Eating & Writing on my Laptop
The water broke on my WO 65-2 , aka, 1952 Unimatic, and instead of delivering a baby Uni, it wouldn't hold water. I tried in vain to procure another Bellows. Dissatisfied with washdays without a Unimatic, I was about to give up when Big Ted offered a 56 for purchase.
Turned out, a man who travels from his home in Cleveland to Boston each month on a Lobster Run was passing through the land of Ted, making the delivery a piece of cake.
Ted had warned me that there was some scraping on the tub's rim. What he didn't tell me was that the gray porcelain was a flawless, immaculate, highly glossed masterpiece. I have seen few tubs this beautiful.
When I first started using the machine, I noticed that it overfilled by several gallons, and that it was washing for 15 minutes even though I had selected ten and there was no 15 on the dial, anyway, as you can plainly see. Even more encouraging, the washer stayed on DRY for 7 minutes. So I adjusted the water pressure at the tap, to make the time match the fill, and enjoyed this unusual machine that was clearly modified for a rinsaholic, with a 5 minute overflow rinse. With every cycle lengthened, including the wash spin, this was like a Frigi on steroids--total overkill. But I was hardly complaining--the loads were so dry, and it was winter, and the 56 was in the kitchen--total bliss.
I soon learned from Steve Gyrafoam that he once owned this machine, and before him it lived with Mark Lightedcontrols who had replaced the original timer which advanced every 40 seconds with a Mallory timer which clicks every minute, effectively adding 20 seconds to each increment, thus making this machine one souped up mutha.
From Mark to Steve to Ted to Mike--and the machine is still sane LOL.
About the water throw: You really have to be quick with the camera: if you fiddle a few seconds too long--WHOOSH--she's gone where the mushrooms go ---lalalalalalalal. But at least you get to appreciate some of the tub's beauty.[this post was last edited: 4/18/2012-22:01]