brucelucenta
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jul 21, 2013
- Messages
- 1,924
This washer helped start the wave toward top loading washing machines. Frigidaire introduced this machine shortly after WWII. It was truly a terrific washer that washed clothes quite well and spun them out nearly dry. Unfortunately, Frigidaire washers in the beginning had the ability to tie whatever you washed in them into literal knots! When loaded in the careful way that Frigidaire instructed, the tangling was lessened quite a bit though. The tangling issue caused them a great deal of grief along with the owners of Frigidaire washers. Many who purchased those machines hated them and vowed to NEVER buy another Frigidaire washer again! Although in the mid '60's Frigidaire introduced the "Jet Action Cone" agitator, that for the most part did not tangle clothes, Frigidaire washers never fully recovered from that stigma. Frigidaire was one of the last to incorporate a large perforated tub until about 1970 when the 1-18 machines were introduced. Those machines were capable of washing the largest loads of any washing machine at the time and did a very good job of it. It was the end of an era though, most everyone that was going to get an automatic washer had already done so and what was left was people who replaced what they had with new. Frigidaire washers had a good run for over 30 years while owned by GM. In 1979 the appliance division was sold to White Westinghouse, never to make a washer that agitated up and down again. The washers made after that were Westinghouse "clones" at the time and the dryers were the worst machines ever made until WCI started making them in the Westinghouse "clone" too. I have always thought it a terrible shame that Frigidaire had not made the "Jet Action Cone" agitator from the beginning. Considering that "frigidaire" and refrigerator had become synonymous, had their washers not tangled history might have been different for the appliance industry.