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DING DING DING

And the Gold Star goes to John-Jakins, yay for the correct answer.

And a Blue star goes to Bethann for being the first to suggest it was a Dishwasher!

John, do you agree with Consumer Reports rating the cleaning ability of this Dishwasher as excellent? It seems to clean the best of any impeller dishwasher I have seen. But time will tell. I love the stainless steel racks, no vinyl coating to peel off and then rust.

More pictures and video's (yes video's) to come once I get some plexiglas cut.
 
Stupid Uni

Opps, Glenn I see you get a Gold Star too, I just noticed your post saying a Westinghouse Dishwasher above and before Johns. So we have two gold Stars!!!
 
Westinghouse Dishwasher

Looks as if Glenn-DADoES was posting as I was typing. It is a great vintage dishwasher. Mine is also a 1950. It has no problem with todays standard 11 in plates. i have over the years owned many vintage dishwashers, this one as far as cleaning is second only to my 1958 Mobile Maid Bow Tie impeller machine. However It is by far the quietest vintage dishwasher that I have ever come across.
The only problem I have ever had with the westinghouse is the pump the design of the tub is such that if you stop to put a forgotten piece into the machine you must make sure the the water on the upper lid stops dripping, if not it will run down the outside of the tub and the motor get on the fly wheel and the pump slips and will not drain. The pump must also be completely water tight as the slightest bit of water will be spun onto the rubber wheel on the bottom of the motor and again the pump will slip and fail to drain the machine.
havent posted to the sight in a long time but I log on at least twice a day to see what is going on.

See Ya
John
 
Hi John, well its nice to see you posting again. Actually I was quite shocked at how quiet this dishwasher was too! The wash/rinse cycle is extremely short, if they had made it longer I bet it would be an excellent dishwasher. I don't see why exactly it seems to clean better than other impeller machines I have owned, but some Plexiglass might help with that mystery.

More pictures later on tonight.
 
BLUE STAR!

WHAT!, You mean to tell me I only get a BLUE STAR!This rating system stinks!I was thinking more like Silver or something! All these motor heads that thought it was a washer! And the DUMB BLONDE ( Thanks Rick )said it was a dishwasher. Hell, if I wouldn't have told em they still be guessing!LOL!

I think it just reminds me of Cadet blue! ( Turquoise would be much better!)
 
WOMAN!!

Now quitcherbellyacin Beth Ann! As a Blue Star is really quite an honor here. Like a Blue Ribbon,or a Blue State,its All Goood!

As for me,I got nothin' Cause I didn't even guess the year right,and it was even in the picture! :(
 
This Westinghouse is the dishwasher a friend had in her kitchen for years. I have a newer WH roll-out model with vinyl coated racks which is someplace in the warehouse and it held plates at a very tipped back position also which is possibly why the 11 inch diameter plates pose no problem. Somehow, I think that this last WH machine with the laid back racking for plates was the roll-out with the heavy die cast control panel, the little red sliding switch for the hot water booster and a cycle that was still one wash, two rinses and dry. The machine had a round screen detergent cup held by a loop of the upper rack. If the hot water booster was selected, the timer would advance into the wash and pause as it heated water while washing. With just the 700 or 750 watt element, no pre-rinse to warm the dishes and an uninsulated tank, it could wash along for 45 minutes or more, while heating the water, almost like a primitive pot scrubber. John mentioned that his machine cleaned almost as well as his bowtie impeller GE and my curiosity was piqued when I saw the impeller in his brand new dishwasher just out of the box, so I went to the February, 1950 announcement of this dishwasher and saw that it had an aluminum impeller and diverter blade to create the wash action. Metal impellers can be honed to a sharper edge than Bakelite and I would be willing to bet that the aluminum impeller is the reason that this is such a great performer. With the GE dishwashers, it is true that the cycling, racking and even the shape of the impeller changed when the models with the bowtie impeller were introduced, but that metal impeller made a big difference in the washing ability of those machines.

The information in the February, 1950 issue of Electrical Merchandising describes the cycle:

"Washes and rinses in 4 cycles, each using 7 qts. hot water; 1st cycle is a purge rinse to clear off waste; 2nd cycle is a 5 min. washing action followed by 2 separate rinses; last cycle is a 22 min. automatic drying cycle.

Prices: 48-in, electric sink model $374.95; 24-in. cabinet $284.95; undercounter model, $254.95; (Waste-Away garbage disposer available as accessory for sink model at $124.95 additional). In the product highlights there is this blurb:
"Westinghouse returns to dishwasher field with a large capacity, front opening and top-loading dishwasher."
At the time of the 1939 World's Fair, Westinghouse was showing their front-loading dishwashers that still looked like the Conover dishwashers from the company WH bought to have a dishwasher. So this was their big new design. The control was very much like the old GE machines. You turned the knob one way to unlock the drawer so that it could roll out and you turned it the other direction to start the cycle.

I also believe that the extremely tipped-back position in which plates were held in the lower rack helped asure great cleaning because in most impeller-style dishwashers, a great deal of the cleaning of the plates is actually accomplished by the constant downward cascade of water returning to the sump after having been thrown to the top of the tank. The sharper the impeller edge, the more water it throws so, going up or falling down, the water movement this dishwasher provided resulted in great washing action.
 
MR. READER!

If I catch you yelling again, I'm driving to Ft. Wayne and dying your hair PLATINUM! I suppose this is why your first wife divorced you! LMAO!
 
Very nice...a Westinghouse DW!! I think I remember this one, but when will we be able to see a full frontal shot?

Is this what you traded the Wash-N-Dry Laundromat for? Oops...silly of me to ask as we all know you're still waiting on that Calypso of your dreams! ;-)

--Austin
 
Thanks Tom for the great info! That is an interesting theory about a metal impeller, I bet it really does make a difference. Here are some shots from the newly installed 1950 Westinghouse.

Gosh its pretty...

9-29-2005-22-17-56--Unimatic1140.jpg
 
Inside, the little screen cup is the "automatic" detergent dispenser. The big screen cup in the center is the silverware basket.

9-29-2005-22-18-27--Unimatic1140.jpg
 

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