classiccat
Member
- Joined
- Feb 8, 2013
- Messages
- 14
My wife & I purchased a Maytag Atlantis washer/dryer ~12 years ago (after graduate school) and have been quite pleased with the performance...especially the large capacity.
Recently* it has been going out-of-balance making a horrible banging sound...*ok, i have to admit that I allowed it persist for over a year!
Originally I couldn't find where to purchase a snubber and I didn't think that I had the tools to fix the suspension...perfect excuse to procrastinate!
Over the holiday, i decided to take action and download the service manual. And once i saw a cheap solution for removing the brake on the forum, I would fabricate the other tools necessary to complete this project.
After removal of my front panel, I could see the telltale white shavings of a wiped-out snubber.
I tilted the washer to remove the belt and transmission oil (accumulated in the brake & dustcap) began pouring all over the floor.
I do some small-engine work where changing bearings & seals is commonplace.
Unfortunately my wife is short on patience so I simply purchased a new transmission...which will allow me to rebuild the existing tranny and keep it as a backup...as long as the internals aren't shot because I can't find individual transmission parts.
The tranny was IMO a great price considering that I'm able to keep a washer that we love (and i now know how to fix).
it also included a new integral spin-hub...good news since I damaged the chinzy plastic one with my "fabricated" spanner adapter.
With new brake, springs, snubber, belt and "High-torque" tranny, she's running like the day we bought it...maybe better!
Excellent forum! alot of useful information for a DIY-er!

Recently* it has been going out-of-balance making a horrible banging sound...*ok, i have to admit that I allowed it persist for over a year!
Originally I couldn't find where to purchase a snubber and I didn't think that I had the tools to fix the suspension...perfect excuse to procrastinate!
Over the holiday, i decided to take action and download the service manual. And once i saw a cheap solution for removing the brake on the forum, I would fabricate the other tools necessary to complete this project.
After removal of my front panel, I could see the telltale white shavings of a wiped-out snubber.
I tilted the washer to remove the belt and transmission oil (accumulated in the brake & dustcap) began pouring all over the floor.
I do some small-engine work where changing bearings & seals is commonplace.
Unfortunately my wife is short on patience so I simply purchased a new transmission...which will allow me to rebuild the existing tranny and keep it as a backup...as long as the internals aren't shot because I can't find individual transmission parts.
The tranny was IMO a great price considering that I'm able to keep a washer that we love (and i now know how to fix).
it also included a new integral spin-hub...good news since I damaged the chinzy plastic one with my "fabricated" spanner adapter.
With new brake, springs, snubber, belt and "High-torque" tranny, she's running like the day we bought it...maybe better!
Excellent forum! alot of useful information for a DIY-er!
