heater element in the air intake for the heater box which will add 1100 watts of heat power. I am also adding an additional safety thermostat for the additional heater and three heat relays to protect the timer, dry temperature switch and motor centrifugal switch.
 
Nothing new under the Sun!

That spin cycle is fascinating! Bendix found that 90% of the wash water is extracted in the Duo at 250 RPMS. Thats why the Duo only gets up to 250 in the final spin and stops dead still before going on to the final 525 spin before dry. This patented process prevents pasting of the clothing against the drum during the dry cycle.

My new Speed Queens use this same spin accelerate as the EASY. The SQ ramps up to 250 and back down again repeatedly. In physics a short duration acceleration is what is called an impact. The impact effect transfers a lot of energy in a brief amount of time. I think this might cause greater extraction than just ramping up to 250 for a few minutes. The repeated ramp up and down increases the acceleration cycles that the clothes are exposed too.
At first I didn't get it, thought it was stupid but looking at it from a physical standpoint maybe not. And Easy did this way back before electronics.
Washers Rock!
 
Yes, Jon, but heavy fabrics are not as well extracted at the slower spin speeds so the rinsing in the SQ is not as good as it could be. The Miele W1986 with high speed spins after the wash and each of the three rinses, rinses much better than the SQ. After the final spin in the EASY, we put the load in a nearby toploader for a spin and it removed a bunch more water, so much so that water could no longer be wrung from the towels by hand. Even though Bendix said that 90% of the water was removed at 250rpm, they increased the spin to the full 500+rpm after each of the rinses for better laundering. You can't cut corners when you are removing radioactive dirt from laundry.

"Um, no, there is no green tub light in the Duomatic. Why do you ask?"
 
John,

That is an awesome machine, thanks for sharing and teaching us how it all works. Can't wait to see it in person someday. I love the technology that goes into these combinations.
 
Heat relays

Paul,  I don't really have a favorite, I used to get these big balky things that looked like the contactors that were used in central A/C condensing units. But now the ones that I have been using are much smaller and quieter, I look for ones that handle at least 30 AMPs and have 200-240 volt coils, do you have any you like?
 
Relays

I don't have a favorite however I have seen solid-state relays in use and that solution look attractive. They were compact and carried large currents. Haven't done the math to see if they'd work in a washer (ex: My 1930's Bendix).
 

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