Frigies in the house—not pleased

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washabear

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Jul 19, 2008
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272
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Maryland
I received my Frigidaire 2140 washer and matching dryer a week ago, and I am not happy. The dryer is fine, but the washer is not. The big problem is that it often will not spin between cycles. It always does the final spin, but between the wash and rinse and between the other rinses, it usually will not spin. The only time it does it is with very light loads (shirts or sheets). With anything else, it tumbles a bit, rotates slowly, tumbles a bit, rotates slowly, and then just gives up. This is crazy. I’ve never had a washer that wouldn’t spin before. I’m thinking of returning it.
 
Many American FL washers these days won't do a real spin between the wash and each of the rinses. My dad's Whirlpool Duet washer will distribute and take off to about 300 RPM for 4 or 5 seconds then start filling for the rinse. I've begun to use the soak cycle to wash and then set it to the drain and spin cycle for a full 900 RPM spin then reset to another soak for rinse then another 900 RPM spin and call it done!
 
My Affinity does the same thing, I believe this is normal. How are your clothes coming out? Mine are cleaner than ever with this machine.
 
i notice the same thing

It seems to spin at low speed (i am guessing 300 rpm) for about a minute between the rinses. But as cny4 reported, the clothes come out very clean. I guess it's supposed to work like that.

How are your clothes coming out?
 
You mean this is NORMAL? Sheesh! I guess I have some stuff to get used to.

Clothes are coming out fine. I haven't really noticed an appreciable difference in cleaning versus my old top loader, but the clothes are fine. At first, I thought they were coming out too hard, but turning down the heat on the dryer solved that, and now they come out nice and soft.

Thanks!
 
FWIW

My vintage Miele for "Cottons" rinse, does two deep rinses (fill, tumble, drain) then a quick 30 second low spin, another deep rinse, then a final rinse before the final spin sequence. This is on top of adding heaps of cold water at the end of the wash cycle.

Rinsing is process of dilution, thus one does not need to nor should spin too fast between rinses as it can lead to muck being forced back into the wash. Also depending upon wash temperature and how the machine cools down the water temperature, spinning too fast too soon can cause creases that will take ages of ironing (if then), to remove. You can see this if one takes laundry hot from a twin tub and puts it right into the spinner for a spin without cooling it down first.

L.
 
Launderess, your description of the rinse process fits my machine to a t. You described exactly what I see going on in my machine, though I usually select the Extra Rinse option, so that there are at least three rinses.
 
my 2140 does the same thing, and that's why it has been replaced by a toploader. it is unable to balance the load 90% of the time regardless of how much or little is in the drum and ends up spinning only after the final rinse, and that's only because it keeps trying until it's satisfied. a test wash of my whites with no detergent was still getting suds out after 4 full wash cycles. i've seen that drum ramping up to spin with absolutely no wobble, then it will stop as if it were off balance.
 
spins

The logic in some units only monitors current speed and compares this to desired speed, if increasing voltage to the motor does not result in a steady speed up, it assumes something is wrong and reacts. Just how it reacts depends on the programming as well as whether other things are being monitored.

These machines are much more sensitive to level floors than TLs are. Enormously so. They also have trouble dealing with the resonances which come up in wooden floors. If your machine is having trouble setting up the spins - especially the final spin, then you can help it a lot by:

1) Leveling the machine, setting the spirit level against the front and sides of the cabinet as well as on top. It has to be level side to side as well as front to back.

2) Try putting the machine in a corner of the room, corners are stronger and resonate less.

3) Put a very dense panel under it. 3/4 inch pressboard or marine HDF; or similar. This will span the floor boards and distribute the weight better. I have seen this trick done so often, incredible how much it helps (not all European floors are reinforced concrete).

Laundress is right, you don't want too much spin between rinses - (remember, these spins speeds are much higher than most TLs so more efficient) (even allowing for the greater diameter of the TL-Tubs, we are so not going there again...).

All the current Stiftung Warentest results I have read continue to give these machines good ratings for people with allergies. Of course, we have seen European machines dumbed-down for the US market before...
 
forgot somethings

One thing which caught me off-guard when I first came to Europe was the way FLs pump water out.
In the US, TLs use "timed drain". The timer motor runs for a length of time equal to what the designers think the tub needs to drain completely plus a safety factor.
FLs monitor the water level in the outer tub. Once all the water has been pumped out, that's it. It only takes as long as needed.
Don't forget - you aren't pumping out zillions of gallons here, just a few, so it is also going to go much faster.
A really unlikely possibility, but I've made this mistake before...were absolutely all the packaging and transport nuts, bolts, materials, etc. removed?
 
<blockquote>In the US, TLs use "timed drain". The timer motor runs for a length of time equal to what the designers think the tub needs to drain completely plus a safety factor.</blockquote>Panthera, it's dangerous to make blanket statements like that. :-)

TLs with mechanical timers have fixed-time drains. Some with electronic controls do have variable drain periods. The first Whirlpool electronic TL (LFA9800 in 1977/1978) timed the drain as double the time required for water level pressure switch to reset + 30 seconds. My F&Ps are variable based on water level pressure readings, and I'm thinking the Oasis/Cabrio/Bravos siblings are as well. (True, F&P is of NZ origin, but they're now being produced at a facility in Clyde, OH.) My Calypso appears to have mostly timed drains, but it does monitor water level as part of the process for purpose of detecting pump failures ("Long Drain" error codes).
 
Don't worry about the spin. I have the same 2140 and on the normal and heavy cycles it will spin between each rinse (usually) if it's not off balance--though it is finicky about that. The PP cycle does not. I wouldn't return it as it's a great machine and a very good price for the features you get.
 
Interim spins

I've found that fast interim spins are crucial to rinsing, especially with modern water saving machines. Although rinsing is a process of dilution, interim spins spin as much soap (as well as dirt) out of the laundry as possible before the rinse cycle even begins - which means that the rinses don't need to rinse out as much to start with and thus can use less water/rinses.

My Miele will spin at 1000 for about 2-4 minutes after the wash (depending how heavy the load is), then at 2 mins at 1000 between each rinse, my AEG will spin for about 2 mins at 800 after the wash, increasing the speed by 200 after each rinse (i.e 1000 after rinse 1, 1200 after rinse 2, 1400 after rinse 3, before the final rinse) - and when using low water levels laundry was better rinsed using 2 or 3 rinses than our old GEC made Creda and Hotpoint machines which would do 4 high level rinses with not as much spinning between the rinses. Conversely, our Bosch Exxcel had slow interim spins combined with low water level rinses, and this was the worst rinsing machine we ever had, so interim spins are important.

Adding to that, I've never had trouble with dirt being spun back into laundry (IMO I think it is an urban myth), and laundry is no more creased than if you used slow spins. Besides, if you are washing laundry that is prone to creasing you should use a more suitable cycle rather than a cottons cycle.

Only time nowadays I use higher water levels (fortunately I can programme this into the Miele and AEG), is for the vintage effect.

Jon
 
I agree in the fact that interim spinning is of benefit to rinsing ability in modern machines which use less water. However I have found that this can compromise on the machines ability to give a perfectly clean result. I have now had my Miele W4446WPS for 3 months, which performs its interim spinning in the exact same manner as Jon described above. However I feel that the centrifugal force of a fast spin of 1000rpm in my case or more with some other European machines after the wash cycle before rinsing commences can actually compromise the final result especially on white and pastel/light coloured washing. I agree in the fact that despite most modern detergents containing agents to repel soil redeposition, it can happen as a result of this spinning action. This action is effective in ensuring thorough rinsing but of course you wash your textiles for a reason, and that is to remove soil as opposed to simply redistributing it onto garments and thus as a result of the composition of modern detergents, its not always a case by where the rinsing action is able to remove the redeposited soiling. From a European perspective, and of course this is a matter of personal opinion and nothing more, I feel that an extra 10-15 litres of water per cycle used in rinsing would produce a more acceptable final result. In my opinion, some form of water extraction is essential following the main wash, but nothing of which would consist of excessive revolutions per minute, if this is followed by faster interim spinning in between rinses then so be it as then the benefit will show through. Just a matter of personal opinion that I have found with my latest machine so I thought I would share! :)

Saj
 
Timed Drains, Timed Fills, Timed Out

I am glad you are back. Certainly, there are some US TL machines - what, 0.01% of those in use? - which use logic to monitor the drain cycle.
But we are talking about experiences with the first FL here, so I permitted myself the luxury of not discussing every possible exception.
There has got to be some room for generalizations or we will all get bogged down in absurd discussions.
 
Bruce, I have a 1st genreation Frigidaire Front Loader and I love the machine. At best it does 2 short burst spins between the wash, first rinse, and 2nd rinse, and before the final 4th rinse. I have no complaints and in fact, it rinses better than my 1986 DD Lady Kenmore. Front loaders are a totally different process, even rinsing. One bear to another, walk away form the machine if the intricaciesa bug ya to death. If the clothes are coming out fine, that's the key!! And yes, glad you found out using lower drying temps improves softness. Why, becuse less moisture is in the dryer for a shorterr period of time and less of a "steam" effect.
 
Thanks for the additional replies. Sorry for the delay in my reply; I was away most of the day yesterday. The machine is level, and all the shipping pieces were removed. It sits on a concrete basement floor. It never has a problem with the final spin and always does that without fail and without vibrating, shaking, or rumbling (and makes a pretty cool sound while doing it). I guess I’m just confused about the interim phases and am unfamiliar with how they work.

Of course, if I stopped sitting in front of the thing watching it like a television, that might help! I’m sure that novelty will wear off soon.

Thanks again for your help.
 
Balancing and Rinsing

Jay, my full size Duet washer does the same thing, it appears to be balanced nearly perfectly and yet it still feels the need to redistribute. This is the most annoying thing about FL machines IMO, as it's frustrating to see the machine's drum rotating so smoothly only to have it slow down and redistribute to be more off balance. Why these machines don't quit while they're ahead of the balancing game I don't know, but it's definitely a weak point in the design and engineering.

Bruce, my machine doesn't do a very high speed spin for the rinse either but my laundry doesn't come out smelling like detergent, so the clothes are definitely getting a thorough rinsing. The big test was towels. They always smelled like detergent after my old TL was done with them. Now they have no detergent smell at all after running them through my Duet.

I still find myself watching my Duet in action sometimes, but trust me, the novelty level will wear off from what it is for you right now. In the meantime, enjoy the show!

Ralph
 

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