My 4 y/o LG made front loader

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This is what I do when I use the Bulky cycle on my LG washer...I use the Turbo Wash feature to make sure that the front of the load like a comforter gets thoroughly drenched and washed properly. The Bulky cycle only limits one to a Medium speed spin which is a paltry 600 rpms...not fast enough or long enough. So when the washer ends, and it turns off. I open the door,, close it, then touch the power button. Then I touch the Spin speed button and that will give one a Spin Only cycle of 17 mins. Then I touch the start button and let the washer spin the comforter to extract even more water.

One thing though, I never use those dreaded pods since they always seem to get some of the wrapper in a fold of a shirt or towel, worst is sheets. I don't think they have the oomph to really get clothes clean. I use Persil and Tide on occasion. Persil mostly, liquid for colors and PowerPearls for whites. Persil does especially well in LG washers I find.
 
Uninmatic1140, the reason your LG top load washer spins slow on the bulky cycle, is LG top load washers don't have the best suspension system, or any HE top load washer. There are several videos on YouTube about LG and Samsung top load washers that have exploded, due to the lack of a suspension system. If you take the front panel or cabinet off of a vintage top load washer, you will notice there are springs underneath the tub, to absorb the slightly off balance loads. The only good top load washers that are sold today would be Speed Queen. I don't like those HE top load washers and dryers that can cost up to $2,500+, and won't even last up ten years.
 
Yes Sean, Bruce is right, I am talking about an LG Front Loader, not top loader. Not all vintage washers use springs in the suspension, Whirlpool/Kenmore belt drive machines are one example, Philco ball-point balancing machines are also another without springs. Frigidaire Unimatic washers (1947-1963) used one heavy duty spring, but it was more to act as a snubber, and only one part of the suspension. Modern LG machines use shock absorbers which I think is a good design, Bendix front loaders also used heavy-duty shock absorbers. My guess is the reason for the exploding washers has more to do with cheap/thinner metals and use of plastics than anything else.

My LG front loader will shake and make quite a bit of noise at full-speed if the load is over 50% unbalanced. It will produce more vibration than any vintage washer of mine that spins over 1100rpm. My Frigidaire Unimatic washers will vibrate at 1140rpm, but not a severely and no where as noisily as the LG FL, the GE washers are amazingly solid at 1140rpm, but the snubber pads can be a bit noisy. Again I think this has to do more with the cheap/thin metals used in modern machines than any design flaw in the suspension.

My boyfriend has a LG toploader, we were in his kitchen the other day and up from the basement came this loud vibration noise of his machine in full-speed spin. I was actually surprised that it was as noisy as it was and I had previously made sure it was perfectly level. He hates that washer after seeing my machines and wants me to get him an agitator top loader. I have a good lead on a TOL Wards 20lb machine which I'm going to restore for him, a truly excellent 70's washer design (performance and capacity-wise that is) which he can use in conjunction with his top loading LG. I'll be willing to bet he stops using the LG after getting used to the Wards.

One thing I like to do with my LG front loader is starve it from cold water by turning off the cold water line. I don't use it for anything but the sanitary cycle anyways. My hot water heater is set at 150F and the LG likes to mix a bit of cold water in. Nope, not allowing that to happen, when I select hot I expect to get hot, hmmmmmmmph and nothing else missy! Also I like giving it 3 hot rinses with WaterPlus selected. I want the bleach in the first rinse to be in hot water anyways. After the final spin when it unlocks, I open the door and steam pours out. I love removing steaming hot things from that washer and the washer dries itself out much faster than with cool or cold water for rinses. It also smells wonderful for days after doing that.

Mike I really like those scent-free white Tide pods. While I have never tried them in the LG, they work wonderfully in my vintage machines and not once have I ever had any plastic pouch residue left over. I'm not surprised that they sometimes wont melt in a modern front-loader, simply not enough water. I do remember experimenting in the LG once by placing two 1960's Salvo tablets into the drum. The Salvo never dissolved! I heard knocking as those tablets tumbled for over 40 minutes without melting properly, I had to stop the machine and remove them in the first rinse. I then put a fresh set of two tablets in the Westinghouse Laundromat and they dissolved within 60 seconds in warm water.
 
I find that if the pods are used in a top loader that does use a good amount of water then there is no issue with dissolving. Since I put the SQ washer aside and have been using the LG along with my Frigidaire built GE front loader, that using those pods can be a pain if I just toss them into the drum as directed. What I do is pop them into the dispenser tray and let them dissolve there. The LG will use hot water for the main detergent area and cold for the prewash area. Both sides are flushed regardless of cycle. I will have to agree that the hot washes are dumbed down some. On Bright Whites cycle the hot water temp doesn't go beyond 120 and my water heater is at 150F. But that said, I don't seem to have any issues with wash performance. I do choose the TurboWash feature for all cycles since I love having that final spray rinse in the last spin.
If your LG doesn't have the TurboWash feature then your results will be different. Granted my LG is not top of the line...I have the 3570 set...It works rather well and I never have an issue with vibrations. Some times it will take a bit for it to balance, but when it does its usually pretty solid. I do find if the washer thinks that there will be an issue that it will choose a slower spin speed. In some ways that is ok, but when one is used to feeling laundry come out of the washer well spun at 1200 rpms, there is a big difference weight wise compared to a load that was spun at just 600 rpms.
 
Robert, the reason your LG front loader mixes cold water when you select hot, is all HE top and front loaders have Automatic Tempatire Control (ATC) where it adds cold water when you selected a hot wash tempature, and even adds more cold water than hot water. My Maytag A810 has Cold/Cold Warm/Cold Warm/Warm Hot/Cold Hot/Warm tempature options. Newer machines don't really have a warm rinse option. The laundry detergent I like to use Tandil Original Scent Laundry Detergent which is Aldi's version of Gain Liquid, and has the same smell as Gain! Works really well in my Maytag A810 washer. I'll post a photo the Tandil Laundry Detergent, and my Maytag A810 dryer set.
 
Yes, that set is similar to what I had before replacing them with my LG made front loader & dryer. The LG holds easily twice as much as the Maytag did.
 
Maytag85.

There are HE front loaders that do not mix cold water with hot. When I select a hot wash on my Whirlpool Duet, it is only hot direct no mixing. I believe most front loaders with a heater built in do no mix hot and cold together. I think Speed Queen front loaders also do not mix the hot either.

Jon
 
One thing I do notice on my LG washer is that the hot wash on the Bright Whites cycle will start out at 90F or so and the heater brings the water temp up so it gives like a "profile wash" as some stains release at different temps. I find it works quite well and I always use the next step up from Normal soil on the soil level selector to give the load a tad more time to wash. I find that the heavy soil level is overkill.
 
While my LG does not have the "Tubro-wash" per se, it does have a recirculation nozzle/system. The recirculation is very helpful in getting the entire load saturated as relatively fast.

As for the vibration in this machine, I wouldn't consider it a "problem", it simply makes more noise than it would perfectly balanced. No different than a vintage machine, except the vintage machines that spin over 1000rpm seem to not make quite as much overall vibration. Again I just attribute it to the construction materials and it's really not a big deal overall. I know it's not just this machine LG, I've seen Duets and Maytag FL do the exact same thing at 1000+ rpm.

Here is my LG...

unimatic1140++4-7-2017-14-52-2.jpg
 
"do you use the "water plus" option or "extra rinse"?"

Hey Kevin, I use both selections always. Except when I use the Sanitary+Steam cycle it will not let you select either WaterPulse or Extra Rinse.
 
That's is a decent LG front loader. I remember our front loader would spin so fast, it would sound like a jet taking off! My Maytag does not spin as fast, but the tub is more shallow, and it does spin a good amount of water out. Maytag top load washers always had a a spin speed of about 700rpm, while Whirlpool/Kenmore had a slower spin speed of about 500rpm. My Lady Kenmore Portable Belt Drive Washer has a fast spin speed of about 900rpm.
 
Hold on...Maytag washers like he one you have only spin at 618 rpms...and some final spin cycles like on the 510 that I had long ago were not that long so I had to run another spin cycle to get out more water.

I remember that washer model from a few years ago....that washer has the RollerJet wash vanes. Mine does not have that but it has the same design vanes in the back of the drum. The newer LG washers have done away with that design and have a more conventional vanes design. One thing I find with the design is that loads of jeans and long sleeved shirts are prone to tangling. It can be a pain for the washer to spin a load that is tangled up into a wad. Nothing thrills me more than having to take the entire wash load out in a ball and have it drop into the laundry basket and have to untangle the load before as I throw the clothes into the dryer. That was sarcasm...lol
 
nmassman44

It's too bad you aren't old enough to experience a load out of the first Frigidaire washers. They were capable of not only tangling the clothes into an entire ball, they could literally tie them in knots! The clothes sure were spun out dry though!!!! Small consolation to most! In the past 4+ years I have never had a tangling problem with my LG made front loader.
 
I have never experienced the LG tangle anything as of yet but it is interesting to hear it has that ability.

Yes 618rpm is the fastest a Helical-drive maytag will spin as desgined. I do know some members here have changed the drive pulleys to the 50hz European parts and that will bring the spin speed up over 700.

Early Frigidaire washers can tangle, but proper loading/sorting will minimize that down to a rarity, at least in my experience. In 1957 when they started to put loading instructions under the washer lid, the Frigidaire Unimatic rose all the way up to #1 in 1958 Consumer Reports testing. I suspect the reason was CU simply followed the loading instructions.
 
Unimatic1140

Follow the instructions???? What's that???? LOL
I have to tell you about someone I let use a 1954 Frigidaire I had. She bought brand new foldable diapers and was going to start using them. She unfolded and loaded them all into the washer and after it cycled, they were literally one great big knotted mass! LOL
 

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