The Spiralator always looked small in the big tub of the SpinDryer, but that same size in the automatic's tub must be wild. If anyone has them, Better Homes & Gardens from the early to mid fifties feature Easy ads, some double page, with Arthur Godfrey promoting them. People placed a lot of stock in him then and Easy was a HUGE name in laundry because of the popularity of the SpinDryers. The ads showed a kind of confusing diagram of the path of the clothes circling the Spiralator with a broken line and arrows with a segment of it dipping down and then rising up. With the fins continuing in the curved spiral to the edge, it would give the circular motion seen in GEs with the spiral ramp agitator, but lots more.
On a sad note, Easy was so convinced that the combinations were the real future of laundry that they put the majority of their resources and marketing behind them. Easy made that first WH top loader, but I think the last of anything Easy I saw were the washer and dryer marketed under the AMC (Allied Merchandising Corporation) badge that department stores back in the mid 60s sold as their "own house brand" like Rich's of Atlanta and Woodward & Lothrop in Washington, DC. They could make higher profits on them than the major brands. I remember that the dryer had some good design elements in that the heated air entered through the perforated back at about the 1 o'clock position and exited through perforations in the front of the drum at about the 8 o'clock position. There was a pull out lint filter in that position in the collar-type opening between the front of the cabinet and the drum itself. The filter was almost a square shape, made of screen on a fairly heavy frame. The handle was covered in something like a red vinyl or plastic that I guess would be less likely to burn fingers than just a bare piece of metal. I could tell that the air flow was pretty effective, but the drum was zinc coated and the door opening was quite small. The dryer design was not that much behind the WP design with the perforated back and probably more efficient with the across the drum air flow, but it was also prone to lint buildup in between the drum and outer tub.
The motor-tranny-pump package was beltless, more like wringer washers, far ahead of anyone else, even Frigidaire. They made commercial coin-op washers that lasted a long time also, so it was not that the design was not rugged. That base with the 4 arms supporting the ring is Speed Queen all over. It would have been interesting to see how they might have modernized the Easy line, but maybe it's just as well that we did not see it go to hell like the Kelvintor washers did.
On a sad note, Easy was so convinced that the combinations were the real future of laundry that they put the majority of their resources and marketing behind them. Easy made that first WH top loader, but I think the last of anything Easy I saw were the washer and dryer marketed under the AMC (Allied Merchandising Corporation) badge that department stores back in the mid 60s sold as their "own house brand" like Rich's of Atlanta and Woodward & Lothrop in Washington, DC. They could make higher profits on them than the major brands. I remember that the dryer had some good design elements in that the heated air entered through the perforated back at about the 1 o'clock position and exited through perforations in the front of the drum at about the 8 o'clock position. There was a pull out lint filter in that position in the collar-type opening between the front of the cabinet and the drum itself. The filter was almost a square shape, made of screen on a fairly heavy frame. The handle was covered in something like a red vinyl or plastic that I guess would be less likely to burn fingers than just a bare piece of metal. I could tell that the air flow was pretty effective, but the drum was zinc coated and the door opening was quite small. The dryer design was not that much behind the WP design with the perforated back and probably more efficient with the across the drum air flow, but it was also prone to lint buildup in between the drum and outer tub.
The motor-tranny-pump package was beltless, more like wringer washers, far ahead of anyone else, even Frigidaire. They made commercial coin-op washers that lasted a long time also, so it was not that the design was not rugged. That base with the 4 arms supporting the ring is Speed Queen all over. It would have been interesting to see how they might have modernized the Easy line, but maybe it's just as well that we did not see it go to hell like the Kelvintor washers did.