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jons1077

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Jun 25, 2014
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487
Location
Vancouver, Washington, USA
Here's my scenario guys...

I have a Kitchenaid Superba KDS-19 dishwasher. It's a built-in model and it's been sitting on my porch for a really long time...over a year now. I was hoping I could cut out a section of cabinet in the old kitchen and install it. Problem is the cabinets in the house are too low, too narrow, etc. There's no way.

I do however have a newer portable Kenmore dishwasher we've been using for a few months now. It's probably 5-10 years old and does a great job. I'd really prefer the KDS-19 though.

Do you think my Kitchenaid would fit in the Kenmore cabinet so I could use it instead?

Thanks!

Jon
 
Well, you got me thinking

I have 3 KitchenAid Portables. 2 being front loaders. I would start by unscrewing the leveling legs and get a nice set of casters. As a matter of fact, I have the 1967 Superba still torn down in my garage. How about later today I take some all angle shots and I'll e-mail you or post them ?
Yay. First Winter Project on Cape Cod. Eddie
 
Interesting...

that the older Kitchenaid models did sit inside a metal frame. I'm guessing that ended after the 18 series?

I'll take a closer look this weekend and, who knows, my little theory on this might work. I'd sure love to fire this baby up.

BTW, awesome dishwashers guys!
 
Waiting on racks and snow

The kd_57 (17 portable) is still working, my wife likes it. So the project on the kds-22 is somewhat stalled.

I got the whirlpool cabinate apart, tub and stuf gone. It was built on a dolly frame with castors on it.

I finally grabbed a family member in october (he was just passing thru) to help me move the 22 from the front porch to the basement shop area. But I've not done more to it since then. The yellow jacket infestation in the basement didn't help.

My plan is to scoot the dolly under the KDS-22, attach them together, and then wrap the whirlpool shell sheetmetal around it. I measured and think "built-ins" all use a standard dimension, so it will fit fine.

How to hook up to the sink, etc, will require some more creative cognition.

So, yes I think it can be done, but no, I'm not to the point where I can verify success. The lack of stirrups atop of the tub concern me some. But there are some great aerospace "hysol" glues I think I can use to mount stirrups successfully.

A note on the kd-57. Those inlet valves have a flow restrictor on them. In 1974 sinks didn't have their own flow restrictors. So this unit chokes, runs on 1 1/2 gallons fill in the 3 minutes alloted, if you hook it up. I solved that by removing the restrictor from the valve. The water pressure sensor now shuts water off 1/4" above pump screen, still below the wash arms.

My wife does "light wash" with 130 deg water and has no problem.
 
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