NORGE 20lb SET

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Re: What year it is ?

I'm going to say that I think it was proballey a 1980's to mid 80's somewhere around 83 I'm guessing.
 
Norgeman, not really sure on the date but I think that these are early 80's. If I find out I'll post the actual date.
 
Recently acquired this set on E-bay. Both are in great shape and need no repair. In fact the guy was washing his sheets when I got there to pick them up. I guess he didn't have time the night before !!??

View attachment 9926
Just bought the exact dryer, not much info out there. Any chance you know the production year? I'm guessing 1983 based off the washer (Maytag) I bought and the history of the owners
 
Curious...
Why do they call it a "burpilator"?
Filtering isn't via flow by the motor-driven (drain) pump. There's a water-pumping channel in the agitator that on on the counterclockwise stroke spews water into the filter pan which sits on top. Thus, the agitator "burps" water into the filter.



Signed: Goofy Glenn
 
Filtering isn't via flow by the motor-driven (drain) pump. There's a water-pumping channel in the agitator that on on the counterclockwise stroke spews water into the filter pan which sits on top. Thus, the agitator "burps" water into the filter.



Signed: Goofy Glenn

I watched the video.
I don't like that type of filtering design at all.
And how efficient would it "burp" with a low water level?
It does have a nice fast draining before the spin, but that's it. :( :(
 
I watched the video.
I don't like that type of filtering design at all.
And how efficient would it "burp" with a low water level?
It does have a nice fast draining before the spin, but that's it. :( :(
I don't recall these being very good machines, lots of pot metal and noise. The dryers were even more goofy, they pressurized the drum with a big pinwheel. Every other dryer built in the free world has a negative pressure in the drum, which minimizes the lint that would find it's way out. I recall working on one of them that had a solid block of lint filling the entire cabinet... at least it wasn't a real fire hazard at that point, no room for enough air for sustained combustion!

Still, it's amazing any at all have survived, let alone in working condition... Kudos to whoever wants to keep them around, I honestly think every design should be preserved, whether I like them or not!
 
Parents had 1980 monkey norge dryer bought new and served well for next 18 years until the motor seized and no replacement avalible at the dump. Design started about 1968 and ran to about 1982 using a 1/2 hp motor.About 1983 same basic design had fan reduced in size a little and changed to radial type,motor reduced to 1/3 hp. ~1986 different dryer design-similar to WCI products and conventional blower on end of 1/4 hp motor. ~1967-earlier Norge dryers also had delt driven radial fan behind the drum blowing through the 3 ports at back of drum-I think these had 1/3 hp motor
 
I don't recall these being very good machines, lots of pot metal and noise. The dryers were even more goofy, they pressurized the drum with a big pinwheel. Every other dryer built in the free world has a negative pressure in the drum, which minimizes the lint that would find it's way out. I recall working on one of them that had a solid block of lint filling the entire cabinet... at least it wasn't a real fire hazard at that point, no room for enough air for sustained combustion!

Still, it's amazing any at all have survived, let alone in working condition... Kudos to whoever wants to keep them around, I honestly think every design should be preserved, whether I like them
 
Our Norge-built 20lb washer and dryer seemed, at first, to be built like tanks, although tanks were much quieter than the 20 pound washer. I worked outside on communications sites and towers, so my work clothes got quite dirty. The washer did a better job at getting them clean than than its Maytag 806 predecessor. We would have never purchased the set if we had know about the positive airflow dryer. Our experiences with it were not so positive. It was truly the lint bucket you mentioned. Thankfully, it disassembled easily so quarterly cabinet lint removal jobs were annoying, but not difficult. The aggressive washer didn't help as it also created a lot of lint. The Burp-o-Lator agitator simply did not have enough water flow through it to do a good job.
 
As you all must already know, a washer can only filter some of the loose lint during agitation.
And the dryer is what collects most of it.
The reason is, of course, the damp clothes, etc, are still loaded with lint that natually adheres to the damp articles.
It's only by drying, tumbling, that that lint is finally able to break loose and wind up in the dryer's lint screen.

"This has been your reality lesson of the day, class dismissed" :)
 
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