Quick question for the gurus:
In all of the guides for helical transmission servicing on the Maytag washing machines, the bulk of the servicing effort seems to be the process of removing the agitator, tub, brake, etc, to actually get the transmission out of the machine... and then the associated labor and parts to re-install.
** What prevents the helical trans from being split and serviced WITHOUT removing it? **
My parent's A308 recently died... Dad says it spins fine, but locks up when it tries to agitate. I gather from other posts here that it's likely to be a lack of lubrication, specifically on that top bearing.
Looking at the machine, couldn't you simplify the transmission servicing by simply leaving the agitator and tubs together, and just un-bolt the outer tub from the supports, remove the transmission case bolts, and lift the top half of the transmission up and out with the tub, leaving the bottom half of the transmission in the chassis?
Of course further disassembly may be required depending on what you find... but this would seem to greatly reduce the amount of labor for the initial diagnosis... and substantially reduce it for a refill of the gear oil...
Any thoughts are appreciated!
In all of the guides for helical transmission servicing on the Maytag washing machines, the bulk of the servicing effort seems to be the process of removing the agitator, tub, brake, etc, to actually get the transmission out of the machine... and then the associated labor and parts to re-install.
** What prevents the helical trans from being split and serviced WITHOUT removing it? **
My parent's A308 recently died... Dad says it spins fine, but locks up when it tries to agitate. I gather from other posts here that it's likely to be a lack of lubrication, specifically on that top bearing.
Looking at the machine, couldn't you simplify the transmission servicing by simply leaving the agitator and tubs together, and just un-bolt the outer tub from the supports, remove the transmission case bolts, and lift the top half of the transmission up and out with the tub, leaving the bottom half of the transmission in the chassis?
Of course further disassembly may be required depending on what you find... but this would seem to greatly reduce the amount of labor for the initial diagnosis... and substantially reduce it for a refill of the gear oil...
Any thoughts are appreciated!