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hr(bob) [email protected] hr(bob) hofmann@att.net is offline
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Default Non-reversing washing machine motor

On Feb 27, 8:33*pm, "Don Young" wrote:
"hr(bob) " wrote in message

...
On Feb 27, 1:18 pm, Joe wrote:





On Feb 27, 8:41 am, "hr(bob) "
wrote:


My 3-year old Admiral washing machine (made by Maytag)sometimes fails
to drain and spin at the end of the rinse cycle. It has been doing
this about 10% of the time for the last year.


If I rotate the timer back to the final spin position, it always works
ok. Today I happened to be in the laundry and see the machine in the
middle of what should have been the rinse drain/spin cycle and the
machine was still agitating. I opened the lid and then reclosed it,
and the machine immediately went into the drain/spin cycle.


As far as I know, the motor direction determines if it agitates or
pumps out and spins. I am assuming that there is a relay somewhere
that failed to operate/release and put the motor into the correct
direction to drain and spin. I know there is an appliance repair
group, but can't seem to come up with it.


Help!


H. R.(Bob) Hofmann


Repairclinic.com is your friend. HTH


Joe- Hide quoted text -


- Show quoted text -


Thanx. *It did the same no-reversing thing while I was watching it
tonight, found a schematic inside the top rear plate, will study the
wiring to see if it is the timer, as that is where the reversal of the
motor is accomplished. If so, a big hammer lightly applied to the
timer may be the next step.
It seems possible to me that the problem is that the lid switch is not
always actuating properly. Most washers will not go into a spin cycle with
the lid up, but they will agitate. Lid switches are a fairly common problem
area.

Don Young- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


Don:

You are right, it will fill and agitate with the cover open. The
thing is, it always spins out the first/wash portion of the cycle, it
is only the 2nd spin, after the rinse cycle, that does not work
properly. and no one has touched the lid or the lid switch during that
time..

I just finished looking at the wiring diagram, and pretty well decided
that it probably is a sticking contact inside the timer, so I will run
another load of wash tomorrow, and when it gets to the point where the
rinse cycle spin should be starting and if it doesn't, that's when the
hammer will be applied gently to the timer. If that works, I'll check
to be sure my local parts place has a replacement timer, and then
proceed to take the timer apart to see if anything is repairable. I
like to tinker so it is a good excuse to have some fun for less than
$75.00 - the cost of a new timer.

Bob Hofmann