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Rebuild P-motor yourself? No problem!
Well, it is compared to fixing home appliances!!
When I should be happily bolting the Blue Bomber's 3.0 back together, I am instead trying to fix our clothes dryer. It is shakin' the house so bad, I thought it might fall into the basement! This model is a G.E., and while I have a lot of respect for the quality of their industrial products, this dryer is typical of household appliances.... *crap*, put together with sheet metal screws, and wired worse than a junior high science project. Will I get it fixed? Maybe by mid-nite. Will there be any parts to fix it? Probably not. It's only 10 years old; my SC is almost 22 and I can get *everything* for it. Sheesh!!! Gotta go...I can hear our cats are scattering 250 efin sheet metal screws all over the floor! :mad: |
I hear you man. Rebuilt our GE gas dryer after only 3 years of use; drum bearings had failed due to bad design. New parts had revised better design but cost over a $100. Changed belt and some other bearings while I was in there. Yes, the design is made for minimum initial cost not ease of repair. A good source of parts is www.repairclinic.com in Michigan; you can wait weeks getting them through local sources. A few weeks ago the transmission in our 4 year old GE washer (top of the line) began to fail. Parts and tools required will be around $250; I said no way was it worth it. Bought the wife a Maytag Neptune last weekend. No more GE junk for us. I'd rather work on Porsches. Jim
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Re: Rebuild P-motor yourself? No problem!
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Hope your home-maker engineer project goes as planned, Doug. |
Easy on the GE bashing. :D
Actually, I work for GE.....Medical Systems. We have Amana washer/dryer and GE kitchen appliances. They do well with 'fridges and stoves but I've never heard good things about their laundry room stuff. Besides, I get KILLER deals on GE crap. That way I can but some P-car crap.....er, stuff. |
"How to Rebuild and Modify Your GE Washer" - Coming December 2004. It should be out by the time you get your Engine Rebuild book in the mail...
-Wayne |
you have to quit drying your pcar parts in the dryer. i hate nafda. or is that nafduh.
no offence to south of the boarder, but my two year old jenn air/amana fridge has had every electrical component replaced already. the neptune stuff is worth the investment. the guy that owns the local laundy mat upgraded and he says he saves enough in water and power to pay for them. |
Wayne, That's pretty funny. I snarfed my coffee.
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Any carbon fiber parts available for my Kenmore dryer? Figure it could boost the efficiency and dry the clothes in half the time. Maybe it needs a turbo?
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Have a GE dishwasher. The bushings in the motor died after 4 years. While I was trying to figure out what was wrong with it I noticed two houses down from me had thrown out their dish washer which was the same make and model as mine. I pulled parts off of it to fix mine.
I fully expect to be replacing my dishwasher in the next year. |
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Who wants to wear dry clothes?! I mean...I'm not alone on this one am I...?!:eek:
:D Ryan |
I too used to work for the General. 18 years of brainwashing finally wore off, 3 year sabatical, now working for a GE competitor (Power Generation not Appliances). I'm sure someone did a six sigma project on this design.
Oh by the way, Whirlpool makes a great washer/dryer. Duet Series. ;) |
On a more positive note, when my GE refrigerator's plastic shelving brackets cracked, (too many beers on one shelf...) I was able to locate my frig on their WEBSITE, find exploded drawings, ORDER the parts with a massacard, and have the CORRECT PARTS shipped to my hacienda in 3 days!!!
I was impressed...:cool: PS: I am not now, and have not ever been employed by the General, honest to gosh.. |
We should all wake up and do what the Japanese and Europeans do....sell All-in-One Washer/Dryer units.
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Selling appliances gets me through college and feeds my p-car. |
my refrigerator works great, and its a General MOTORS (Fridgidare)
from the 50s/60s, came with the house. |
GE was good laundry stuff 30-40 years ago. Not now, though.
We replaced a very old range a few years ago because certain parts (two stovetop burners, for example) did not work. We immediately noticed that the new one was more cheaply made, thnner sheet metal, and had no character like the old one. Lately, I was thinking that it might have been better to re-fit the thing with modern parts. I think this could be a good business. Classic sytling, higher quality, with modern circuits. |
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"How to Rebuild and Modify Your GE Washer" - Coming December 2004. It should be out by the time you get your Engine Rebuild book in the mail...
-Wayne Here's a start Steve |
naahh,
you gotta let the Maytag Repairman write the book. Remember, he has nothing else to do! |
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.....And BTW, Don Davis, no GE bashing here (except for their home appliances). General Electric make some of the best H.V. switchgear on the market. I specify it for many jobs I do for utility and commercial customers. |
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