<span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman'; font-size: medium;">If you can find an Australian Wilkins Servis model, the stainless steel inner tub is a direct fit. Good luck on that though.</span>
Thanks! The upper aluminum trans threads seems a little messed up. What's that vertical notch passing through the threaded area for?
The parts diagram says there several trans models?
I love threads like this.
Not much to offer, except - the only part I've ever seen fail which was hard to find on Maytags of that era was the timer.
As to the electronic drying controls, not that impressed. Definitely the weakest design of an otherwise outstandingly well made laundry system. I'd not bother.
problem from water intrusion though a leaking stem seal.
Happy New Year everyone!
Post# 1125556 , Reply# 8 8/11/2021 at 14:00 by Good-Shepherd
Worn, rusted and pitted agitator shafts are the problem from water intrusion though a leaking stem seal.
The leaking stem seal part is: A04298 Seal, Agitator Drive Shaft (A4298) or WP210690 Seal, Rubber (Replaces: 210690) or both?
How do I look up part details and part numbers? The part numbers on the microfiche diagrams aren't the same as the listed part numbers below the diagrams.
The brass washer is from the A4298 seal. You can discard that. The agitator shaft is too far gone, you'll need another one. The upper shaft bearing is probably junk too.
There's an upper and lower brass sleeve bearing that the shaft rides on. When the upper seal goes, water makes its way down the shaft and contaminates the upper sleeve bearing. Water intrusion wipes the oil away and causes metal to metal contact between the shaft and brass bearing, destroying it. For some odd reason, Maytag made every single part available except those brass sleeve bearings. The sleeve bearing pops right out but you'll have to find a machine shop that will fabricate a new one. Tolerances here are very tight and critical. When the bearing is installed, the tolerances close up a bit.
"The brass washer serves no important purpose?"
The brass washer is located in the upper cone inside the A4298 seal. You can see it in this picture below. It's placed between the spring and outer rubber mold. It will be there when you purchase a new seal.
I bought a mounting stem, part # WP-6-2095720. It seems to be the correct part number but it's a different design. It doesn't use the washer, clip and a spring loaded seal. The spring loaded seal looks like a good design.
Maytag switched to the inferior triple lip seal around 1994. You can use a new A4298 seal under the mounting stem as added protection (small cone face down, like the previous design), just don't reuse the original washer and (obviously) the clip. Also, be sure to remove the bass washer that usually gets left on the shaft from the previous A4298 seal.
The new triple lips sealed is actually superior to the old seal that Maytag used for decades. Problem was you need a very good agitator shaft and Maytag did not put a stainless steel sleeve on the shaft for the new type seal to be most effective.
I would not try putting the old type seal underneath the lip type seal I saw one a while ago where someone did that and it pushed the lip seal out and the whole thing failed very suddenly and completely.
You can really see the mineral buildup in that outer tub on your machine that you’re rebuilding, this is from hard water and using way too little detergent or cheap detergent, it’s also ruins the seal which is why the shaft is in such bad shape on that washer. If in doubt when washing clothing always use more detergent make sure the wash water is very slippery and your fingers.
Oh really, why were these failing like crazy when installed on a brand new agitator shaft back in the 90's? This is a crap design, you're the ONLY repairmen that has had a nice thing to say about them without using an endless stream of 4 letter words.
I've been putting the old style A4298 seal under the new mounting stem for 14 years on all of my machines without any problems. My current daily driver has had one for 14 years and counting. I will be replacing it next year because I know the triple lip seal is probably dead and relying on the A4298 seal to keep water at bay.
Slide the seal onto the agitator shaft, small end pointing down. Then install the mounting stem. You need to remove the agitator stop ring before installing the A4298 seal if you haven't already done that.