Hi Shanonabc
I have three Gentle Annies - one my parents use every day. Mum just loves it - she calls it"Annie" and craps on about it all the time. The second was for spare parts - the motor control board is shot. The third is in my garage - I got it to possibly replace Mum's machine as hers was misbehaving but the fault turned out to be trivial (can't remember what) so the extra machine is still here.
These are fantastic machines, the quality is amazing, I think much better construction than Smart Drives which were built more to a price. Gentle Annies were $999 about 15 years ago, you can get a new basic Smart Drive for just over $500. To my mind the GAs really show FP's history of medical equipment manufacture - where it is really important that things never fail. The only common fault I'm aware of on GAs is the lid is made of two layers of plastic, over time they separate and the lid then becomes "floppy", sagging away from the lid switch so it stops spinning. Gluing the lid back together fixes the problem. The power board is in a metal box underneath, if a hose leaks the box can get wet and fry the boards inside - that's what happened to my spare parts machine.
Hi Arrrooohhh
I got two Whirlpool FLs a few months ago. One wasn't working simply because the dispenser had its liquid detergent dam in place but it had been used with powder, so the dispenser was completely caked up with goo. Water had been flowing down the face of the machine so paint was wrecked and starting to rust.
Inside the machine was disgusting with several handfuls of slime - mixture of detergent residue and probably cooking oil - machine was a tea towel washer in a restaurant - not where I work I hasten to add. It is now cleaned out and working but I have to repair the paint yet. It is an awm285-800, a fairly basic 800 rpm machine less than 5 years old. I really like it, very quiet, stable and no fuss, seems to wash well and is gentle on itself, should last ages. I got it for nothing.
The later one, the 5100, is only three years old, thrown out by Radio Rentals, the only fault was a bit of plastic caught in the button trap which almost blocked it completely. I got it from the recycle centre for $15. Also the (fragile) plastic fingers that hold the lid on were broken off but I think I can repair that, so the machine works perfectly but the lid panel is loose. I am using it again at present, it is very highly computerised and the programmers don't think like I do and it is too clever for me, I am still battling to get it to do what I want instead of what some engineer in Italy thinks is good for me. Heres some of it...
When the machine is started, the computer checks the settings of the buttons, then locks in the settings so most of them can't be changed during a wash (child proof, also fiddle-proof when I like to fiddle...)
As I don't want it to heat but I want it to fill with warm to hot water, I have to set the temp to higher than 60 degrees to get some hot water in the fill, on lower settings it fills cold only. When full I turn the dial back to tap cold so it doesn't try to heat, as I have disconnected the heater. If I don't change the temp setting it will sit there all day waiting for the water to heat up...
Even on the short wash it washes for bloody ages, but if I select Rapid button as well as short wash I get a wash about the right time but it only does ONE rinse!!! pathetic. It spins after wash, then clicks past each intermediate rinse with a short pause at each, then goes straight to final rinse.
If I don't select rapid I get four rinses (or three, I can't remember). It has an "intensive rinse" button but even then it only does one rinse when rapid is selected. The water level may be higher but it is slight - still doesn't reach the opening, let alone come up the door. It is the most miserly washer with water I have ever seen.
If I were prepared to leave the cycles alone and do as it was designed it would be an excellent machine, quiet for a brush motor but still not as quiet as the Thor which has an induction motor. Probably not a great rinser, though it does spin after the weash and every spin, but the water level is SO low even in rinses. Very stable when spinning, seems robust and thoughtfully designed, but no thought given for my needs - minimum power use including NO heat (it is impossible to stop it heating unless you disconnect the element, even on "minimum" setting it heats cold water to 20 degrees C.), good rinsing, prefer full load done in about one hour.
Chris.