Maytag GAS Washer!!

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In the words of a lady who I knew in Lenoir!

If you put their brain in a hummingbird it would fly backwards and suck a mules ass for a morning glory!
 
Pretty Ridiculous

I recall seeing ads/pix for Maytag wringer models gas-equipped for use before Rural Electrification came about, but come on - the last century was the 20th!

Reminds me of when my THD store opened in 2004. Ours was the first of the "new design", linear rather than big box. A lot of THD's TV commercials were filmed in my store (about two a month). At the outset, we were drastically low on store stock so we used to sell floor models often. Once they were ready to film, we had a blank spot in our over-the-range microwaves. One of the film crew went and got one out of stock, unboxed it, and shoved it in next to an identical model.

For weeks afterwards, we would be quizzed by shoppers, "What's the difference between these two displays?". I used to just say, "They're just duplicate models". My hateful co-worker would say, "One's electric, the other one's gas". No one ever questioned him.
 
This got me to wondering. A motive power source is a motive power source, no?

I wonder how silly it would be to get a machine like this and strap a small gasoline motor in where the electric motor goes.

Imagine a fuel filler door on the side, a muffler on the back and a little oil change every 300 washes sticker on the upper left corner of the control panel...
 
Its funny you should say that .....

Because a vacuumland memeber from Finland posted this picture a few days ago.

This is a Hoover single tub hand wringer washer from the late 1950s or early 1960s. It appears to have at least been sanctioned by Hoover as the platform it sits on appears to be an extension of the normal base of the machine. And the instruction book appears to be Hoover too - it certainly has the logo on it.

Al

vacbear58++11-4-2011-10-47-47.jpg
 
If Amish can use gasoline to run a washer, why not a car

Because you cannot drive the washer away from the farm.  That is also why tractors and wagons have steel wheels.  It keeps them close to the farm & family.

 

I remember back when I was a youngster, we were on some amish farms that used pnuematic powered washer motors.
 
Then As Now Farms Always Have Petrol Stored

Ever since the first cars, trucks, and other petrol powered motor equipment came upon the scene farms have had stashes of gas. For nothing else if to run the aforementioned equipment. Therefore it makes total sense to have washing machines powered by gas motors. IIRC Maytag's early washers with gas motors had a wealth of farm equipment accessories that could be run off that motor such as butter churns etc..

Petrol, benzene and so forth were also used for everything from spot cleaning to home "dry cleaning" of garments.

Farm living back then involved quite allot of self sufficiency. Nearest town or village could be day or longer ride on horseback, and the general store may or may not have had what you wanted. No telephone service meant if you did run out of something that was that until you found away to get to where it was.
 
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