I found a Jacobs Launderall!

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This is beyond cool.

Especially because Paul is one of the few people on this planet who has the skill and patience to make this work.

There's a lot to be said for TL H-Axis machines, pity they've never really caught on on this continent.
 
Wow Paul, what a cool and unusual find... and it's amazing it still works! I look forward to the results of the water test. Once you know it holds water, do you think you might try doing an actual "test load" of laundry?

CONGRATULATIONS!

Kevin
 
Very neat. How many washers made today will still be operating 68 years from now? Like I even need to ask.
 
Very Amazing

I had one for a short time, got it to spin and cracked it open a bit, boy did it look complicated. It is truly amazing that yours works. I would say it is in very good shape from the pictures. Congratulations!
 
All righty then,  here's a video of the first water test, showing the fill portion of the cycle.  I was sure those solenoids were dead, but nope!

 

Rick - about the handles - one is a selector for hot or warm wash (it moves a cable that activates a lever on one end of the tranny unit to power on the water solenoids) and the other is just a 'starter' button that activates a relay to get the motor running.  Interesting thing about the Jacobs - it doesn't have a conventional timer.  It's kinda like the 50s Blackstone (especially that Charcoal Gray BA250... *giggle*) in that the motor drives a series of cams that run a sequence of fill, wash (oscillating back and forth), drain, spin, fill, rinse, drain, fill, rinse and spin.  Once you start a Launderall ya can't stop it and the default wash time is 10 minutes.  Definitely not for the really delicate items in your wash!

 

The video is unedited and shows there are a few leaks.  The ones coming from the supply hoses are probably just because I didn't have an appropriate clamp to attach them properly; as for the leaks observed from the pump housing and what I think may have been from the coin trap, I'm hoping that these are the good old cork gaskets and will swell with further testing.   Yes, I am the eternal optimist... LOL 

 

 
And of course I had to film the spin...  Yes, I think we're all now convinced whoever built that mock-up washer on the famous I Love Lucy episode where Ethel gets slapped in the face with a wet towel was inspired by a Launderall... LOL 

 

This video also proves the following:  the machine really should be bolted down, weak wooden floors will not be your friend with this washer, and Canyon is smart enough to get the hell away from leaky vintage washers.  

 

And although my marketing degree served no useful purpose in my so-called career, the tag line I thought of while witnessing the Launderall spin was:  "Yes, the Launderall by Jacobs is the machine you want if you really, really hate your downstairs neighbours...."  LOL 

 

 
Lovely washer drama! A pity these machines didn't have suspension, perhaps it would have been more popular. On the other hand, one cycle and two temperatures isn't a big selling point.

Ten minutes of tumbling in the wash isn't very long for an H-axis machine. I presume it didn't do very well on cleaning.

I guess the next H-axis toploader that saw the light was the Swiss V-Zug Unimatic in the fifties.
 
Paul, you just made the NIB Launderall a bit more desirable now that we have proof that these machines can work without going into flames!

Maybe God had something to do with the possessed evil burning machine that Jon used to have!

;-)
 
WOW

One of the all time cool finds, congratulations!

That 15 seconds reversal must have been hell on the motor and tranny and suspension, that's plenty of weight and water to switch directions so quick. Not for delicates, that's for sure.
Thanks for the videos!!!!
 
Fun videos!

I can't get over how well your machine is running! It sounds as though the water stopped the rumbling sound it was making in your "dry" run videos.

So the tub is not leaking at all? Just the hoses you rigged up?

I think you should bolt it down and do a load of laundry. You just might be impressed with the results!
 
Congratulations!!!

I have seen/used one of the Jacobs Launderalls in the early 1950's. The people had it on a cement slab, but had only two bolts. When the machine started to spin, it was like a bucking broncho and made an extremely loud noise as it bucked and hit the floor.

That Launderall was replaced with a Maytag AMP.

I thought the machine was fascinating.

Good luck.

Jerry Gay
 
'Daily' use might be a stretch... LOL  

 

The basement in Ogden has a pretty rickety wood floor over a good solid concrete one - I've been campaigning to have the wood floor removed for sake of the ol' washer collection but that may not happen for some time.   I was thinking of making a concrete pier to bolt it to but that may not be really practical either.  Oh, such decisions!!
 
L U C Y, you got some splaing to do......

I have this very prized working leaking & never on fire in my humble collection. No timer to break,yea... select water temp warm/hot, turn the handle to lock the lid sending the machine on it's way to hands free clean laundry. However, no control of the time, or cycle. Unplug it, open the lid, lock lid & plug it in, begins cycle where you were, has to finish out cycle, to shut off ready for next load. I did fill it, run it into spin with a few towels, it jumped up off the floor in the air. Three of us sat on it, what a great ride, had to unplug, no wonder it had such long bolts into the concrete floor.

Mine was still bolted to the floor 1988, had a hell of a time to find where the 2 7" bolts were located to get the machine moved. It was plugged in and hoses connected, it started humming and the tumbler turned. A 1970's "shredmore" was installed as daily driver.

Did you know? Jacobs a Detroit Motor City Co part of the automotive industry making transmissions at the time. Other auto makers like General Motors/Fridigaire, Nash/Kelvinator(ABC), later years Ford/Philco-Bendix were making entry onto showroom floors in department stores to impress the husband designed & manufactured by an auto industry company & delight the housewife with end of the most labor & time usage to keep the home & family clean at the push of a button.

This unique machine was in production for a few years by Jacobs 1946-1950. it was a cash cow for them, built plants in other US cities & Canada too. At one time , F.L.Jacobs Mfg began manufacturing refrigerated machines for Coca-Cola,Pepsi,Royal Crown Cola & 7up in the 1940's while located in Indianapolis, Indiana. Later, around 1950, they moved to Traverse City, Michigan before going out of business in late 1953. Jacobs machines have a unique shape that many collectors nicknamed the "mailbox". This design has become a trademark of styling for F.L. Jacobs.

Bendix the 1st automatic home laundry company introduced the port hole in 1937, held all the patents, so Jacobs &, Westinghouse had to be clever to design around their machines around them, and beat them at the game. The cone shaped coin catcher, vs Bendix can shape, Westinghouse tilted tub, designs to avoid royalties.

The design of Jacobs top load horizontal axis was also used in European home laundry equipment, it provided a larger wash tub in a compact movable unit. Westinghouse also got into this market early with the "Revolving Agitator" touted by our beloved Betty Furness in the mid 1950's.

It's great to see another Launderall by Jacobs rescued now available for viewing on this sight. Their print advertising like the automobile ads of the day, with large image of the gleaming white cabinet, round glass window hinged door, chrome trimmed with brushed aluminum family crest escutcheon, with printed story telling sales pitch below.

BTW....Enjoy the 20 anniversary Wash-N-combo convention, in our nations capitol. The meet & greet,sights and smells, the bells (how-dry-I-am) with stories & show and tell for days on end. I will miss it all this year, however please let me vicariously enjoy thru all your posted memories of the event.

Bye for now
 
Facts on F.L.Jacobs Co

F. L. Jacobs Company, hereinafter called Jacobs, is a Michigan corporation formed on January 7, 1933, with its principal office in Detroit, Michigan.

The company that marketed the Monitor steam iron, Monitor Equipment Corporation, was the brainchild of Theodore K. Quinn, a former executive at General Electric (GE). His idea was to engage small manufacturers to sell their products through an organized network of distributors, thereby making it possible for these small companies to compete with the ever-more-dominant big manufacturers, such as GE.

Monitor engaged the F. L. Jacobs company to manufacture the irons. F. L. Jacobs of Detroit, Michigan originally specialized in manufacturing home appliances like the Jacobs Launderall washing machine. They began manufacturing soda vending machines for Coca-Cola in the 1940’s from a plant in Indianapolis, Indiana.

The F. L. Jacobs Company moved to Traverse City, Michigan around 1950. Unfortunately, there weren't to be any more Jacobs soda machines coming down the production line. It seems that in 1951 the F. L. Jacobs Company was encouraged by the U.S. Department of Justice to repay $15 million “in excess profits from producing necessities and munitions of war during World War II”. They voluntarily paid back the money, and it obviously put a strain on the company. They closed their doors in 1953.
 

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