Westinghouse Continental 500 Dishwasher Part II

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reactor

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Apr 2, 2019
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486
Location
Oak Ridge, Tennessee--
For those who missed my previous post in Shopper's Square, a 1975 Westinghouse dishwasher was listed for sale. This was the last year Westinghouse produced appliance before selling their appliance division to White Consolidated Industries in December, 1975.

The dishwasher did not sell, so the seller, Lori, kindly gave it to me. She indicated it "smoked" when she turned it on and turned it off immediately to prevent further damage.

The dishwasher shows no rust whatsoever, on neither the tub nor the racks. (By the way, he pictures turned out with a yellowish cast, in the close up of the rack. that is not their actual color, which is white.)
The design was a new one for Westinghouse, sporting a horizontal motor with pump and fan in a combo unit.

The fan provides forced air to dry the dishes, meaning the main pump motor runs for the entire duration of the dry cycle. You can see the flat ventilation tube, in picture number 10, running from the motor unit to the side of the tub. It draws hot. moist air off the top of the tub through a vent on the inside.
In picture 3, you see the air exhaust from the drying fan, with a funky looking foam rubber boot, which is the orange oddly shaped object you see. It acts as a plenum and extends to the vent under the underside of lower access panel, to expel the moist air from the tub during the drying cycle.

In pictures 7 and 8, you can see the drain solenoid with the heat sink surrounding the coil. Another unusual feature is this coil is energized at all times, EXCEPT
during the drain component of the cycle.

As you can see, Westinghouse is using a tower wash system. The tower (photo 6) is installed in the middle of the tube/sleeve (photo 5) which is mounted on the center of the rack.

You can see the bottom of the tower has a rubber seal surrounded by little plastic protrusions. On the lower wash arm (no pictures, sorry) a little tiny white plastic tube, I call it a nub, with a beveled edge, rises up about and inch and a half. The nub is guided to the center hole in the seal by the protrusions, making a sealed delivery system of water from the lower wash arm to the tower's spray head (Westinghouse calls this spray head the "distributor.")

Notice, the tower has a threaded end where the sprayer/head is supposed to be. As it is, with the head missing, water would just shoot straight up without being distributed evenly to the upper rack.

Sadly, even if the dishwasher is repaired, I cannot use it without a distributor on the spray delivery tube.

Questions for everyone: Does anyone have a spare wash tube with spray head attached or the just head/distributor itself? I will gladly purchase it from you.

Secondly, the drain solenoid's plunger is in the out position, which would indicate that it is currently in the drain position, as it is un-energized. It is attached, by a spring, to the drain valve actuator (the actuator looks similar to GE's).
The problem, this valve will not rotate in the direction toward the solenoid. That means the solenoid cannot pull the actuator toward it, to stop the draining, when it is energized. Oddly, the plastic actuator will rotate easily in the other direction. This does not make any sense.

I may be looking at it wrongly but can see no way the plunger can make any movement on the actuator when it is pulled in. The plunger moves into the coil easily when I push it in with my finger, but only stretches the spring out that connects it to the plastic actuator. HELP!!

Thirdly, does anyone have the repair manual for the 1975 model (SU500) year? I will you pay for a copy of yours. Ephemera has a 1974 manual, but I threw away $13.00 downloading it, as it is for the vertical pump Westinghouse dishwashers. Evidently, Westinghouse had just gone to this design for the 1975 year.

Any help is appreciated!

Barry

[this post was last edited: 9/3/2023-18:58]

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A big thank you to SteveD!!

Many, many thanks to Steve who sent me copy of the repair manual! You are lifesaver, Steve!![this post was last edited: 9/3/2023-18:31]
 
door panel removed-a look inside

Removed outer door panel. No rust inside. Has a thermoelectric release for detergent cup and solenoid controlled rinse agent dispenser.

On the inside of the door panel is the schematic and timer diagram. This Westinghouse has only five water changes.. wash, rinse, wash, rinse, rinse. The first wash is the longer, at 18 minutes.

Will post more pictures when I remove the control panel and also when the pump is removed.

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Did they keep this design when they turned into White-Westinghouse?

Another thing to know from living in the area was that 1975 was about the time things started to go south for Westinghouse as a company and all the layoffs started, in many of the different products they had back then.
 
Did they keep this design when they turned into White-Westinghouse?

Another thing to know from living in the area was that 1975 was about the time things started to go south for Westinghouse as a company and all the layoffs started, in many of the different products they had back then.
 
white-westinghouse

In checking, as near as I can tell Bob, White Consolidated kept the same basic design, for the 1976 model year, but made a few changes. They modified the pump assembly somewhat and put wheels on the lower rack. The upper and lower rack design remained virtually identical, but they cosmetically changed the control panel a bit.
 
Westinghouse!

I am surprised they didnt have a light or as westy would call it a single wash cycle
was this considered to be the TOL - I think the sanitizer boosted up to 145 degrees in the main wash and final rinse.
 
SU 700

Hi Peter, this dishwasher was their middle model. The TOL was the SU 700. It had two additional buttons, one for "Gentle Wash" and one for "Single Wash," which, as you say, was their equivalent to a light wash. The SU700 also had a white porcelain tub as opposed to the blue porcelain of the SU400 and the SU500.
 
Great! Send me your address & I'll get it out to you next week (I'm going out of town tomorrow for the weekend).

I actually have the SC700 (portable version of the SU). When I got it everything worked, but it had a bad leak. Interestingly the leak would stop as the unit was running! I could not figure that out, but it ended up having two issues: the shaft seal was going/had gone and the drain valve stem had a leak. When I tried to repair the seal I discovered the motor shaft was rusted almost through; the fan was seized to the shaft and the set screw was frozen. I tried everything to get that fan off, but the motor shaft was so badly damaged that it new shaft seal would not stop the leaking.

When I started looking for a replacement motor & pump I landed on one from a much later series (once they were White-Westinghouse). Through use of a timed "off-delay" relay I was able to adapt it for use in this machine. I also had to change the wash arm & support from the original to a later style (shaped more like GE's). The bearing/locking ring of the original wash arm has two broken tabs; it will not lock onto the support. Also, I think my timer might be operating erratically; it doesn't follow the sequence (Esterline) chart exactly (minor differences, but they're there). In any case I was able to clean it up and had the cabinet powder coated in Racetrack Yellow! The machine works OK; loading is a kind of rigid, but mine has the adjustable upper rack which makes it able to take tall things in either rack. It's also very noisy! :)

I actually saw your post and was thinking of contacting the seller, but you beat me to it! No worries, I hope you can get it going.

Here are the "before" pics:

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While it may not be the best performing dishwasher it really turned out well! It's a very stylish machine. I love the moniker "Continental". So MCM! I'm working on a cutting board for the top.

The pics show the original wash arm & support; I had to change it because it kept popping off the support (even with the wash tower over it). I used a wash arm & support from the next series (just after they became part of WCI). I think it was model SC650 (?). It works ok, but I'd like to find the original support.

Also, the third pic in the "after" series shows the motor & pump I adapted. In order to keep the drain valve from opening it is tied to a relay which holds the switch open. When the timer calls for the drain solenoid to de-energize, the relay opens and completes the circuit to the drain valve. Since the pump action will keep the valve open, the delay off relay in series with the drain valve opens the circuit to the drain valve after about 5 seconds. This prevents the solenoid from overheating. It also keeps it off during the dry cycle.

I'm working on a way to get the motor to turn off during the dry cycle and incorporate a fan to pull air through utilizing the existing air duct; I haven't figured that out just yet!

Please keep us posted on how your repairs are going.
 
Many Thanks!

Thank you so much, Alan!! I'll send you a message on this site. Your Continental looks beautiful! You have put much time and effort into it, and it shows.
 

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