Lint Balls I have known

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question before posting

I don't get too many of these and if I do, they're tiny balls. (haha). Anyways, is it a good or bad sign of a washer's gentleness if your washer is extracting this much textile and lint? Those are planetoid-size lint balls!
 
I'm SAVED ! I'm SAVED! PRAISE GOD!

...phew, we do get lint balls - not much, but the washer picks them up. I love how the FF works....you guys got me looking at FF's now....I have my eyes on a pair, but like the Maytags. No wonder you get diseased with all this.
 
Diseased - I'm from the Midwest - it's a term we used in a positive way - something you can't easily get rid of - it clings - like lint....or the pleasing semi-hypnotic trance that occurs when you start and use a new machine like a FF, for instance - i.e.: "It's a good thing"
 
Phil:

Even if you do graduate to Filter-Flos later, a pair of classic Maytags would be a very good place to start getting comfortable with owning collectible laundry appliances.

Maytag's engineering is simple and robust, yet the machines can be as fully-featured as anything out there. The top-of-the-line 806s are two-speed machines that last forever with reasonable maintenance.

Other collectible machines can have more complex mechanicals that require more knowledge to repair. That may or may not be a drawback for you; you're the best judge of your mechanical abilities. But Maytags are a good place to start.
 
Wade in the Water

Just wading through the lint for now...I have two Maytags - and pleased...but the LK's, GE FF and Elites/Superba's are interesting..no experience with washers and dryers, so I am definitely a good target for the school of hard knocks. Have worked on a lot of things - cars are not easier than tearing apart a washer, but from reading here, there are some doozie horror stories. Everything has it's little jewel of hell awaiting the unsuspecting hobbyist. If I've read correctly, the Maytags are the easier to work on and the less likely to breakdown. Anyway - I like the LK, GE FF, Elites and Superba (kenmore and kitchenaids) of certain years....but know and appreciate the Maytag line and build..agree.

Thanks

Lint Wader (Phil) :-)
 

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