DIYNewbie

Forum Replies Created

Viewing 8 posts - 1 through 8 (of 8 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • in reply to: Washing machine pipes standard fitting? #455060
    DIYNewbie
    Participant

    Re: Washing machine pipes standard fitting?

    We are buying a second hand machine.

    in reply to: Squeaking sound with Indesit WG924 #224149
    DIYNewbie
    Participant

    Re: Squeaking sound with Indesit WG924

    Just an 11 year followup. The machine lasted over a decade after this first fix. I think we had the same repairperson replace the seal at a later date.

    in reply to: Door seals on washing machines #227357
    DIYNewbie
    Participant

    Re: Door seals on washing machines

    clivejameson wrote:You’d prolly know if the drum was out of position either by it running eccentrically due to it being bent, or by excessive noise from drum bearing failure.

    Far more likely is the seal itself is slightly mis-shapen…it does happen occasionally when they’ve been stored incorrectly and ‘remember’ the wrong shape they’ve been forced into whilst stored (often at the wholesaler so don’t automatically blame the engineer). Sometimes it’s just the seal hasn’t been located precisely on the tub or it’s clamp band isn’t quite in position.

    Get the guy back….if he’s only just replaced the seal he should sort it free of charge even if another seal is required…if you found him on here then he definitely will 😉

    He’s agreed to replace the seal for the price of the seal alone. That sounds fair to me as the amount I would have paid would be the same as if he’d changed the seal in the first place. He offered this solution when I asked him about the first repair not working. I’ve emailed to accept that offer. He didn’t replace the seal the first time.

    I did try to find a repairperson on here, but the only two companies that came up in the search were a fair distance away.

    in reply to: Door seals on washing machines #227355
    DIYNewbie
    Participant

    Re: Door seals on washing machines

    Thank you. I have a problem with a door seal that is rubbing. We had the machine repaired for a “squeak” once, but the squeak returned immediately. The repairman (by email) says that the fault was due to the door seal being out of place, and we could push it back. He said in his email that otherwise he would replace the door seal for the cost of the part alone, which sounds fair since we have paid him for labour once without the fault being fixed.

    Looking at the door seal all the way around the drum, it seems to be very close to the drum lip at the bottom, where it is rubbing. But at the top the position of the lip on the door seal appears to be very different, and it’s well back from the lip on the drum. Or another way to put it is that the drum is not centered in the door seal. The repairman described replacement of the seal as the “worst case” scenario, but I’m wondering if the drum, rather than the seal, could be in the wrong place. Particularly since the repairman said that the seal appeared to be in good condition.

    Is going for a seal replacement very likely to solve the problem properly? Or could we end up back in the same situation?

    in reply to: Squeaking sound with Indesit WG924 #224148
    DIYNewbie
    Participant

    Re: Squeaking sound with Indesit WG924

    As a followup to this thread … I eventually got around to booking a local repairperson. He fixed it easily. While he initially thought the sound indicated a bearing problem, it turned out to be that the seal had moved, possibly having being moved when my partner was removing clothes, and was rubbing. It wasn’t just a slight move, “it wasn’t on properly”. Easily fixed. He charged £35.

    While I didn’t manage to fix the problem this time, I think that having had a poke around, I’ll be more prepared for “next time”. If it’s a simple problem. Again for future reference, would it have been possible for a newbie to fix an improperly fitted seal?

    in reply to: Squeaking sound with Indesit WG924 #224146
    DIYNewbie
    Participant

    Re: Squeaking sound with Indesit WG924

    iadom wrote:To remove the front panel you will need a hacksaw or oxyacetylene torch. 😆 It is a one piece cabinet. The lifters or baffles Martin refers to are the three plastic ribs inside the drum that ‘lift’ the clothes during wash.

    Ah, I think I see the problem. There are no separate, removable, plastic baffles inside the drum. The inner drum is a one piece thing, with the baffles being part of the drum.

    There is a picture taken from the doorway of the washer below.

    The hose he refers to is the large black hose from the drain pump. you need to remove it at the outer drum end.

    There is a large black hose from the drain pump to the bottom of the drum. But it’s not just a simple black rubber hose. It is a molded rubber fitting with a complicated looking attachment. I’m starting to think that even if it is just a sock back there, getting it out may be beyond me.

    If I pull the drum towards me (in front of the washing machine), and turn the drum, it doesn’t squeak. I wonder if any missing sock is at the back of the drum wrapped around the spindle at the back of the machine.

    Here’s the drum:

    Here’s the drainage pipe. Looks tricky to remove.

    in reply to: Squeaking sound with Indesit WG924 #224144
    DIYNewbie
    Participant

    Re: Squeaking sound with Indesit WG924

    Thanks for the info. We found it very difficult to look through the holes, but had a good look around, and couldn’t see anything.

    I’m not sure what the drum riser/baffles are. We haven’t removed the front door seal, we don’t know how to do so, but we noticed the screw at the top of the seal and the clip going all the way around the seal keeping it firmly attached to the drum.

    I’m guessing that to see the riser/baffles, and to have a chance of removing the sock, or whatever, we’d need to remove the front of the washing machine. Is this difficult? I notice two screws on the top, and two screws inside the soap dispenser. I presume the door seal would have to be removed from the drum too, which I note in other postings is fiddly.

    Could you please be a bit more specific as to what you mean by the problem being solveable by removing the bottom hose? I notice a the outlet pipe attaching to what I presume is a pump. That looks tricky to remove. Though perhaps because I haven’t removed the front panel yet.

    in reply to: Squeaking sound with Indesit WG924 #224142
    DIYNewbie
    Participant

    Re: Squeaking sound with Indesit WG924

    Martin wrote:

    DIYNewbie wrote:
    The squeak occurs when the drum is rotated in either direction.

    The drum should spin quiet freely either way when empty. The drive belt may be the cause and worth checking to see if the noise remains with the belt taken off? There may be the odd sock stuck between inner and outer drum?

    Main bearing water seals can squeak a bit if not lubricated on installation but don’t usually develop the noise after years of use. Bearings do get noisy though once the water seal gets damaged and worn and rusty bearings will rumble and squeak that’s for sure!

    Thank you. I removed the belt. The drum rotated quite easily in either direction with the belt off, but the noise was still there. Louder if anything. I don’t necessarily know how freely it should turn. I couldn’t spin it and watch it spin. But it was very easy to move by hand.

    Could you please tell me how I should check if I have rusty bearings? I haven’t dismantled the machine apart from removing outer casings. I have looked over what I can see, and I cannot see any signs of water leakage or spillage inside the machine nor where it was standing.

    As for a sock being stuck between the inner and outer drum, could you please advise what I should do? I’ve looked for old threads, and the answer seems machine-dependent. E.g.

    http://www.ukwhitegoods.co.uk/modules.p … oving+sock (bra wire in Bosch)

    Here’s a thread where you (Martin) say that it’s easy to remove a sock, if you remove one of the “drum lifters”. I don’t know what a drum lifter is. I’ll search more online.

    http://www.ukwhitegoods.co.uk/modules.p … light=sock

    Would it help if I made a recording of the sound and posted it?

    Any comments or advice would be greatly appreciated.

Viewing 8 posts - 1 through 8 (of 8 total)