Hoover Keymatic - The First !!!

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Keymatic Life

Hi Louis

Glad I was able to find this, can you believe non about and then like a number 23 bus, TWO come along at once, the other now residing in South Wales..

Looking forward to renovating it, not fully operational although the drum turns and timer advances, a few leaks from a manual fill test, the rest is a service nightmare, reams of wire on the two distribution blocks and yards of hosing all waiting to perish..

A lot of the faults had been ironed out so to speak on the next model machine that you have..

So at the moment your idea is best, get loads of friends and family around, fill it with "Ice & Tinnies" then surprise them by going to the "Keymatic" instead of the fridge.

Keymatic On Boddies, The Cream Of Manchester!!!

Cheers,

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Times & Temps

Hi Bob

I`ve scanned the programmes in for you, the first words of the book proudly proclaim:

"You now possess the most fully advanced automatic washing machine in the world - the Automated Hoover Keymatic. Quite a boast dont you think!!

The Keymatic only uses three Temps, these are:
85c / 185F, 60c / 140F, & 40c.

The one Keyplate supplied only has 8 programmes including rinse & spin and spin only.

Check the programmes

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Support Springs

Hey Chris

I thought you would have the answer to the drum, I`ve just checked again because I couldnt see a wire, and then I saw it, the reason I missed it its soooooo thin, no wonder they broke, the wiring in the plug is thicker!!!

Its snapped on the left hand side, Although I have the original Hoover Tech Manual its the one thing it doesnt show , just mentions it, you just about can see the pulleys but no cable...Should be easy to do but obviously have to take the cabinet apart etc..and to put a thicker cable in as well.

Will reserve that for a full overhall and will stick a wooden block underneath to take the support of the tub/motor until then...

Was really surprised to see the pulleys and bets etc,

When the tub is tumbling ready for spin, the second motor windings operate, does that mean the drum still moves in the same direction or does it reverse and change direction??

cant work that out and if it reverses it would cause one hell of a jolt etc.

Drum runs very smooth pulsator had a bit of a squeak but after an oiling gone quiet.

Feet & Feet of hoses, it fills through the sump, is that right??

The shape of the drum is very interesting almost has three sides to it, straight in the middle and slopes at front & back, makes a very interesting study of the laws of physics just to do a wash!!

Cheers

Mike
 
Kewl Turquoise!!

Hi Robert

Never thought I would end up having a turquoise machine after drooling after all those you have there...

Its the most sophisticated machine I`ve ever seen, a renovators dream a servicemans nightmare!!

All of the UK machines where made hot & cold fill, they expected you would keep your water at 50c, and the heater would suppliment to the desired programme.

The heater is a whopping 3000watts and the cables are obviously thick to cope...

Well now you do have the chance to see a keymatic yourself, you even have a choice of Continents & Countries...

I know, for you 40th next year you can do a "Round-The-World"
trip, Fly Chester Uk for a Roman Adventure, Off to The Netherlands with Louis, Call in at Amersterdam to press the red light zone, And then Off to Chris In Aus where you can be 39 for 12 hrs longer...!!!

Sorted

Mike
 
Pulsator Twists

Hi Jon

Sounds simple and thats what happens, when you look at the motor from the back , the pulsator drive is RHS and the drum drive is LHS with the gearbox...

I wondered if they looked at the Westinghouse machine to take designs from?? obviously patents with Bendix ruled out the simpler option.

When did Westinghouse first produce the FL??

How does the westy suspension work, springs or shocks, anyone any pics from the inside??

Me thinks you must have used a 70`s style keymatic, did it have one keyslot or two,

The third generation of machines had two slots , one to store spare keyplates etc,

Was it this one below?? or check the links to the other pics??

Mike


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Keyplates

Now that would be a very fun way to wash! Just look for the desired cycle on the keyplate and pop it in!

Were these double-sided, having cycles on both the front and back, or did you have to buy a separate keyplate for options 4-8? More of a curiosity question: Did the machine start when the keyplate was inserted or did it have to be turned on first?

Looking forward to meeting you at the Convention!

--Austin
 
Some more Keymatic questions--

How long did this fascinating control system last?

Were the following generations less complex?

Were the following generations reliable?

I think it's a very cool device, no matter what.

Lawwrence/Maytagbear
 
Yay Mike!

I believe Keymatics were still being sold when my parents bought their first Hoover washer in 1982 - the installation manual has a picture of teh control panels for the machines in the 1982 range, and the Keymatic was the 2nd model down, with a machine with a programme selector dial and timeline display as the top model, and our model A3110, which was the 1100 spin timer model, with the fast/half/woollens spin buttons :-). There was also an 800rpm version of the A3110, but it didnt have a woollens button.

My nana also ahd a version of teh washer we had, but from the 1972. Again, it had the programme dial with cottons/synthetics/woollens spin buttons, but it was slightly smaller than our Hoover washer, and also instead of a door release pushbutton on the control panel, it had a slider to the right of the door that you pulled across to release the door. And of course, had that infamous Hoover drum (with the small hole in the back, and 3 sausage shaped lines between each paddle), which was still in use on the New Wave machines until Hoover were finally bought by Candy in the late 90s :-(. I have such fond memories of these machines, such a shame they're not around anymore :-(. My nana now has a Hotpoint WM25 from 1996/1997 and she said it is nowhere near as good as her old Hoover was at washing. In fact, she only got rid of the Hoover because she won the Hotpoint in a raffle, otherwise she'd probably still have it to this day :-).

I've probably said before, but my Grandma had a 1960's version of the Hotpoint TL - it's similar to the 70s version on your site, with the temperature dial, programme dial, timeline progress indicators, and buttons for hevy soil/rinse hold/short spin etc. It was a very cool machine, but it got replaced when I was about 5 or 6 so don't remember *too* much about it. A Hotpoint 1993 Aquarius 800 (9528 i think the number is) replaced the TL.

I've always loved looking through your Yahoo photo album Mike, you have quite a collection that I envy! Maybe you should host the convention next year :-D.

Take care,

Jon :-)
 
Hi Mike.

I wouldn't use a thicker drum cable, it might be less flexible and therefore not allow the drum to flex around enough. When you get it going you will be amazed how much the drum moves around during spin yet the outer cabinet douesn't vibrate or jump about at all. It is on castors but it doesn't move around. The suspension is very flexible, could give some lessons to today's front loaders in that regard. That machine is over 40 years old, the cable may even be original so that's not a bad run, to get a new cable made up I'd chase around classic car restoration places, someone who makes up accelerator cables and bonnet cables to order could make one up to sample. My first keymatic had a broken cable (rusted through) but I had about three or four more which never gave trouble. I will search my spares to see if I have a cable but I strongly doubt it. I thought I had many Keymatic spares but when I looked for them I can find only a few. Hmmm.

That red belt for spin is probably a replacement. The originals look like a loop of rubberized rope. There is no apparent join, it is woven into a circle. I have a couple, I can post a pic one day soon.

The drum only turns one way. The two pulleys on the back of the drum have an ingenious clutch between each pulley and the shaft, a couple of rollers and a spring, when the pulley turns one way it drives, when the pulley reverses it idles backwards. As the two motor pulleys drive in opposite directions, if one pulley is driving the other is going backwards and not driving. So when washing the slow (wash) pulley drives and the fast (spin)pulley idles backwards. If the pulsator solenoid is released, the pulsator is also driven by the spin pulley which is whizzing backwards, so the pulsator is driven reverse to the drum.
When the wash is finished it pumps out. First static ("neutral drain"), then as the water level drops it starts tumbling again to distribute the load. When it is ready to spin, the motor instantly reverses (which dims all the lights in the house for a second) so the slow pulley now reverses and the fast pulley turns in the drive direction. The pulsator turns with the drum in this direction. The motor has a very strong start winding so it gets up to spin speed very fast.

Because of the clutches inside the two pulleys, it is impossible to drive the drum backwards. Either pulley if driven in reverse just idles.

Yes, it fills through the sump. How about that sump hose? Have you ever seen anything so complicated? Dead ends, flexy bits, rigid bits, a narrow hose to the pressure switches, phew!

Interesting that the instructions for yours say three rinses. Someone at twin tub emporium has posted a later one with four rinses. ALL Australian ones had three rinses.

Best Wishes

Chris.
 
Hi Austin

The keyplates are double sided so one plate gives eight options. The machines came with two plates but the two plates have the same options except the black one is for cold fill and the red one for hot or warm fill. (Black one was for where there was no hot water supply to the laundry.)

The machine has a separate rocker switch for on/off, but it doesn't have to be used. If the rocker switch wasn't turned off after the last load, you just press in the keyplate to start. The keyplate can be inserted to three depths - press in fully to start, it snaps back when released to the centre position which is normal running position, where keyplate fingers are engaged to select the cycle. You can also pull the keyplate out a little which disengages the keyplate fingers and causes the timer to skip through the programs so you can manually skip a part of a cycle or skip through to the end if you want to change cycles. You have to release a childproof button underneath to do the skip through thing. It is fun to do as the timer actually does each function as it skips past so it fills a second, tumbles a second, pumps a second, spins a second and so on as it skips through. If there is water inside it stops and empties before it does the tiny spin though.

If the machine gets off balance on spin it just turns off the rocker switch. (fortunately this very rarely happens) When you have rebalanced the load you press the rocker switch back on and it goes straight into spin with no tumble to distribute the load.

Chris
 

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