GM Frigidaire 1-18 Washtub Capacity

Automatic Washer - The world's coolest Washing Machines, Dryers and Dishwashers

Help Support :

scrubflex

Well-known member
Joined
May 12, 2008
Messages
1,083
Location
bronx, new york
Does anyone know how big is the 1-18 tub? How big a load it's capable of handling...it's dimensions (L x W), cubic foot measurements. What washer is the 1-18 equal in size to, vintage or modern?
 
One pound to eighteen pounds of laundry.  Timeless, really.

 

As with any washer, there are things that the 1-18 handles really well like towels, mixed cotton loads, etc. and some loads it doesn't do quite as stellar of a job with.  Large loads of blue jeans, bulky comforters and the like won't turn over as rapidly.  Your mileage may vary.

 

I love mine for super-sized towel loads, nothing washes towels like the plunging Jet-Action of a Frigidaire and rinsing is excellent.   The fibers of towels in particular seem to fluff up, even old towels have been revived to a degree with that wash action.  Less wear it seems, too.  I have a set of microfiber fleece sheets and a couple of throws that it does a great job with, never a tangle and always well rinsed.
 
Hey Gansky, I've seen the video with large load of jeans and thought shouldn't they have 'balled-up' the jean and placed it in sections around the Jet-Cone and tub? And for the comforter, suppose using a lower water---would that help power-up the turnover? Have you ever washed a super-sized load with the water level raised beyond the top cone? I've never seen any videos with the water level and washloads pass MAXI. Does anyone load the tub up to the rim...I'd like to see what the top cone can do. The Jet-Cone is only top loading agitator that uses 'water turbulence' to clean clothes. No fins or vanes to beat and move the clothes through the water making it the 'gentlest'. I want a 1-18 especially after learning how to make them much quieter. I just wish there was a way to muffle-out the water sounds from inside the Jet-Cone...1-18's in NYC???
 
Actually with the jet cone agitators you no longer needed to put the clothes in sections as in previous models. The washing action was different, the jet cone agitator actually pulled the clothes down instead of plunging the water so vigorously to move the water making the clothes move so vigorously and making them tangle so badly. The jet cone agitator was designed to eliminate the tangling that the earlier machines had. When you overfill the 1-18 washer past the top cone it only splashes and creates more suds and does nothing to pull the clothing down for turnover. With the jet cone agitators the lighter weight clothes such as permanent press and synthetics tend to float and not plunge under easily. I don't know exactly how much a 1-18 will hold, but it is more than any other top loader I have ever used before. I used them in a commercial shirt laundry myself and they cleaned and spun out the shirts as well as the commercial 50 pound front loader.
 
My Experience

Is that you can load that thing up and the Jet Cone always wins.  I have done many a Maxi load in my two with fine results.  I still resort to the old X loading patern with mine because it is a habit and it also produces a better balanced load.  I always start the bottom with pants or shorts and then the shirts on the top.  Pants are folded in half and dropped loosely, the same with shirts.

 

I have a huge bulky queen comforter for winter and it fills the machine to the top when loaded dry.  The water entering reduces it size somewhat.  This comforter is so huge that it will not turn over however it still comes clean because...  The Jet Cone and the recirculation keeps water on the move, the Jet Cone forces sudsy water through the comforter while the filter is catching all the nasty stuff.  I do a double rinse and a two 50 minute drying sessions in a 1-18 dryer because the comforter balls up and has to be flipped to dry the other parts.  It's a laborious task but the machines produce good final results even when taxed in this manner.
 
Hey ScrubFlex

I just joined AW and also had the good fortune of picking up a 1-18 on Craigslist while I was in Kansas City for the holidays (still can't believe the coincidence and timing.) It's in my sisters place there and needs a new water intake valve but anxious to get it up and running. I live in NYC so we may have to start an NYC 1-18 support group. I have wondered if neighbors would put up with this noise in the cramped living quarters of NYC. I have, however, thought a perfect place for one would be a house on fire island. I have a friend who has a five bedroom house and the volume and type of laundry he deals with would be the perfect test, which I think the 1-18 would pass!

gregingotham-2015010423385303153_1.jpg
 
Okay, I figured because of the 12 upper holes inside the column and the vents at the upper edge of the larger cone, water forced through would be strong enough to help push the clothes down to the bottom of the tub from the top...just like the water turbulence from the 3 cones at the bottom of the agitator.
Just a thought, maybe the (3-slotted hole) reduces or hampers the water surge as it passes through it...weakening the water-flow force. If this is the case, then making a bigger hole will cause the top cone to be more effective in pushing water through the vents and forcing the load to the bottom better than as is.
In terms of tub size, do you think the 1-18 washtub's is big as Maytag's 806 or 712 washer?

scrubflex-2015010422492500426_1.jpg
 
I'm in...now all you need for your 1-18 is to check out Jetcone's NOISE REDUCTION application and also add the'Cotton Blanket Soundproof Insulation' to line the cabinet and top for complete quiet operation. That's what I'm going to do when I get my 1-18...model WIC-A.
 
Will you guys be so kind and post some pics of the Jet Cone agitator. That show closer up views of the design inside the column walls and bottom. Also, pics of the bottom cones (underneath to see the vents and cone (undercarriage). I wish there was a 'cut-away' that show the design of the agitator.
 
Harry, did you post a picture of your WIC-A washer's tub? Mine has the newer style tub as seen in this thread.

If the tub is from your machine, I'd be curious to see it's serial number!

 
Being old enough to have been around when these machines first came out, I do remember a lot about them. The first style of tub had holes at the bottom of the tub and the second style did not. I would think that getting rid of sand and sediment would be better with the first style of tub. These machines were very unusual in the fact that most machines washed better with smaller loads and this machine did it's best job with a full or even slightly overfull load of clothes. They washed a much bigger load of clothes than anything else on the market then and probably even now. I worked on a great many of these machines and they were real work horses. One downfall they had was the tub seal on some would wear out quickly. When this happened the consumer would usually use the machine leaking and eventually it would ruin the bearings fairly quickly when water would get into them. By the time they called the repairman it would cost a fortune to fix it and not worth repairing in most people's mind. I worked at a used washer and dryer place in '74 briefly and he had a matching set about a year old that the seal had gone out on the washer and the rollers in back of the dryer had gotten off track and tore up the felt seal on. He ended up selling the poor woman a kenmore set that was at least 10-15 years old and she gave him her Frigidaire 1-18 set. I had more problems with the dryers and their rollers than the washers myself. Particularly the later dryers that only used two rollers at the back. They used to somehow let the drum guide cut part of the rubber roller and the entire rubber cover would come off and make the drum sit lower and thus tearing up the felt seal.
 
I get it Bob...no Phil it isn't mine, the WIC-A is the 1-18 washer I hope to fine here in NYC...Bruce the holes I was referring to are the slotted-holes inside the top area of the Jet-Cone agitator's column. It's capacity ability sounds AWESOME and just what I wanted to hear and the only way to handle the tub seal problem is to act quickly.
 
In 2006 at the Texas Washin, I washed a load in the 1/18 of my own towels.  I normally washed these as two separate loads in the Lady Shredmore, both about 3/4 full.  the 1/18 didn't even hiccup.  I think everyone at Austin's house that evening were amazed at just how much of a BobLoad I got in that 1/18.  I'm estimating 16 bath towels, 16 wash cloths, and at least 10 hand towels.  And these are not the postage stamp size bath towels. 
 
Norge/Wards 20-lb

Wellllll Todd, I can't say from experience.  I've never had an opportunity to BobLoad a Norge newer than our 1964.  I'd love to find out.  As Hans says, nothing outcleans a Norge!!!   If I ever go visit my sister & BIL in Petaluma, I won't pack anything.  I'll simply load up several boxes of dirty laundry and ship it out there and come on over for a wash-in
 

Latest posts

Back
Top