The GE HydroWave: One of the worst washers ever

Automatic Washer - The world's coolest Washing Machines, Dryers and Dishwashers

Help Support AutomaticWasher.org:

Completely and utterly ridiculous.
What an authoritarian thing to say.
GE broke NO laws in the production of the T series and Hydrowave washers. In fact, they made GE lots of money and gave owners years and years of mostly good service.

The constant emotional tirades on this model of appliance is highly medically questionable.

So you're saying its ok for appliance makers not to honor their warranty?
 
You're lying! I've seen GE commercial machines failed! One was nearly blown apart at my old college dorm! I'm serious! It's not funny!
This is unfortunate but that’s also not how math and statistics work. You’re talking about small observed data points. Not the statistical failure rate of a HUGE sample size of machines. GE made millions of these things.
I’m not going to say they were amazing on a Newton Maytag level. But they were decently comparable to other products on the market at the time.
You should know better, Jerome, that machines in college dorm and apartment settings see more abuse. In fact, GE would void those warranties as “commercial” settings if in a dorm.

Why do so many appliances fail around you Jerome? Are you haunted?
 
What a stupid comment.
The typical argument response of “so if you’re not anti-x, you must be pro-y!!!”

In reply #21 you never rebutted the second sentence of my original statement:

I wish GE would be legally and financially held accountable for the Model Ts and subsequent Hydrowave shortcoming. Considering how many premature failure warranties GE failed to honor, there technically could have been a class action lawsuit.

I can only deduce you agree with GE refusing to honor warranties something which btw I have dealt with first hand.
 
In reply #21 you never rebutted the second sentence of my original statement:



I can only deduce you agree with GE refusing to honor warranties something which btw I have dealt with first hand.
I guess some service people get perks to stick up for certain products, regardless of what others may say,
However, I just ignore those argumentative types and their accusations.
Ain't no skin off my hide.
It makes life much more pleasant, just a few mouse-clicks and my sanity stays intact.
 
I guess some service people get perks to stick up for certain products, regardless of what others may say,
However, I just ignore those argumentative types and their accusations.
Ain't no skin off my hide.
It makes life much more pleasant, just a few mouse-clicks and my sanity stays intact.

In all honesty I probably should.

However at the same time, I've gotten into the unfortunate habit of rebutting detractors. The way I see it members of the general public read these forums for information. I'd rather the market contingent see a balance of information instead of a one sided argument of value engineered complexity = best doctrine as is being preached here.

One can hope that a grass roots movement could be ignited where people come to the realization that the best value and performance comes from simple, stout, over engineered appliances designed to last decades rather than the flashy, disposable HE detritus the public has been mislead into buying.

Changing perception to see things as they actually are is the only thing that will change the appliance market. Of course the detractors know that, so their modus operandi is to discredit the messenger in front of the listening audience.

Opponents can't refute the information, so they have to challenge the presenter.
 
In all honesty I probably should.

However at the same time, I've gotten into the unfortunate habit of rebutting detractors. The way I see it members of the general public read these forums for information. I'd rather the market contingent see a balance of information instead of a one sided argument of value engineered complexity = best doctrine as is being preached here.

One can hope that a grass roots movement could be ignited where people come to the realization that the best value and performance comes from simple, stout, over engineered appliances designed to last decades rather than the flashy, disposable HE detritus the public has been mislead into buying.

Changing perception to see things as they actually are is the only thing that will change the appliance market. Of course the detractors know that, so their modus operandi is to discredit the messenger in front of the listening audience.

Opponents can't refute the information, so they have to challenge the presenter.
I agree on the general public's education, in hopes that it can help those without the deeper knowledge that someone with experience will offer.
And perhaps that will lead to others "passing the words of wisdom" so that hopefully those corporations will see that changes need to be made in terms of quality and design.
After all, their reputations are at stake, and no amount of the consolidating of brand names will keep them from losing customers.
 
IIRC there were at least a few cups of oil in the transmission. The transmission was too small for the agitator it was driving.
There was oil in the transmission and it was indeed undersized. Another major failure point of the model-T’s was the pressure switch hose. The poorly designed pressure switch hose was prone to clogging, and as a result the GE Model-T’s would commonly flood your home!

I see so many reports of GE Model-T washers flooding homes.

The model-T GE was probably the worst washer of the 2000s (pre-2006, before the Hydrowave was introduced) outside of the Maytag Neptune top loader and Whirlpool Calypso.

There are only four washers worse than the Motel-T. The four include the agitub Frigidaires, the HydroWave (which is essentially a Model-T but worse), the Maytag top load Neptune, and the Whirlpool Calypso.
 
There was oil in the transmission and it was indeed undersized. Another major failure point of the model-T’s was the pressure switch hose. The poorly designed pressure switch hose was prone to clogging, and as a result the GE Model-T’s would commonly flood your home!

Yup.

And if a Model T went into spin-drain, it was not uncommon for some of the water to exit the overflow tub.

Yes the pressure switch prevented spin before the pressure switch reset, however when it would reset at about half way empty the spin would start throwing the water upward until the pressure switch tripped, causing machine would stop and brake, and then starting the process over and over again in rapid succession.

The latter none clutch models were worse.

Stupid, stupid, stupid.
 
Yup.

And if a Model T went into spin-drain, it was not uncommon for some of the water to exit the overflow tub.

Yes the pressure switch prevented spin before the pressure switch reset, however when it would reset at about half way empty the spin would start throwing the water upward until the pressure switch tripped, causing machine would stop and brake, and then starting the process over and over again in rapid succession.

The latter none clutch models were worse.

Stupid, stupid, stupid.
I’m surprised GE never got recalled for the Model-T’s or Hydrowaves for all their premature failure. GE also used terrible seals on their units, the seals would commonly fail and water would get into the bearings and cause it to howl like a freight train. I’ve heard of people who had bearings and seals fail on their HydroWave in under a year.

Another failure point on those mode shifters was the magnet, causing the washer to either make a horrible noise or rotate back and forth on wash cycle.

The plastic tubs are the best part of the Model-T’s, plastic tubs have never been a failure point on washers, that’s a lie. The plastic tub was probably the most durable part of the machine, and many GE model-T’s also use stainless drums (not only HydroWaves - mind you).

The impeller HydroWaves didn’t clean well at all and they had a weirdly placed fabric softener dispenser. The noise they made was higher pitched.

Another major failure of the HydroWaves was the tub straps, the tub straps on those HydroWave units would very commonly fail, causing it to shake violently on every load. It’s rarely the suspension rods that fail on the HydroWaves, usually if it keeps shaking it’s the tub straps that are bad. Model-T’s had a similar design so the tub straps on those failed often as well. The suspension rods rarely were the culprit on the HydroWave machines.

GE should definitely recall their newer machines, as they are literally exploding like the recalled Samsungs.

The Model-T’s and HydroWaves were an absolute nightmare to repair if the mode shifter when (on a HydroWave) or the transmission went (on a model-T), the entire machine had to be taken apart to fix it. You had to essentially take the WHOLE thing apart. Same goes for if you had to replace the seal or the tub center bushing.

I honestly don’t think the newest Whirlpools are any better, as many are literally getting bad control boards right after a year, I think Whirlpool should be sued and legally responsible for all the control board problems they had on their VMW’s, as well as a recall. They don’t seem to be fixing it, because as time goes on I’m seeing later and later models with a faulty board, I bet in 2026 I’ll see the 2025’s with bad boards as well. The service bulletin only affects the 2023 and 2024 models. It’s like they designed the pressure switches on those boards to fail within a year to make customers buy a new machine every year. Thousands, if not millions, of Whirlpool washers made from 2023-present are constantly draining and not starting the cycle. As of now, I’m seeing the models made as late as December or November, 2024 that are constantly draining, so the 2025 units are probably also affected. There is no good reason on why millions of machines should be getting control board issues every year.

I bet on Christmas people will be buying a lot of the VMWs of that style (especially since they are being discontinued and are often in stock at lower prices on clearance), and I bet within a year they’ll have control board issues.

I read a Reddit thread about an apartment or something full of these newer Whirlpools (2023 I think), and they said half of them started the constant drain issue within a year or two. Whirlpool seems to be discontinuing the traditional VMW’s so I hope it’s not an issue for post-2025 modes since all the newly released smaller models are essentially the 4.5 to 4.8 models by looks but with a smaller drum. I bet that Maytag six-light VMW launched in 2025 will get a constant drain issue by 2026.

The potted boards found on the bigger VMW and VMAX units don’t seem to have that problem.
 
Last edited:
Let’s not forget. The timers on the HydroWave and Model-T units weren’t the greatest, they’d often get noisy or not fully advance. I can’t find anything good about the model-T or HydroWave. The timers were a common failure point too.

Some washers are super reliable but can’t wash well, like the Speed Queen TR series, they spin out well and are built like tanks, but they can’t wash well with the whole drum spinning on the wash cycle and a bolted on agitator. This was NOT true for HydroWaves, and even those washed better than a Model-T tho the GE HydroWave didn’t wash well either.

I don’t mind HE washers or the way they wash, but I know even a GE Model T will wash better than ANY VMW (except for the commercial grade ones). A Maytag commercial can probably wash better than a GE Model-T easily. I don’t hate Model-T’s mainly for their cleaning performance, I hate them for their durability and reliability, the metal used on them was also cheap and thin, GE literally made their cabinets out of sheet metal. GE is probably the only manufacturer I’ve seen who used sheet metal for their cabinets. Even the motors on the HydroWaves and Model-T’s weren’t the best.
 
Last edited:
The timers on the HydroWave and Model-T units weren’t the greatest, they’d often get noisy or not fully advance.
My brother had timer issues with his Hydrowave. The timer wasn't noisy but sometimes quit advancing in certain areas. The idiot replaced it with a Samsuck top loading impeller model that has given him problems.
 
My brother had timer issues with his Hydrowave. The timer wasn't noisy but sometimes quit advancing in certain areas. The idiot replaced it with a Samsuck top loading impeller model that has given him problems.
I actually think Samsung top loaders are better than HydroWaves, usually when those fail it’s something like the suspension rods or the drain pump. They also easily have better washing performance. At least the Samsungs don’t get tub seal failures without a year.

No, I don’t like Samsungs at all, their parts are too expensive and the suspension rods and their new ECM pumps are known to go out. The pumps are known to make an awful noise. Samsung only makes good phones and TVs, not appliances. I actually think the new Samsungs are better than the current Whirlpools. At least the new Samsungs don’t have control boards that barely last one year.

The timers on those HydroWaves and Model-T’s were known to fail, like the one you mentioned, I had a friend who had a model-T with a messed up timer (it was a Model-T unit, not a HydroWave), and that machine wasn’t even that old.


The GE basic units with the agitators are okay, but all the other ones are TERRIBLE. The GE units with the washplates literally destroy themselves during spin cycle, I literally call those units “General Explosion”.
 
Last edited:
I’m not sure which is worse, a GE HydroWave or a Samsung
Samsuck, by a long shot! The Hydrowave was over 10 years old when he got them used.

I think he's overloading the Samsuck. From what I've read on this forum, they should not be loaded more than 30% capacity. He fills it all the way up and washes most things tap cold.

I washed some towels his kids brought over to swim in the pool. God, those things stunk like hell! The towels also showed a lot so of wear, like the impeller was chewing them up which is probably from overloading.
 
Back
Top