My friend Dennis films the movies and the last few times he came over with his camera, I wasn't up to filming. The last one we made was over a year ago. I'll get back to it.
And now back to the
suds.
The Frigidaire could lose its prime easily, too, but the KM/WP's did not. They pretty much wrote the book on suds-saving; in fact, WP would not market their Automatic until they perfected the Suds-return. And as has been seen on this forum lately, the early machines had Suds-returns as a standard feature, built into the wash cycle, without any special separate switches. The Suds were returned and the wash cycle proceeded without interruption, automatically. You didn't have to move the dial as is the case on some later models.
The suds hose was indeed designed to reach the bottom of the tub, but the siphon would break to prevent the last half inch or so from entering the washer. Some hoses were cut at an angle at the bottom, other created an angle by the placement of the hose, but I saw many that were nearly flush with the bottom, and a few that sucked up all the water. Most loads did not have muck or stuff in the washing liquors, as they were once comically called. You'd save the grime for last, and not save that water by removing the plug from the sink.
The early WP/KM machines did not allow the save or drain/dispose option. All wash water was pumped out the suds hose, and all rinse water, including the post-wash spray rinses, came out the L-shaped drain hose; hence, all the valve clanging that so many of us came to love. If you didn't want to save the suds, you simply left the stopper out of the sink. There was no way to make all the water come out of one hose, as was possible in later years. I think GE's earliest suds-returns did have the save/drain/drain/ feature.
For me, few washer functions are as dramatic or as satisfying as watching the original suds-returns at work.
EDIT: PS, Dave, the other flix are on another channel. Dennis had trouble finding the first channel so he made EasySpin 1.