How To Replace The Two Speed Clutch On A G.E. Filter Flo

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Now, reinstall the motor.

Tip the washer forward again, and slip the motor back underneath it. Align it with the three studs that hold it on, and add the washers and lock nuts, only tightening them enough to hold the motor up off the floor. You’ll need the motor to be able to slide in order to get the belt hooked back over the outer drum. Once this is done, tighten the nuts up until they’re tight, and then back them off slightly. Pull the motor away from the transmission until the belt is nice and tight, then re tighten the nuts.
 
Replacing a two speed clutch on a GE filter flow washer

Well done, as everyone can tell from your good instructions it’s fairly detailed thing because you have to disassemble the clutch to remove it from the motor and to reinstall it after a while GE started just selling the whole motor and clutch in a unit which was often not a bad deal if you had one that was in bad shape.

Of course you don’t have to remove the pump drive from the pump and from the driver on the top of the clutch unless you replacing that rubber driver or replacing the water pump.

I always just lay the whole washing machine on the face of the machine with some padding rather than try to work underneath it.

It was always amazing that GE went all the trouble with these multi speed clutches and yet they were one of the world‘s largest makers of electric motors and they could’ve easily just put a two speed motor in the washer.

John L
 
I always appreciate, celebrate and save these wonderful How-To threads. Guy, thank you very much for doing and posting this. This is a project I actually might be able to do with my very limited tech skills.

John, I agree with your comment about how easy it would have been to use a two-speed motor. But wasn't the issue always that, with a 2-speed motor running on SLOW, the Filter-Flo stream wouldn't have enough momentum to make it into the filter pan? Even I, Filter-Flo lover that I am, recognize that the FF system was mostly BS that used way too much water, but I love those filter pans and I don't think there's a better washing machine for people with Golden Retrievers.

What I wonder about, and never thought about until I joined this site and saw Mr. Seeger's amazing GE AW early Automatic, was WHY, for God's sake, WHY didn't the engineers in Appliance Park use THAT machine (with its Rim-Flo that might not have needed a forceful stream, it's Frigidaire-fast spin speed and it's wash-board solid tub) as the paradigm for their Latter Half of the Twentieth Century models?????????

They went back to the Rim-Flo when they Borg-assimilated Hotpoint washers, but they quickly dumbed-down those machines when Jack Welch and his merry band of bean counters took over. Apparently white goods didn't please the stock-holders as much as nuclear weapons and dirty finance.
 
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