.
Well I have a working washer again...hopefully it will stay working longer this time.
In this repair session I learned a lot, best summed up with the statement, "should've got the TL Speed Queen."
Really, that is it in a nutshell. I almost did too, but at the last minute went for the FL thinking they made more sense, cleaner dryer cloths while using less water.
What I didn't factor in was the greater complexity to the FL machines leaves them more susceptible to major failures than their TL brethren. And the appliance repair eco-system knows the TL machine like the back of their hand while the FL machine is seen as exotic-trouble-prone fruit. When I asked the parts manager how it could be he didn't know about Speed Queen Direct he said, "never came up before, we always had the needed parts in stock." In other words he wasn't replacing boards on FL machines but standard items on the TL machine.
As far as we can tell the pump choked on a sock and failed, which inturn likely caused the motor board to fail. Now what happened last time I don't know, the board failed on it's own. In both cases the board was collected for shipment back to Wisconsin, presumably for fault diagnosis and perhaps a reboot.
The tech said repair personnel used to be able to perform firmware upgrades in the field on a SQ but that is no longer the case. "Planned obsolescence?" I asked, "you got it" the tech replied. The repair tech also said Samsung and LG were far worse than SQ in that area though.
So a pox on both our houses. FL SQ users like me need to be ultra careful about pocket contents and the use of a garment bag. And I think SQ needs to beef up the motor control board protections and provide a training DVD or YouTube video to every tech to clarify the whys and wherefores of the FL product. Suffice it to say this tech had some seriously mistaken ideas on their use. "You should never wash a sheet bigger than a twin, you will overload the machine and wear out the suspension"...was one clearly highly mistaken gem of misinformation. "You should see lots of water splashing or you are overloading the machine"...was another moment he was clearly in need of some retraining. Very nice guy though, and good at what he did know.
Nonetheless he did convince me, along with my own experience, these machines are not family friendly.
Kids socks end up everywhere, stuck in pant legs etc. so even with judicious use of a garment bag we will no doubt miss one here or there and this machine will choke on it every time...which apparently also puts the board at great risk of failing as well.
So to the users of SQ TL machines, thumbs up, you made the right choice. All the good things said about those machines likely hold true...for *that* machine; FL buyers, caveat emptor.[this post was last edited: 2/7/2017-17:42]