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I used to own a used Rollermatic that looked almost exactly like this one except that the selector knobs were chrome instead of plastic. What model is this (belongs to another member) and what year was it produced?

bajaespuma++3-31-2014-14-19-44.jpg
 
From what I've been able to determine within the Frigidaire Model Index and Identifier document (available on AE.org) is that 1-18 or "S" Line production was slated for the 1971 model year.  I suspect that they started building 1-18 washers in the fall of 1970, but I have yet to find an S-Line 1-18 washer that indicates it was built before 1971.

 

The index document lists N line models being produced from 1968-1970.

 

I should also point out that GM stopped indicating the year within each model number starting in 1966, and instead would indicate the model Line letter. 

<ul>
<li>1965 - J ('65 models do indicate the year, but J is considered to be the identifier for the model run)</li>
<li>1966 - K</li>
<li>1967 - L</li>
<li>1968-1970 - N</li>
</ul>
Some 1969 models were listed as P line washers (the High-Fashion WXP comes to mind...)

 

So, the model number of the washer in Ken's picture above would have probably been WCDN, and the dryer DCDN.  They got pretty crazy with the model identifiers during this time frame.

 

Ben

 
According to the Frigidaire production index.  The "N" line of Rollermatics was produced from 1968-1970.

The "S" line of 1-18 machines are listed as 1971 production.

The Tech-Talk for the "S" line 1-18 washers is dated September of 1970.  This seems to be consistent with Frigidiare's long-standing practice of introducing a new line in fall of the year.

 

I have no idea IF the machines you drew ever existed.  Someone who has more experience with the Frigidaire line from that time period might know more.

 

The picture of the actual machine you have posted there looks to me like it COULD be a 1967 WCDAL.  I would certainly not bet the farm on that, though!
 
post#747568

Thats my rollermatic!I havent run it yet,but isnt she purdy?!Had that shipped from Florida and my rollers are Jetcone Jon approved,no higher praise!
 
Ken, the one with the white control panel you posted is a "L" model (WCDAL) and the Gold Crown pair in your drawing would be a "N" model.

 

No dryers had a pushbutton door opener like that after 1965.

 

I have the exact same green Gold Crown washer and the model number is WN7. It has about the same features as the WCDATN from the "regular" Frigidaire line but the 4 knobs are unique to this Gold Crown model (some regular Custom Deluxe models had 4 knobs too but they had different features). The WN5 Gold Crown is the closest model to the WCDATN. 

 

Here's a WN5 (I think it was Trainguy's machine). This is a Rapidry 1000 model with a single knob for the wash and rinse temperatures. 

philr++4-1-2014-10-57-32.jpg
 
This is another machine that Trainguy has/had.

 

This one is a WCDARN.  A 1968-70 non-rapidry 1000 Custom Deluxe model with the Suds-Return option. 

philr++4-1-2014-11-00-58.jpg
 
This is Joe's WCDATN, a 1968-70 Rapidry 1000 model with the same controls as the coppertone WN5 two posts above. 

philr++4-1-2014-11-02-26.jpg
 
On the left is my 1968-70 WN7 Gold Crown Rapidry 1000 washer and on the right,  a 1968-70 DECSN Canadian dryer. I have the matching WN5 Gold Crown dryer for the washer but I haven't finished repairing it... 

philr++4-1-2014-11-10-10.jpg
 
This is Eddy1210's Canadian non-Rapidry 1000 1968-70 model. It would be the matching washer for my dryer above. 

philr++4-1-2014-11-16-56.jpg
 
Phil, where do you reference all of the information about those late 60s Rollermatics?  I have the 1968 N line tech talk and the Frigidaire "Identifier" but all of those "crown series" machines and their slight variations make my head spin!  (Although not at rapid-dry speed!)
 
Mark, I wish I had reference books with pictures of every Gold Crown models but I don't... The Frigidaire lineup was quite complicated by the late 1960s!

 

This one (a picture that Ben took) is a WCDN. A non-Rapidry 1968-70 model with an infinite water level selector and a "lint away" light. 

philr++4-1-2014-11-22-33.jpg
 
This washer is a WCDL, a 1967 non-Rapidry 1000 Custom Deluxe model with the infinite water level control. It's very similar to the 1968-70 model but lacks the "lint away" lamp and had the all white control panel rather than the black/silver control panel of the 1968-70 model. 

 

The dryer beside is a DCDL. 

 

philr++4-1-2014-11-29-19.jpg
 
This is a scan from Ben's documentation (Ken, I have the same manual if you need a larger scan) of the WCDXN (on the left).   This is the model with infinitely variable agitation and speed spin, also a Custom Deluxe...

 

Of course, during the same time, there were a lot of other DeLuxe, Imperial and Custom Imperial models. Other Gold Crown models that I have never seen too.

 

 

philr++4-1-2014-11-32-29.jpg
 
Phil, that white WCDL in post 746775 is exactly the model I owned when I had a small studio apartment in the late '80s. There was an old well-established Frigidaire dealer that had been in Westbrook Connecticut since the early '60's called George's Appliance that sold it to me. By the mid-eighties, George's had been sold a couple of times and had split in two, with one business being a Frigidaire "Jet-Action" Laundromat, and the other side was a used appliance dealer. The appliance side had a mini-Frigidaire graveyard and I picked this model out of a collection of rusting Rollermatics. I wanted a "Rapid-Dry" model but there wasn't one in good condition at the time. This machine was far and away in the best condition and the dealer verified that for me with a 60-day warranty.

 

It was a great performer and because of the stinginess of the solid tub design I was able to fill the machine from my kitchen sink and drain it the same way. It was also quiet enough that it didn't disturb my downstairs neighbors as I was worried it might. I didn't run it late at night, but I was expecting somebody at some point to complain and it wasn't an issue. I found a "flying-saucer" fabric softener dispenser for it (that I may still have somewhere buried in the boxes of the basement). I wish I had been able to hang on to that machine. Up until 1995 there were lots of old Rollermatics around this area. Then, they just disappeared.

 

Thank you for the postings and yes, I would enjoy looking at any literature on the 67, 68 and 69 models that you have.

bajaespuma++4-1-2014-16-17-8.jpg
 
Ken, here are closer views at the 1967 WCDL controls, note the infinite water level control instead of the "full load" and "small load" selections of the time-filled models. 

philr++4-1-2014-17-35-41.jpg
 

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