The Maytag Atlantis

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DiamondTiara

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Does anyone else here have experience with the Maytag Atlantis? It is one of my dream washers, I think it ranks very highly at the top of the list of a dream washer for me. I know there are other models so this is just a general "Maytag Atlantis" thread. What do people here think of it?

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I had and still have a Maytag Atlantis pair. Must be over 20 years old. I don’t have them hooked up anymore. Worst washing machine I have ever used. Washed and rinsed really badly and very noisy when running. The drier was pretty good but like all electric driers very expensive to run. I have a heat pump drier now. Uses next to no electricity. Good luck getting one.
 
I had and still have a Maytag Atlantis pair. Must be over 20 years old. I don’t have them hooked up anymore. Worst washing machine I have ever used. Washed and rinsed really badly and very noisy when running. The drier was pretty good but like all electric driers very expensive to run. I have a heat pump drier now. Uses next to no electricity. Good luck getting one.
What does your Atlantis Washer look like?
 
Does anyone else here have experience with the Maytag Atlantis? It is one of my dream washers, I think it ranks very highly at the top of the list of a dream washer for me. I know there are other models so this is just a general "Maytag Atlantis" thread. What do people here think of it?

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I've used one once. They're decent.
 
These were fairly common to find about 15 yrs ago,now rare : i grabbed one at the dump,found it in working order,and washed several loads in it before placing into storage and later giving to a guy at work. Another was recovered at the curb,found it worked,but had major runout(wobble) of the basket to the point of wearing a hole in the plastic outer tub-corrosion of the aluminum hub where plastic basket bolted up had built up and expanded,forcing the runout-clearing corrosion off and remounting basket got this one running decent. These washers are based on Norge design.
 
These were fairly common to find about 15 yrs ago,now rare : i grabbed one at the dump,found it in working order,and washed several loads in it before placing into storage and later giving to a guy at work. Another was recovered at the curb,found it worked,but had major runout(wobble) of the basket to the point of wearing a hole in the plastic outer tub-corrosion of the aluminum hub where plastic basket bolted up had built up and expanded,forcing the runout-clearing corrosion off and remounting basket got this one running decent. These washers are based on Norge design.
What's their suspension and transmission design compared to their older pitman and orbital designs?
 
Does anyone else here have experience with the Maytag Atlantis? It is one of my dream washers, I think it ranks very highly at the top of the list of a dream washer for me. I know there are other models so this is just a general "Maytag Atlantis" thread. What do people here think of it?

View attachment 321047
I had a pair at my old house; my late great-grandmother purchased it for my family around early 2004. It was a replacement for a Whirlpool set that came with the house in 2001 (apparently, the dryer took too long to dry clothes). The Maytag washer was very robust. Excellent washing and rinsing performance, thanks to a powerful agitator that created strong turnover. However, it was just plain noisy, and certain loads of bedding were prone to throwing the machine off-balance. The matching dryer worked just as well, fully drying every load of laundry.

This Maytag set is where I first started doing laundry at home, during my later teen years. I had previously done laundry while in high school, so this was a very important life skill to learn at home.

However, in early 2013, the washer died, likely as a result of washing my bathrobe by itself. I was taking down our Christmas tree, completely unaware that the machine had gone off-balance and was walking to the left. It was at that point that the washer was no longer filling with water; the agitator would simply move without any water every time we turned the washer on. So my dad did a lot of research on new washers, and bought an LG WM2650HWA washer to replace the Maytag with (our first-foray into front-loaders). In the interim, my mom and I had to drive down to the laundromat a couple times to get our laundry washed. It was a bit pricey to use their washers. The dryer still worked, so we brought the clean, wet clothes home in trash bags to dry them without the further expense of using the laundromat dryers.

I assumed that we were going to buy the matching LG dryer later down the road, but that ultimately didn't happen. The Maytag dryer just refused to die. However, in later years, my dad had to buy a couple of replacement parts for it, namely the timer and one of the drum baffles. So our washer and dryer were forever mismatched, even by the time we sold the house five years ago.
 

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These were fairly common to find about 15 yrs ago,now rare : i grabbed one at the dump,found it in working order,and washed several loads in it before placing into storage and later giving to a guy at work. Another was recovered at the curb,found it worked,but had major runout(wobble) of the basket to the point of wearing a hole in the plastic outer tub-corrosion of the aluminum hub where plastic basket bolted up had built up and expanded,forcing the runout-clearing corrosion off and remounting basket got this one running decent. These washers are based on Norge design.
OOh... based on a Norge design. That speaks volumes. It's a wonder any survived to this day... (based upon a few interactions servicing old Norges in the 1980s, may be biased a bit unfairly!)
 
I had a pair at my old house; my late great-grandmother purchased it for my family around early 2004. It was a replacement for a Whirlpool set that came with the house in 2001 (apparently, the dryer took too long to dry clothes). The Maytag washer was very robust. Excellent washing and rinsing performance, thanks to a powerful agitator that created strong turnover. However, it was just plain noisy, and certain loads of bedding were prone to throwing the machine off-balance. The matching dryer worked just as well, fully drying every load of laundry.

This Maytag set is where I first started doing laundry at home, during my later teen years. I had previously done laundry while in high school, so this was a very important life skill to learn at home.

However, in early 2013, the washer died, likely as a result of washing my bathrobe by itself. I was taking down our Christmas tree, completely unaware that the machine had gone off-balance and was walking to the left. It was at that point that the washer was no longer filling with water; the agitator would simply move without any water every time we turned the washer on. So my dad did a lot of research on new washers, and bought an LG WM2650HWA washer to replace the Maytag with (our first-foray into front-loaders). In the interim, my mom and I had to drive down to the laundromat a couple times to get our laundry washed. It was a bit pricey to use their washers. The dryer still worked, so we brought the clean, wet clothes home in trash bags to dry them without the further expense of using the laundromat dryers.

I assumed that we were going to buy the matching LG dryer later down the road, but that ultimately didn't happen. The Maytag dryer just refused to die. However, in later years, my dad had to buy a couple of replacement parts for it, namely the timer and one of the drum baffles. So our washer and dryer were forever mismatched, even by the time we sold the house five years ago.

That's an interesting story there. The Maytag washer lasted almost 10 years and it could have been replaced, but the dryer working as long as it did shows that modern stuff isn't made like it used to. You had a Machine that is one of my dream machines, so you are lucky you got as many years with it as you did. One of my relatives has a similar-ish machine. It is an Admiral Machine, likely made around the same era.
 
From what I read here, I'd be sorry to own one of those Atlantis machines.
And Pstehle is correct about "modern" machines, actually a lot of "new" products not having a satisfyingly long service life - without issues.

So here I go again, touting the incredible reliability and great performance of my 39 year old Maytag A842 washer and DG842 dryer that have been my troublefree means of doing my laundry.
I've got better things to do and worry about than filling my mind with "IF" my machines will last.
 
I had a pair at my old house; my late great-grandmother purchased it for my family around early 2004. It was a replacement for a Whirlpool set that came with the house in 2001 (apparently, the dryer took too long to dry clothes). The Maytag washer was very robust. Excellent washing and rinsing performance, thanks to a powerful agitator that created strong turnover. However, it was just plain noisy, and certain loads of bedding were prone to throwing the machine off-balance. The matching dryer worked just as well, fully drying every load of laundry.

This Maytag set is where I first started doing laundry at home, during my later teen years. I had previously done laundry while in high school, so this was a very important life skill to learn at home.

However, in early 2013, the washer died, likely as a result of washing my bathrobe by itself. I was taking down our Christmas tree, completely unaware that the machine had gone off-balance and was walking to the left. It was at that point that the washer was no longer filling with water; the agitator would simply move without any water every time we turned the washer on. So my dad did a lot of research on new washers, and bought an LG WM2650HWA washer to replace the Maytag with (our first-foray into front-loaders). In the interim, my mom and I had to drive down to the laundromat a couple times to get our laundry washed. It was a bit pricey to use their washers. The dryer still worked, so we brought the clean, wet clothes home in trash bags to dry them without the further expense of using the laundromat dryers.

I assumed that we were going to buy the matching LG dryer later down the road, but that ultimately didn't happen. The Maytag dryer just refused to die. However, in later years, my dad had to buy a couple of replacement parts for it, namely the timer and one of the drum baffles. So our washer and dryer were forever mismatched, even by the time we sold the house five years ago.
My family ALWAYS buys matching sets, no exceptions.
 
From what I read here, I'd be sorry to own one of those Atlantis machines.
And Pstehle is correct about "modern" machines, actually a lot of "new" products not having a satisfyingly long service life - without issues.

So here I go again, touting the incredible reliability and great performance of my 39 year old Maytag A842 washer and DG842 dryer that have been my troublefree means of doing my laundry.
I've got better things to do and worry about than filling my mind with "IF" my machines will last.
I prefer matching sets. If one goes out, I'd buy the whole set.
 
I had an Atlantis about a year ago…

And it was one of the better performing washers that I have gotten to experience. However, there is one big thing to be aware of with these machines, and that is that one of the gears in the transmission has a nasty habit of self destructing. It has plastic locking tabs on the outside of it to allow the transmission to lock up for the spin cycle. These are prone to breaking off at about the 10-15 year mark, and leaving the machine unable to spin. Replacement gears are still readily available online, but tearing the whole machine apart to get to it is a bit of a chore. However, I feel that it is a repair that is certainly worth doing, especially if it’s a dream machine. Outside of that issue, though, the rest of the washer seemed pretty solidly built to me. Good luck with finding one!

Thatwasherguy.
 
I had an Atlantis about a year ago…

And it was one of the better performing washers that I have gotten to experience. However, there is one big thing to be aware of with these machines, and that is that one of the gears in the transmission has a nasty habit of self destructing. It has plastic locking tabs on the outside of it to allow the transmission to lock up for the spin cycle. These are prone to breaking off at about the 10-15 year mark, and leaving the machine unable to spin. Replacement gears are still readily available online, but tearing the whole machine apart to get to it is a bit of a chore. However, I feel that it is a repair that is certainly worth doing, especially if it’s a dream machine. Outside of that issue, though, the rest of the washer seemed pretty solidly built to me. Good luck with finding one!

Thatwasherguy.
That PLASTIC gear design is not a good design, sorry.
To use such a vulnerable gear to "lock up" the transmission is asking for trouble.

Granted, my 39 year old Maytag has a "plastic" gear in its pittman trans, but its job is an easy one, preventing stress on it, and driving all the metal gears.
It's lasted 39 years as proof and still going strong.
 
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