Hi everyone! My name is Franco, i'm from Buenos Aires, Argentina, and this is my first post on this awesome page!
Recently found this really rare General Electric washing machine. I don't know anything about it. It's the first one i've ever seen. Unfortunately the motor and rear cover are missing, so it have no tags on it.
What i know so far:
-It has 2 knobs on the front. One of them is missing, the other one has a non-original switch (someone took it apart years ago and replaced the original swtich with a common on/off switch). I assume one knob is a timer, but i have no idea about the other one.
-The lever on the top commands the drain pump or drain valve, sadly it doesn't have it either. For what i see, the mechanism opens a valve or activates a mechanic pump holding it against the motor pulley.
-The little window under the door indicates water level.
-The lever under the door moves the motor for wash or spin function. According to the motor position, the belt runs on the wash pulley or the spin pulley. Interesting system.
Any information/ideas you might wanna share are welcome! Hope you like the photos!
















Recently found this really rare General Electric washing machine. I don't know anything about it. It's the first one i've ever seen. Unfortunately the motor and rear cover are missing, so it have no tags on it.
What i know so far:
-It has 2 knobs on the front. One of them is missing, the other one has a non-original switch (someone took it apart years ago and replaced the original swtich with a common on/off switch). I assume one knob is a timer, but i have no idea about the other one.
-The lever on the top commands the drain pump or drain valve, sadly it doesn't have it either. For what i see, the mechanism opens a valve or activates a mechanic pump holding it against the motor pulley.
-The little window under the door indicates water level.
-The lever under the door moves the motor for wash or spin function. According to the motor position, the belt runs on the wash pulley or the spin pulley. Interesting system.
Any information/ideas you might wanna share are welcome! Hope you like the photos!















