Bonk! Bonk! Bonk!

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roto204

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Okay Westinghouse top-loader gurus...

My new Westinghouse-based Faux-1-18 (the 'Faux18,' as I shall henceforth call it) has a nice new belt and sparkling-clean pulleys, thanks in large part to Roger's help and a lot of head-standing.

We've fixed almost every problem with this lovely machine (I know, a WCI with issues? Say it ain't so), but the last one is puzzling.

It agitates and spins quickly and beautifully with the new belt, but when the tub stops after each rotation, it makes a loud, pronounced "bonk!"

"Bonk, bonk, bonk," as it rotates. It's like bonking against a piece of rubber, not a metal-on-metal sound. But it does bonk against something; the hoses quiver ever-so-slightly each time.

But there it goes--agitate, sweep back; tub moves forward; agitator reverses; tub locks, "bonk."

It gets old after a while.

It does not make noise in spin, although sometimes it "cries" as the tub spins--a very rubbery-sounding noise (similar to a dog yelping, actually) that sounds like a rubber part protesting somewhere. That is a rare occurrence, though.

Anyone have any ideas about this? I suspect it's an issue with the transmission, in which case it will likely live out its days, as it were, but I wondered if there was anything more obvious I might be overlooking.

Thanks in advance for your help!

--Nate
 
but when the tub stops after each rotation

Nate do you mean after each tub index or when the washer is slowing down after spin?

Sounds like the clutch spring could be sticking. Might need some grease, but it could be quite the job to do this.
 
Not sure...

The diagrams make the clutch springs look evil. I don't mind rolling up the sleeves; the RepairMaster doesn't say much about it, though (aside from "if the transmission has issues, replace it as a unit", and doesn't even have the index-bonk as a symptom...of course, it's probably due to a worn-out transmission more than anything).

If worse comes to worst, I could always just wait for another machine with an identical configuration to come along...

--Nate
 
If I'm not mistaken, the England English equivalent is either "boink" or "shag," the latter having little if anything to do with floor coverings except that if you have to shag on the rug, it's better to have a shag rug.
 
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