Speed Queen current line up in production through 2018

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mtn1584

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I emailed Allinace and asked them about production,....this was the response I got....

Great questions regarding the DOE and water usage. The good news and only news is we are going to continue to make a sell our current line of top load washers through 2018. There is a lot more to this story but please feel rest assured we will have the current models with slight modifications (better water usage) available for many years to come!

Take from it what you will,
Mike
 
How did you manage to get a response?

I emailed them from their website AND their FB page. No reply.

Thanks for the info though!

washman++10-11-2013-09-09-46.jpg
 
I don't know, maybe because I told them that my family has three sets of the AWN542 model and matching dryer. Myself, my mother, and my brother.
Mike
 
seems pretty vague of an answer.....yes, they will still make them, with added 'modifications'....

and better water use?.....don't like the sound of that....they were already forced to reduce the water level, which can be adjusted back up....as long as that feature is available were good, but if newer models dont allow it, then were screwed!....
 
Future SQ TL Washers

There will be big changes in these washers in the next two years in terms water temperature and rinsing systems, and sorry Eugene the TL SQs are very unlikely to last 50 years, I have never heard anyone @ SQ make that claim, 50 years is the design limit for the FLers. The TLers will probably only last 10-30 years depending on many different usage factors.

 

The TL models are not only very difficult to repair when you have main seal and transmission problems, But also expensive, I predict that most TL SQs will be trashed if they develop these problems, especially when the 10 year transmission warranty is gone. The FL machines on the other hand are relatively easy to replace main bearings and seals in.
 
I'm stocking up on replacement parts

now while the gettin is good. Not ever not in a million years am I going to give up my SQ for a less than stellar HE TL machine.

Just got back from dining out. Went to Sears. Looked over the iron, er I mean, trash. And boy was it trash. LG and Samsung with plastic lids. So called Kennmore and GE with stainless PLATED tubs as thin as a Miller beer can. I was able to move a Kennmore HE basket far enough to feel the outer tub. Plastic.

Thanks but no thanks.

I did two wonderful loads today using Tide Original detergent. For some reason in calm weather, we had a quick power surge.

Know what? I did not have to "reboot" my SQ or my old fashioned GE dryer. And neither one is plugged into a surge supressor!



washman++10-12-2013-19-52-4.jpg
 
John-- I was being silly and exaggerating when I said it would last 50 years. But you think their front-loaders can actually reach the half-century mark? That's pretty impressive. Is the top-loader's shorter life expectancy due to the tub seal? One more question: Do the new Speed Queen top-loaders have the same Arc-Q-Matic transmissions that were found in the McGraw-Edison washers?
 
the tranny on the new ones do offer the 210 degree stroke, but is a whole different design than the Arc-Q-Matic 210.......a shame too, this original tranny offered a power stroke with that design, something that is missing in the new design...

did you see Dan's thread and videos on changing out that agitator with a ramped design from a Westinghouse?

here's one of his videos...

 
Did a little research

on the SQ transmissions.

I learned that the copyright and patent expired on both the ArcQ Matic AND the Eversmooth designs.

If you can save the image I attached, in this old ad there is a pic of the AcrQMatic transmission.

washman++10-13-2013-06-36-42.jpg
 
the good and bad of the two trannies is the first ArcQMatic was similar to many designs in aspect of this was for agitation only, and then there was the spin drive seperate......did not hear too much of them ever failing, and good thing too, they are B*#@H to get out!

in the new EverSmooth, its all in one, agitation and spin are from the same mechanism....

granted they are all metal gear designs....
 
Current SQ TL Washer Transmissions

Are all metal, BUT they use a lot of aluminum including some aluminum gears, and they have aluminum wearing against aluminum which has never been considered good engineering. When you open a used SQ transmission the oil looks like aluminum paste and having both a bottom oil seal exposed to all the metal in the oil and a top seal exposed to possible contamination from water these transmissions not a super long lasting design.
 
Turnover???

In the video link that Ben(Washman) posted, it took nearly a full 2 minutes for the white article to be taken in by the agitator and worked down into the tub. Is that the normal time it takes or was the machine severely overloaded? The white article finally reappears at the nearly 5 minute mark to begin another journey down and around the tub.
Do the yellow and blue articles ever get more than a beating from the agitator?
Am I just out of practice watching clothes move around a tub in a top loader or just been jaded by having Whirlpool/Kenmores all my life and living thru a few different styles of Super Surgilators, Dual Action agitators and those cool golden Pentaswirls?
 
Here was the load

LL Bean Queen size fitted sheet, top sheet, two pillowcases plus one queen bedspread.

Pretty heavy load when you consider the water absorbtion of 100% cotton items.

True the turnover is not as agressive here but I have other vids that show a more agressive turnover. It really depends on the size of the items. At any rate, they did come out peachy clean in my USA made Speed Queen.

The attached pic shows a bigger image of the famous Arc-Q-Matic transmission.

washman++10-13-2013-14-44-23.jpg
 

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