Hi,
I posted this question on another applianceblog (just happened to find it first) and got tons of readers but no answer, so I'm hoping I have better luck here! Doing a search here looks like there's some very knowledgeable technicians online so I'm hoping for the best!
I'm having transmission issues with my Kenmore Series 80 direct drive washer, which I understand is made by Whirlpool and probably the most common basic top-loading washer out there for the past few decades.
Problem started with the motor locked up and just humming one day. The transmission had been leaking for about 10 years, so I figured it finally seized up. I took apart the transmission with the help of this video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ieZ5y47TAMkand found nothing wrong. Pump is fine, coupler is fine, transmission guts appeared fine. Replaced the input seal on the transmission (the seal for the worm gear), filled it with 90w oil, replaced the coupler just because it was over 25 years old, put it all back together and ran the washer twice.
First time, after tub filled with water, I got no agitation on the first cycle although I could hear the motor turning. I figured something was wrong inside the transmission. Then it started pumping the water out, and it started agitation at the same time. I'm not sure if it's supposed to drain the water and agitate at the same time? I never paid that much attention the details of the cycle before. I'm also confused as to why agitation started working, I figured somehow something, maybe the piece of metal called the "shift actuator" in the manual, moved and the transmission started agitating correctly. I understand the motor has to spin counterclockwise for it to be in agitation mode.
Spin cycle worked correctly, although again for some reason it appeared to still be agitating as the spin cycle gained speed. (i.e., as the spin cycle started, it still appeared to be agitating, and as it gained speed agitation appeared to slow down and eventually stop after the tub was spinning at full speed.) Again, I'm not sure if this is how it's supposed to be?
So after the 1st spin cycle the tub filled with water again, and agitation and spin cycles repeated. This time it agitated, I didn't pay close attention to see if agitation/drain and agitation/spin occurred simultaneously again.
So I decided to run the washer again, to see if things got sorted out (i.e., transmission was going to work again), and this time, nothing happened except the motor and pump worked. I figured the transmission seized and I broke the coupler, and that's exactly what happened. I took the transmission apart again, and I found the plastic Agitator Follower broken. Well, I think it's the follower. I forget which plastic piece is the agitator cam and which is the agitator follower. There's a picture in this ******** ad:
http://www.********.com.au/itm/...t-WA285206-/310431822051It's the one on the right. It was smashed to pieces. The piece on the left (the one with the tab) is ok.
Here's a link to a diagram:
LSQ7533JQ1 | Automatic Appliance Parts : Appliance Model LookupThe piece smashed to bits is #14.
So my question - what went wrong? I never really found what caused the motor to seize up originally. Is something worn out of spec in the transmission? Every part looked ok. The only thing that looks like it has wear is the metal shift actuator (the metal plate of #26 in that diagram). On just one of the 2 tabs that are bent down, there's some wear in the metal. Could this wear be causing the transmission to bind up and break that plastic cam piece? Could there also be something wrong in my timer control mechanism if it's not supposed to be agitating and pumping water at the same time? Could something halfway binding up cause the transmission to spin the drum and still have some agitation going on at the same time? I'm not sure how it can spin and agitate at the same time as I know the motor must be spinning clockwise for the spin cycle.
Anyway, I'm hoping to not just replace the broken parts and have things bind up and ruin them again. Any help you or anyone can provide will be much appreciated!
Thanks,
Tom