Washers with timed fill

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I wish I had a picture of it, but the water inlet on the early 1960s timed-fill Highlander sort of squirts water onto a funnel, and from there it runs into the tub. It's nothing like the common water injector on the machines with a pressure switch. To clarify, this restriction happens after the solenoid valve.
 
They why don't I have anything like that on my 1972 A606? My A606 has the common "water injector" system, familiar to many of us. The A200 Highlander shoots a stream of restricted water through thin air into a funnel from which it falls into the tub. It will dig the Highlander out of the garage and peel it apart to take a picture this weekend if necessary, that is, unless anyone else has a picture they could share to save me the trouble.

Edit:

Yes, I found something to save me the trouble. See the picture in Post# 336949 in the thread linked below:

 
Fill Air-Gaps

Hi Ken, there is nothing special about the fill air-gap on your A200, ALL MTs used this system from 1956-1965, and they had lots of problems with minerals building up on the copper spout and causing water to miss the funnel and causing leaks.  Then MT came out with the other type of FAG that you mentioned and they still had lots of problems with leaks.

 

Funny that WP never had all these problems with the FAGs on their machines.

 

John L.
 
The flow restrictors are molded things shaped like thick washers that slide into channels in front of the hot and cold water inlets inside the valve body. Take one apart sometime and you will see what I am talking about. The fill inlet is way too late to be restricting the water flow; like grabbing the front of your pants when your bladder sphincter gives way.
 
Best timed fill

Is one with a pressure switch or float. If I was a manufacture would never rely solely on the timer for a variety of reasons. For the same reasons DW have a float despite most being timed fill.

In terms of flow restriction I'm more leaning toward John on this one, I would imagine the restrictor right at the edge of the water valve then the hose inlet. Reason being that warm would fill 2x as fast overflowing the washer.
 
There was no Whirlpool/Kenmore automatic washer made with a time fill system, only Maytag had it in a perforated tub model and that was very brief. Just because it said fill on the dial didn't mean it was a time fill machine. Whirlpool/Kenmore did that quite often on their frog-eye models.

Yes in order to control the flow of water properly it has to be done after the valve and before the fill flume. Turning the pressure down at the inlet hoses generally wont be consistent.

I received this question in an email today that I will answer here...

Do you know which washers (service manuals) in the Ephemera have a timed fill? Here is a good list, not all have service manuals in the library, but most do...

ABC-O-Matic
AMC
Apex
Blackstone before 1959
Corondao
Frigidaire before 1966
Hamilton before 1960
Hotpoint before 1964
Kelvinator before 1967
Launderall
Norge before 1960
Speed Queen until approx 1970
Wizard
 
Blackstone

Wasn't that the one where the timer acts mechanically on the valve, and if power goes off during the fill, the valve does not close? I recall there was a thread about that a while ago.
 
Well, thank you for the insights and info on Whirlpool and Kenmore washers that to my impression, were timed-fill, but turned out to have an entirely different water-filling system, as they were definitely not metered-fill (still no Water Level knob on those, and relegated to the bottom-most-level in their line-ups)...

-- Dave
 
Yes, the Blackstones would continue to fill if the electricity were unplugged. The water would continue to drain from the outer tub, since the drain hose was at the bottom of the cabinet, not requiring the pump to drain the water.

Actually, we commonly unplugged the machine when it was filling, so we could adjust the spray into the tub without having a spinning tub.

Never heard of a flooding disaster due to loss of electricity.
 

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