Montgomery Ward "Her Majesty" dryer in Tucson

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roto204

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Tucson, AZ
Love the old circle Monkey Ward logo. I worked at a Monkey's 5 years, 3 years as Manager of Men's Department.
 
Her Majesty Electric Dryer

This is one of the original style Norge dryers that were built like a tank, these are very efficient good performing dryers [ only real downside is they tend to leak air at every seam and seal ] so be per paired for a little heat, humidity and LINT in your laundry area, LOL. These make a great outdoor dryer for the porch.

 

I wounder if this dryer is really yellow or avocado?
 
That is NOT a 1968 Her Majesty Dryer. More like 1964/1965. Yes, that's Robert's washer. Was also the same washer a neighbor had across the street.
 
Bob's right.  Our dreadful Signature 18 washer that permanently scarred the tile floor was a '67 and it had the super cheap looking slanted console and the white agitator Norge continued to use for what, 25 or 30 more years? 

 

The Norge consoles just before that time were much nicer looking, as demonstrated by Her Majesty above.
 
Her Majesty Electric Dryer

Norges Velvet Heat worked very much like KMS Soft Heat on the electric dryers, it had two heaters and when a good minimum exhaust temperature of around 130F was reached it just used one heater to finish drying the load. The really unique system was on the Gas KMs where the burner used a variable input to precisely match burner flame size to exhaust temperature [ much like gas ovens did before about 1960 ]. On the gas Velvet Heat dryers they just used a two level gas valve, which I am sure still worked very well.

 

Many higher end electric dryers today are using dual heaters that are used in similar ways to reduce power consumption slightly and provide a more gentile heat source.
 
The two thermostats are located just inside the lint filter duct at the bottom of the dryer. I found that I could speed up the drying by making it run on the higher burner input longer by insulating the thermostat that had to be satisfied to shift the the burner to the lower input. It's funny how Norge changed the burner configuration over the years. First the drilled port cast iron burner which ran almost the whole width of the cabinet had the holes on the top. The gas Her Majesty from about the mid 60s had the burner turned over so that the flames came out the bottom. In the last machines, there was just a big old jet that shot the flame into a combustion chamber. To hell with all of the advertising about the evenness of the heat from the full width burner or heating element. Norge sorta moved to the "just get'er done" motto before Larry the Cable Guy was ever heard of.
 
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