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[email protected] November 12th 05 11:04 PM

Washing Machine Timer Dial Out of Sequence
 
We have a two setting (regular and Perma Press) radial dial control
Maytag top load Model A206 washing machine. The timer wore out after
25 years (clock motor would not engage control unit). We replaced the
timer with a new OEM timer. The washing machine control now advances
through the wash cycle, but is not synchronized with the visual timer
settings (i.e. start, agitate, spin, rinse, etc) on the dial. The dial
itself has a fixed position bayonet mount so there is no room for
adjustment. Is there a way to reset the control dial to the correct
start point? Thank you for your time and insight.

K. Robert


Appliance Repair Aid November 13th 05 02:16 PM

Washing Machine Timer Dial Out of Sequence
 
Hi,

Any chance the wrong timer mounting holes where used? This can make the
dial approx 1/4-3/8 of an inch off.

jeff.
Appliance Repair Aid
http://www.applianceaid.com/


[email protected] November 13th 05 07:46 PM

Washing Machine Timer Dial Out of Sequence
 
Thank you. No, there is only one set of two mounting holes and the
Regular Wash dial setting is off by one-fourth of the dial's
circumference. The rinse cycle terminates in the second half of the
spin dry cycle and the spin (damp) dry cycle overlaps and terminates in
the fourth minute of the 8 minute Permanent Press wash/agitate cycle.
The timer is the correct part number and all electric stubs have
numbers which match the original OEM.

K. Robert


Ed November 13th 05 08:33 PM

Washing Machine Timer Dial Out of Sequence
 
Was your new timer part #204454







wrote in message
oups.com...
Thank you. No, there is only one set of two mounting holes and the
Regular Wash dial setting is off by one-fourth of the dial's
circumference. The rinse cycle terminates in the second half of the
spin dry cycle and the spin (damp) dry cycle overlaps and terminates in
the fourth minute of the 8 minute Permanent Press wash/agitate cycle.
The timer is the correct part number and all electric stubs have
numbers which match the original OEM.

K. Robert




Appliance Repair Aid November 13th 05 09:20 PM

Washing Machine Timer Dial Out of Sequence
 

wrote:
Thank you. No, there is only one set of two mounting holes and the
Regular Wash dial setting is off by one-fourth of the dial's
circumference. The rinse cycle terminates in the second half of the
spin dry cycle and the spin (damp) dry cycle overlaps and terminates in
the fourth minute of the 8 minute Permanent Press wash/agitate cycle.
The timer is the correct part number and all electric stubs have
numbers which match the original OEM.

K. Robert


Hi,

No, there is only one set of two mounting holes


Any change the timer is just turned around 180º?

The timer is the correct part number and all electric stubs have
numbers which match the original OEM


Part# on the old and new where the same?

jeff.
Appliance Repair Aid
http://www.applianceaid.com/


[email protected] November 15th 05 06:00 AM

Washing Machine Timer Dial Out of Sequence
 
Yes. The old part was 204454 and the new part is the same number. Two
or three tabs have been moved from the back to the front of the timer,
but the stub numbers match. Timer lines up motor on left the same as
original and all stubs line up north and south as original.

K. Robert


Appliance Repair Aid November 15th 05 12:56 PM

Washing Machine Timer Dial Out of Sequence
 

wrote:
Yes. The old part was 204454 and the new part is the same number. Two
or three tabs have been moved from the back to the front of the timer,
but the stub numbers match. Timer lines up motor on left the same as
original and all stubs line up north and south as original.

K. Robert


Leaves us with:
- wrong dial was used at one point
- timer is bad

Maybe the old timer can be rebuilt instead of installing a new
timer?
http://www.applianceaid.com/timer_repairs.html

jeff.
Appliance Repair Aid
http://www.applianceaid.com/



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