I've mentioned it took awhile before I appreciated the 1960 Model 80 in our household due to a severe case of Frigidaire envy. I had an unused 1959 Lady Kenmore for about a year back in the early 1990s which was very similar to the Model 80.
Timed dispensers for bleach and fabric softener; a wide array of pre-programmed cycles; an option that stepped water temperature down one level for houses without enough water-heater power; lights in the tub, on the console and, in the Lady K, an ultraviolet lamp which made the suds glow; the option to save or not save wash water (on suds-saver models); infinitely-variable water levels; Roto-Swirl agitators that turned over even the toughest loads; very effective lint-filtering systems (self-cleaning in the Lady K).
You're right, Malcolm, they were very advanced--or at least feature-laden--machines for their time.
Of course Maytags were quieter and almost every other brand of washer spun faster, but those Kenmores sported a long list of bells and whistles. They even became substantially quieter and less prone to suds-lock by the mid-1960s.
My ever-frugal, do-it-yourself stepfather replaced the innards of our '60 with those of a lightly-used mid-60's machine while I was in college. I could hear (and see) the differences the first time I used it after that. The Super Roto-Swirl agitator was gold, skinnier and had ribs on the column and fins; the bottom of the tub sported two rather than four rows of drain holes.
It was fun watching the videos of Kenmores posted in this thread. Thanks!
Ben (Swestoyz): Do you still have your pink '59 Lady K?[this post was last edited: 7/30/2015-15:35]
