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Thanks for posting. Decades ago, after a Washington Post article about our appliance collection, we were called by the son of a recently deceased woman in Arlington, VA who was a German war bride. The house was a museum of carefully used household goods with many of the small electrics stored in their original boxes. Her Bendix Automatic Home Laundry looked like new after more than 40 years of use with no stains, scum, rust or mineral deposits anywhere. He told us of seeing her carefully wipe the area of the soap trap and, indeed, the whole machine, inside and out, dry after each washday. He said that she was very impressed by the wonderful consumer goods she encountered in America.
 
It's amazing how many of these early Bendix washers remain out in the wild.

Early bolt down models often were in damp basements which contributed to poor condition after decades of sitting.

OTOH later models with suspensions were often located elsewhere in better environments.

https://automaticwasher.org/threads/from-the-west-coast-to-the-midwest-a-bendix-restoration.91893

https://automaticwasher.org/threads/1948-bendix-washer-restoration.91075

https://automaticwasher.org/threads/i-just-found-a-1937-bendix-washing-machine.91374

https://automaticwasher.org/threads/patience-has-its-rewards-1940s-bendix-washer.36954






 
Many homes in the South did not have basements so machines were installed on wooden floors. A hole was drilled through the joists and the machine anchored through the joists to a steel plate under the joists. This could cause some wild movements of cabinets when the spin started. I remember a great crash when a crock filled with detergent was sent crashing to the floor at a neighbor's.
 
I remember lots of people having these Bendix front loaders in the 50’s and early 60’s. Our babysitter Mrs. Krenzer and our neighbors the Mallough’s both had Model S machines.

Mrs. Krenzer had hers on her back porch. Behind her house there were train tracks that regular freight trains passed by on and they used to shake the back porch. Once while I was watching the Bendix washing a train shook the house so violently that the door of the Bendix popped open and sudsy water spilled out onto the floor.

Mrs. Krenzer used Cheer and she wasn’t as fastidious as the German War Bride in reply #3 and there was always a thick crust of blue Cheer all around the soap door. This washing machine and my Aunt Imogene’s ‘53 Westy slant front were what started my lifelong interest in washing machines. I simply loved watching the clothes tumbling through the sudsy water and then the bang of the solenoids when the machine would advance to the spin cycle. As I’ve said many times they were almost as good as TV was then,

Eddie
 
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