I'm wondering if that is a Brazilian built machine
I apologize for the mini-dissertation...
I can't say for certain, but I think that machine may have been made in Brazil for the Canadian market. Initially I thought that was a dumb hunch on my part since the BD factories were in Michigan and Ohio (therefore why import from Brazil with sources of supply so close to the Canadian border), but if Inglis continued on in Canada in Belt-drive form until the mid 90s as mentioned above, they'd have had to come from somewhere else.
Back around 1995 or so I rememember calling Whirlpool's toll-free number and asking the attendant when belt-drive production ended. She put me on hold a moment and then came back and said "Fall 1986 for home models, and we built commerial machines about another year. We just dismantled the tooling a few months ago, but we still make them in Brazil". The fall 1986 date makes sense as the model I bought in August of 1986 was one of the last that Kenmore had and it was off the sales floor by October.
I know that Brazil continued to make BDs for a good while into the 90s, so if for whatever reason the Canadian market didn't go 100% DD, the machines could have come from there.
Interestingly, some of the parts available to this day for BDs are made in Brazil, including the current two and four port pumps, which are now made with royal blue bodies vs. the old tan color. The last replacement transmissions were made in Brazil too.
There are some odd things about that Canadian Kenmore....the gray lid, the apparently gray basket, and the funny indent on the lower cabinet front....they all to me anyway suggest that the machine came from a plant with different ways of doing things. I could be wrong, but I suspect it would have been too expensive to manufacture those differences for a smaller market alongside the US versions if this machine was made in America. Porcelain coating is costly to make - I think we'd have seen gray on other US washers at the time if the US plants were doing that at all.
Interesting note - the BD plant in Michigan, which was one of Whirlpool's oldest plants, was in St. Joseph, near the WP headquarters. That plant was closed in the early 80s and the Clyde Ohio plant was expanded to accomodate. Clyde has been one of, if not THE largest washer plants in the world ever since.
I have always wondered how WP decided what would be built in St. Joe and what was made in Clyde, but I'm starting to see a pattern....every washer I've ever seen that was made in St. Joe (they have a "J" in the serial number vs. Clyde's "C") was a standard capacity, at least if it was from the 70s and 80s. The more I think about it, I don't think I've ever seen a St. Joe - J large capacity machine. If anyone knows more, I'd be interested to learn. That means for this special washer, it was either made in Clyde Ohio before 1987, or it came from outside the US.
Let me know what you think folks - I am not fully certain on the Brazilian source idea, but it's just a strong hunch. Sorry again for the lengthy note.