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Austin,
Yes they are very very quite. Much more quite then I remember a 1-18 being. Apperently the set was owned by a older lady who lived alone. I just love having 1-18's back in the house. It's been over a decade, since I had one!!! Thank god we never got around to repainting the laundry room, that's the original yellow paint from the early 70's!!!
Donnie
 
Donnie:

Funny, I was just telling Austin how the laundry room walls matched the 1-18 set! Great job!
 
Left handed??

No, I'm not left handed, why do you ask?
Toggle is right, the sink and plumbing is to the right of the washer, and the 220v plug and the exhust hole is to the left of the dryer. It must be a chicago thing, alomst every laudry room I have been in is set up like this.
Donnie
 
Congratulations! They're beautiful. I've never seen a 1-18 with the fabric softener dispenser. Thanks for answering veg's question about how it works and why it doesn't dispense during agitation. I was wondering the same thing...
 
My W&D were dryer on left.
So I reversed the dryer door to hinge left.

Then I had the pipe extended (Can yo DO that?) to put the washer on left and dryer on right.

uhm, and once again reversed the door to hinge right.

OY VEY
 
Interesting how the hookups are reversed from the usual washer-left arrangement. I wonder what would happen with a Kenmore in its place? ;-)
 
Said: the sink and plumbing is to the right of the washer,

It might just be to keep the pluming runs short. Frequently the kit. and bath are back-to-back for just such a reason.

I grew up with (and have always coincidentally had) the DW to the left of the sink. Is the right better for righties? Don't know; I am a lefty myself.
 
My house built in 2005 has washer on the right. The house in which I grew up, built in 1964 was washer on right. The house my parents bought in 1980, built in 1972, has washer on the right. It was done that way in all three cases so the dryer vents directly through an outside wall. The wall behind them was/is an inside wall -- can't vent the dryer into a bedroom, bathroom, or kitchen!
 
My parents house built in 1961 had washer on right. The Timeline was hinged on the right. Fortunately the 64 Norge had the 3 position hinged door worked well. The house my sister is currently renting, about 10 years old, has washer on the right with dryer on the left.
 
Man Oh Man!!!!

Have my weekend reading! Thanks Donnie!

Now I simply have to have one of these washers! Pity they never were made in a more compact "space saving" design.

My aunt had one of these machines, and during one long summer vaction at her house helped her do the laundry. Having never seen a washer where the agitator bobbed up and down, it was quite amazing to watch, oh but the noise!

Interesting thing about reading the manuals is all the neat information regarding laundry practices one hardly sees today in washer manuals. Things like starching, dyeing, washing pillows, and electric blankets. It does seem however many new front loading washers have dispensed with writing directions in their manuals,and just created special cycles to deal with all and sundry.

22 gallons of water per cycle, guess we'll never see the likes of these behemoths again, well not unless they can bring water use down to around a F&P top loader.

Launderess
 
C O N G R A T U L A T I O N S ! ! !

Congratulations on the beautiful Frigidaire set! May you have many super sudsy washes!!! Mark
 
Said: Interesting how the hookups are reversed from the usual washer-left arrangement.

Here's a slant ya may not have thought of.....
Housing in my area is MUCH older than most of your are used to. You'd consider a 1950's house old. To us it's NEW!
Here electricity came LATER. Cental heating came later. Central (residential) cooling is just starting to become the norm (S L O W L Y ).

Although most homes now have 110/220v service it is not uncommon to see only 50a service. Many aparmtents still have 110v 30a service with only two 15a circuits.

Anyway, to make some sort of point finally..
Washers were added later. Certainly dryers came MUCH later and you squeeze them in where ya can. I guess I am saying here you don't always build new to suit...
 
Said: It does seem however many new front loading washers have dispensed with writing directions in their manuals,and just created special cycles to deal with all and sundry.

I find this interesting, in that we came away from that 50's and 60's mentality where a separate cycle was needed for each and every type of fabric or article to a basic 3 to 6 cycles /programmes.

Regular
PermaPress / EasyCare / Wash n' Wear
Delicate /Gentle

and the TOL fun stuff such as

Pre-Wash
Pre-Soak
(Automatic) Second Rinse.

I may like the quality or Euro-machines, but to me IMHO The limited capacity, the time factor and the multitude of cycles (read: overkill) just don't appeal to me.

I am actually sorry to see that we here are also going cuckoo with too many (ridiculous) cycles. How about some FUN cycles like:

Club / "Disco" (Cigarettes and booze, cologne perfume)
Beach (sand and greasy oils everywhere)
Holiday meal (stains, ya know)
Office (dark colors, maybe some wool, pencil and ink on cuffs)
Garage-wear/ painting clothes. Blue collar job (grease dirt, muck)
Gardening (mud,dirt, allergens) F&P has this already n'est ce pas?
SPANDEX-BE-GONE a cycle to destroy your family's really ill-fitting or inappropriate to age/gender/weight stuff.

OK'nuff said. LOL
We now return this thread to it's proper flow, already in progress.
 
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