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The agitator in this washer was probably my second favorite of all oscilating types made.My first was the Vari-Flex which was adjustible.The drive belt on these was thinner than the norm and realy quieted them down.Three speed agitation 2 speed spin but slower than any other brand not including Whirlpool.Great find!!!
 
Oh my gosh

Those are just beautiful in every way! I still feel that avocado on an appliance is just so regal and captivating. You could put those right in my dining room and it'd look great! Whoever is getting these is going to love them. Aside from the Lady Kenmore model, this has to be the most versatile washer of the Kenmore line-up. Don't let those buttons full you. It is very flexible in letting you choose your cycles and how you want them to work for you, not to mention completely automatic. As much as I like watching my Kenmore work it's also the one machine I'm completely comfortable with leaving alone while I do other things. The dispensers are excellent. You can go through an entire soak, prewask, wash, and two rinses with all additives done automatically! TOO COOL!!!

Jon
 
Whoever is getting these is going to love them.

It didn't take Gordon long to latch onto these... LOL! If anybody can restore these and make them daily drivers, it'll be him.

The video I shot turned out to be corrupted. I reformatted the memory card and will shoot new video tonight and repost a new link. Sorry...

RCD
 
Good save! They look to be in very good original condition. Someone must have really taken care of these.
 
Another Miracle on the Aworg

This is all great stuff to start the day off with, Andy and friends. Wonderful, wonderful, wonderful. Thank you, Andy for all you do.

Oh Charles, that Roto-flex!--a few people here would give their eye-teeth for one of those, although one expects to see a Vari-flex in the Ladies. Maybe Gordon will explain the oddity.

And if you still haven't had enough button play after the program Jon sets forth, you can hit yet another key for Custom Care and get the gentlest Ocean Ripple agitation on the three speed Ladies.

The Karma today is arcing toward the COSMIC. You can feel it--right down to your DNA chains ;->
 
Qustions about these...

So as I look more closely at the controls on these I have some questions.

I noticed that this model washer differs in a couple of different ways from my 1970 version. I see there's no enzyme soak cycle. I guess this was just prior to the enzyme soak craze. This one must also be a suds-savor model. Is that notch just before the pre-wash on the timer for suds? Also one of the buttons (button next to the 2nd rinse) says "Heavy Duty". What does that button do? This machine is also 3-speeds! I always thought only the lady kenmores had the 3rd speed. Apparently at some point #2 also had it.

On the dryer, is the switch (similar to the water level control of the washer) on the far left the cycle signal? The dryer is so simple control-wise, is it only a single temperature? Does every drying cycle have permanent press care?

Would love to see what you guys know about these because they are quite interesting machines.

Jon
 
Heavy Duty

I think Heavy Duty option forces normal wash speed instead of slow. I don't think this is a suds saver model because I can't locate the option to turn it off and on on the control panel.

Malcolm
 
Such variety in the LK's, never ending

Guessing that Malcolm is right: the Heavy Duty button does the exact opposite of what the Custom Care does, but I had not seen that option before.

However, you do not need a separate switch for a suds-return; in fact, most Kenmores and Whirlpools simply used the main dial setting-- nothing else--to return the suds and then automatically proceeded to the wash cycle, and like Jon, I think I read SUDS, but can't see it clearly.
 
Jon and Charles et al -

When you got your 1970 machine Jon, it prompted some debate about the lineup of the time. As a result, I did a lot of research on the various 900-series models of the mid to late 60s, and learned some interesting stuff.

Per an e-mail from Andy, this machine's model number is 110.6604911. There is an S in the model number plate that threw me, but if this machine was a suds model as some including me first surmised, it would have model 110.6605911. The '5' stands for suds model automatics, '4' just automatics, and '3' for semi-automatics where the user defines water temps at the tap...(getting off topic tho).

Oddly, the "real" 66 Lady's model number is 110.6604900 to 110.6604904 or 110.6605900, etc. I believe (just minor engineering revisions). I do not remember what was different about the '910 series but for some reason it didn't qualify as a Lady. There was a 920 and a 930 series also, which is really odd, the '930 being only a 2-speed machine and had a Super Roto-Swirl as it's agitator.

Sears was either price-marketing these separately from the Lady, or possibly there was a shortage of something that distinguished the Lady and warranted a new model number. I simply don't know, but I was surprised to see the '920 and '930, so seemingly identical looking on the parts diagram, but with a Roto-Swirl, etc.

This washer was made in 1968, so perhaps by then even though it was a '66 model, the revised '68 Lady was available so the '66 family tree had to soldier on as 900s without the Lady designation. I think by 1970 the de-throned 900s went on to become 800s as the fancier models came into the Lady lineup (they would have an 8 in the model number where these have a 9).

I don't remember what my '66 Lady had as far as a soak cycle. It was one of the 21 stolen from me so now I can't check and compare. This could easily be something that distinguished one model from another in those years.

Gordon
 
Joe -

Yes we need to do that. We need to have a regional wash-in, though with me being such a brand "loyalist" I think we'd have a lot of people here yawning, LOL.

The oldest Kenmore I have is a 1961, newest belt-drive is a late 1986 with a whole lot in between. You are welcome to see them anytime!

As to the suds dial - sometimes on a non-suds machine, the suds portion of the timer is dead, other times there is a totally different timer, yet in others it's there and functions, but there is no 2-way valve to direct water flow, etc. In this case there may have been a common dial, OR it is a replacement.

Gordon
 
To my friend Andy:

You are such a genuine guy. What a treasure! Thanks again for thinking of me on these.

In 1991 or 1992, I saved a 1966 Lady from the compactor at the Sears regional distribution center (they had been putting all their haul-aways into a compactor before they met me!!!!!). I was reeling from the weekend prior when my washer mentor made me throw a nice 1972 Kenmore 70 into the scrap bin at the landfill. The bin was empty and the machine took a 10-foot fall! I don't know who was more crushed, me or the machine. So, the next weekend, I spy this white '66 Lady. I told Al I'm taking it and you are not going to make me dump it, LOL. He just chuckled.

Anyway, it was a nice machine, but gross in some ways. It had been in a smoker's home and was covered with tar and nicotine yellow scum. It smelled like an ashtray. I didn't want to scrap it, but didn't want to touch it either. So, I put it away, then it got co-mingled into the storage machines, and I didn't touch it or have any interest in it until last summer when I was surprised at what the heat of storage had done to the scum - it was all crystallized and dried up, easily cleaned off. I put the machine back into the trailer, all excited, only to have it stolen weeks later.

This is a great replacement, in fact, a better one.

Thanks man!

Gordon
 
Those are sweet - very good condition it would seem. Price was sure right!

It must be Kenmore week, I stopped at an estate sale today and saw a matched pair of Kenmores with the sliding control covers from around the same time in coppertone. Nice shape, washer sounds like a bearing job is in order but otherwise pretty good. I don't need them but always liked that "we're hiding something" panel style.
 
Common Dial????

Know about the dead space and the blank space, etc., but I can't imagine Sears selling a washer with "SUDS" clearly marked on a washer that did not return the suds.

Sinking in my own suds, are you pulling my leg? LOL

Your friend,

Mike
 
Greg -

Is this what you mean with the concealable console? It's a 1967 model I am pretty sure. Mine needs a bearing job so badly you can hear the spintube rattle in the center post when you move the machine.

Gordon

kenmoreguy64++2-13-2010-13-40-29.jpg
 

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