Joy!
Congratulations on the joy of maximum wash action! That's a beautiful machine, and it represents some of my favorite Montgomery Ward aesthetics, stacked "M|W" logo with a ring of dots and all.
I enjoyed reading about your repairs and the whys and wherefores of what was making it misbehave--amazing that a faulty motor could do all that. I'm so glad you kept at it and fixed her up--she's beautiful!
To answer a question you asked long ago and I missed, the Wards Roger and I found lives on to this day. My then-boss inherited it, preferred it over her Kenmore, and did all her wash in it. The torque spring issue is nil if there is a full load of clothes in the tub to hold the agitator down. It only caused issues with small loads, where the agitator batted and tangled the clothes prior to spin, causing grievous out-of-balance conditions.
Speaking of which, we washed a rug in our MW the other night, and it was completely out of balance--but never knocked or did anything out of the ordinary. All I noticed was that the clothes were wet after the spin, and I sussed out the rest. I guess if it's out of balance during spin, it has a way of never coming up to speed--the tub oscillates wildly, but it stays put. Weird. But cool!
David is so totally attached to the Wards that he has told me it's the only washer he'll use. So, I guess I'd better keep my eyes peeled to keep us in a steady supply of them. (He hated the Whirlpool.) He enjoys the monster capacity and aggressive wash action. The neighbors enjoy the way it rearranges picture frames on their side of the wall and shakes loose plaster dust out of the ceiling.
