Great! Compliments indeed for having restored a such wondeful machine! If I remember right Bendix came out first with Duomatic doing washer/dryer...none did this before!
Have the best washing hours with this machine!
If only there were the right culture of what mean to put dirty clothes in the drum and take them out after a completely wash and dry cycle...just to fold them and brign back to you wardrobe...OMG! What a wonderful world! :-DD
Thanks for sharing these pics, I either had just finished my dream's machine quick restoration...but I had lot less to do than you did!!!
You did a beautiful job with this machine. I especially loved the glass window on the front. I reminds me of a steering wheel on a 50s car. I think what impresses me about these washers and dryers is the design and workmanship. They really put a lot of effort on those machines.
I've been curious about these machines for some time. Did they circulate and exhaust hot air for the drying cycyle, like a conventinal dryer? Did they use some form of condensing?
I've heard that modern combination machines use water as part of the condensing mechanism. This seems wasteful as water is getting more and more scarce, particularly here in Oz. How do they work?
Wonderful restoration, absolutely wonderful! Hats off! I love the steering wheel door. I love the look under the machine too. They don't come that clean from the factory! Enjoy that Bendix for many years in good health.
I did all that tampering prolly 20 years ago long before I knew better. Anyway - it ran and held water, didn't it~! Sorry 'bout the 1/4 horse motor windings, but that's all I had on hand at the time, and it did work ('cept for going into spin - sometimes).
I'm the fella that woke it up out of it's original coma at that time. You could only imagine what it looked like before THAT~. It was outright rusty - openly - even on the front.
Glad you got it and did your thing with it, though, Jon.
It looks great.
I did this banner photo about 10 years ago, and I had the machine a long time before that.
All of these machines are now in the hands of other collectors - and the cycle continues to advance.