Look! Lightburn twintub.

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Underneath.

1 wash and 1 tumble motor.

The water from the spin can drains through an open galvanised box channel to the back where the pump collects the water, when you unscrew the plug in the wash drum, the water also runs into the tray at the rear.

The wash tub is driven by a rubber roller and was apparantly susceptible to slipping due to condensation.

Note the brown bakelite switch at the bottom, this was the same switch as was used in all houses up until the mid 60's.

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Red Knob

To operate:

Plug the machine in and turn the powerpoint on.

This starts the wash motor and the pump running.

To start tumbling, turn the red knob to start and the wash tub will move. A Mechanical linkage moves the drive roller into contact with the wash tub.

Flick the little metal lever above it actuates the switch you can see underneath and stops and starts the spinner.

Simplicity at its best.
 
Left: Euro recptagles, recessed.

Right: UK receptacle, flush (not recessed). Right side is switched "on" (down is "on" up is "off"). In the Brit version inserting the longer grounding/earthing prong opens a shutter allowing the other two prongs access to their proper places.

Sorry to digress. Now, back to our regularly scheduled programme.

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Its so weird. I can see that it would be at all easy to use. As the lightburn spinner design doesn't really facilitate a spin/rinse procedure, it would be a lot of back and forth between the two tubs to get a load done.

The curiosity would be great though to watch the wash action you could use as little water as possible or fill it up to capicity.
 
Sorry yes, I deserve 10 thrashes with a wet noodle.

That huge thing is a std. Brit duplex outlet. Their plugs are huge in that (IIRC) EVERY appliance has a fuse in the plug, due to a thing called a "ring" circuit.

That is a WHOLE other thread.........
 
definitely no spin rinses here

My Current lightburn TT also has the opening around the spinner drive. On my TT if the water level gets to high there is an overflow pipe that directs the water onto the ground. As the pump on mine is quite slow, I've ended up with wet feet a few times now.

On the machines that have no overflow pipe, if the water level gets too high, then the water just runs down the spinner drive shaft and through the motor.
 
Washtub is Fibreglass

You could say that Lightburn Industries had a belief that life goes better with Fibreglass.

The Lightburn Zeta Station Wagon and the Lightburn Zeta Sports Coupe both had Fibreglass bodies. The twintubs had fibreglass wash tubs and tops. It did give them a way of having lots of pretty colours, at a time when colours where hard to apply.

The spin tub seems to always be metal, with a fibreglass like coating.
 
UK 13 Amp Sockets

Hi,

The cheaper (still perfectly legal and safe) 13 amp sockets do indeed open a shutter to accept the live and neutral pins, as the oversized earthing pin is inserted.

However, you photo depicts the "MK" brand of socket. They are generally regarded as the "Rolls Royce" of electrical accessories. Their socket does not rely upon the insertion of the earth-pin to open the shutter. Instead, equal-balanced pressure from the live and neutral pins, swivels the shutter out of the way.

They seem to be the only ones to have this feature, so I presume its patented by them.

Ring-circuit mains in the UK, is basically to ensure that a particular socket and its wiring cannot become overloaded, thus avoiding fire-risk.
 

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