Unusual Pictures of Washing Machines --I HOPE !!!!! Cross your fingers

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thank you--my allergy is to pollen; drums, i love to beat.
 
Dyson 2-Drums Allergy

Hi Mickeyd,
My username is the name of one of my Dyson washers, the Dyson CR02 2-Drums Allergy, My older Dyson washer is the CR01 Memory.
Dyson washers have a unique wash action which uses two aligned drums that rotate in opposite directions. This Contra Rotating wash action is much more efficient and faster at removing dirt than conventional single drum front loaders.

David
 
I have never ever heard of that. Are there any pix around?

Amazing, thank you. And here I though you were allergic to drums. Ah gullibility!
 
SACRILEGE but fascinatig

Conventional washing machines may seem convenient, but their poor performance lets you down. So James Dyson asked his engineers to experiment with every imaginable way of washing to design a better washing machine. Along the way, Dyson engineers made a surprising discovery: washing by hand gave better wash results than single drum machines. Because the laundry is constantly on the move, it is manipulated and flexed. This opens the fabric to the detergent, releasing dirt quickly and effectively. To replicate the movement of washing by hand, Dyson engineers designed two aligned drums and engineered them to rotate in opposite directions at the same time: laundry is constantly on the move, manipulated and flexed.

Washing by hand--who woulda thunk???
 
Dyson tests--funny that they did not say handwashing beat agitator washing. Giving agitators their due, the fins on most agitators force powerful water currents through fabrics.

Mickey, I don't remember a sleeve type filter except for the red one that slid down on the Hotpoint agitator. Whirlpool had a lint filter to "update" wringer and automatic washers made before the recirculating filters were introduced. The filter pan was pushed down on the agitator, had a double wall design and scoops that worked with the agitator strokes to force water up into the filter pan. Other automatics used something similar for awhile, IIRC. Do you have any idea of the age of the Norge? That knurled brass nut on top of the agitator was probably at one time in the cap of the agitator. The rough surface would have given the nut a better lock into the Bakelite. I know nothing about the slits in the agitator shaft. When you take that agitator out, does the metal inside come out with the agitator? If it does not, I don't see how the brass nut would hold the agitator in place. If the metal is the drive block for the agitator, and the agitator is hollow to allow it to slide down onto the block, then the cap would have held the agitator down on the block and the hose clamps would not have been needed. Sorry if this is way the hell and gone wrong, but looking at the photographs of the agitator without closer examination, I am not sure what I am seeing. Is there a "shoulder" at the location of the first hose clamp? It could be that the agitator was made to accommodate a scoop up type lint filter that would be held in place by the agitator cap and be supported by the shoulder, but that is a wild shot, too. Tom
 
Hi Tom

Happy Late Saturday Night

Look at the first Norge photo "....Burpolator" and see the cracks at 5 o'clock extending down the shaft. That is a crack. The clamps were installed by Kolopihski Maytag 20 years ago, They hold the agitator tight against the column and post, preventing any slippage. Once when the agi cap was stuck, I broke it while trying to remove the agitator, which I sometimes do. The parts of the cap fell away revealing a perfect "knurled"--thanks!--brass nut whose base or collar exceeds the circumference of the opening in the agitator. When I remove the nut which I will brush up with sand paper for Ralf's request, the agi comes out just fine.

I've had the machine for 20 years and I believe it was built in 1966 or thereabouts.

Unfortunately, that is not a condom on the shaft; it's just not yet wet up there. The film is from the the boil wash and 3 rinses--the third is heated-- from the Jenn Air dishwasher above
which changes the water 3 times before the main wash, making those "washing liquors" as the old laundries call them, clean enough to use to wash the back hall rugs or other heavy dirty stuff. You can see the Jenn Air's hose in the second Norge picture. The incoming water is a heated brew containing Electrosol, Calgon and Clorox to which I add some Tide. The water enters in 4 stages making for a very interesting performance, as the Norge Behemoth has its way with the dirtiest laundry in my home.

I will take more careful and revealing pictures next time, and thank you for your interest and kind acknowledgment. I appreciate it very much.
 
Splashy

Hi Mickey, what are you doing with those poor machines...LOL, never mind trying to electrocute yourself with all that splashy water..LOL

Love the picks, you always push the boundaries with the Washer Water Shots...now what about the twinnys???

Dont blame Tom, I too thought you had a contraceptive device on that agi!!!

Cheers, Mike
 
Resizing Images on MacOS X with iPhoto

To resize the image and make it smaller...

click on the images you want to share. shift-click to select multiples.

go to the File menu and choose Export

choose "Scale images no larger than:"

set the two boxes to something like 1024 and 768.

You can experiment with the numbers unil you find ones that work for you. 1024x768 made a picture that was around 400kilobites for me, which isn't too bad, and still shows a decent amount of detail.

some later powerbook G4 computers have a scrolling, "two-finger" trackpad that mimics the scroll wheel on a mouse.

I use an inexpensive Logitech mouse on my Mac Pro at work. Its much nicer than the single button mouse, and you get spoiled by the scroll wheel quickly. The Apple Mighty Mouse is a little expensive, and makes my hand ache. I would borrow one for a day or two before I bought one, to make sure i liked it. I also have a kensington trackball for when i have a lot of mousing around to do.
 
Eric, thank you so much. I never saw this. Forgive me

It looks so easy. The next CD will be a piece of cake.

Again, you took the time to give a detailed solution and I missed it. I apologize.
 
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