Was following another thread in the "Deluxe" forum about the decline of laundromats and was thinking about a video of an old commercial washer that I've run into on YouTube a while ago. It's a Troy Laundrite "Big Boy" front loader. Its operation is kind of peculiar, at least by the noise it makes.
When it reverse tumbles, the motor makes an ominous sound for a split second when it goes under load, almost like a shrill buzz. It's like it's audible enough to let you know it's reversing. When it spins, you'll hear a loud BANG!, too loud to be a relay. It almost sounds as if a clutch of some sort has engaged, I'm not sure. When it has fully spooled up, it sounds like a jet engine.
Pretty interesting washer that sounds ominous, more so than a larger Milnor or UniMac, those machines are quiet until spin. Never have encountered an Ametek/Troy machine, which is why I'm wondering about the way it works and why it makes the noise.
Here's the video:
When it reverse tumbles, the motor makes an ominous sound for a split second when it goes under load, almost like a shrill buzz. It's like it's audible enough to let you know it's reversing. When it spins, you'll hear a loud BANG!, too loud to be a relay. It almost sounds as if a clutch of some sort has engaged, I'm not sure. When it has fully spooled up, it sounds like a jet engine.
Pretty interesting washer that sounds ominous, more so than a larger Milnor or UniMac, those machines are quiet until spin. Never have encountered an Ametek/Troy machine, which is why I'm wondering about the way it works and why it makes the noise.
Here's the video: