Tuesday, November 25, 2008
Washing machine "walks" during spin?
Is your washing machine walking, vibrating a lot, doing the shimmy-shammy?
If it's on a pedestal, you can check to make sure the pedestal feet are all touching the ground and locked in place, and you can't rock the unit back and forth with your hands. There should be connecting bolts locking the washer to the pedestal, make sure they are tightened.
If it's not on a pedestal, check the feet on the washer. Got all four? Good. Try to rock the unit with your hands. It should be level, no rocking. If not, you've got a problem with the feet. They should all be in contact with the floor and locked into place.
Next, make sure your shipping bolts were removed when the washer was installed. 99 percent of the time, the installer gets this right, but if not it can make the washer get crazy on you, make a lot of noise and movement, and quite possibly cause damage. Unfortunately, if the shipping bolts (all or some of four, usually, in a square shaped configuration - 1 near each of the four corners and around the drum) are still in the back, you should probably call a local servicer to remove them. It's up to you, but there might be more wrong with it if it's been run a while with shipping bolts in.
If it's not the bolts, it might be your floor.
Quick test, and you might want to be alone when you do this (because of the silly factor), stand next to the washer and bounce on your toes. You can get your arms involved if you really want to test your floor. If you hear glasses clanging together in the kitchen cabinets, it's definitely your floor. If your washer shakes a bit in response to your bouncing, your floor might have a bit more "flex" than some other floors. Don't feel bad, you're in a big group of normal-floor people with this kind of floor.
Try getting a solid single piece of 3/4 inch plywood that is big enough for both the washer and dryer to sit on (feet and all) with room for the hoses and cords. Get some help, and slide the board under the two appliances (or lift them out of the way, and put it on the floor). This should act as a stiffer surface for the washer, some of which spin at very, very high speeds nowadays to get the water out.
Yes, they spin much faster than your old washer did (that's why the dryer normally works a lot faster, less water in the clothes to dry out).
If you've not got shipping bolts and your floor is solid and secure, then it's time to call a servicer for your appliance.
We'd be happy to help if you're in central Alabama.
If it's on a pedestal, you can check to make sure the pedestal feet are all touching the ground and locked in place, and you can't rock the unit back and forth with your hands. There should be connecting bolts locking the washer to the pedestal, make sure they are tightened.
If it's not on a pedestal, check the feet on the washer. Got all four? Good. Try to rock the unit with your hands. It should be level, no rocking. If not, you've got a problem with the feet. They should all be in contact with the floor and locked into place.
Next, make sure your shipping bolts were removed when the washer was installed. 99 percent of the time, the installer gets this right, but if not it can make the washer get crazy on you, make a lot of noise and movement, and quite possibly cause damage. Unfortunately, if the shipping bolts (all or some of four, usually, in a square shaped configuration - 1 near each of the four corners and around the drum) are still in the back, you should probably call a local servicer to remove them. It's up to you, but there might be more wrong with it if it's been run a while with shipping bolts in.
If it's not the bolts, it might be your floor.
Quick test, and you might want to be alone when you do this (because of the silly factor), stand next to the washer and bounce on your toes. You can get your arms involved if you really want to test your floor. If you hear glasses clanging together in the kitchen cabinets, it's definitely your floor. If your washer shakes a bit in response to your bouncing, your floor might have a bit more "flex" than some other floors. Don't feel bad, you're in a big group of normal-floor people with this kind of floor.
Try getting a solid single piece of 3/4 inch plywood that is big enough for both the washer and dryer to sit on (feet and all) with room for the hoses and cords. Get some help, and slide the board under the two appliances (or lift them out of the way, and put it on the floor). This should act as a stiffer surface for the washer, some of which spin at very, very high speeds nowadays to get the water out.
Yes, they spin much faster than your old washer did (that's why the dryer normally works a lot faster, less water in the clothes to dry out).
If you've not got shipping bolts and your floor is solid and secure, then it's time to call a servicer for your appliance.
We'd be happy to help if you're in central Alabama.
Labels: Alabama, diy, servicer, washers, washing machines
