Washing machine: busted bearings?

Posted by: Roger

Washing machine: busted bearings? - 27/12/2010 13:29

My front-loading washing machine has started making a nasty noise during the spin cycle. I suspect that SWMBO has overloaded it and that the bearings are now shot.

How do I confirm this? Or should I just bite the bullet and call out the repairman?
Posted by: larry818

Re: Washing machine: busted bearings? - 27/12/2010 15:21

The bearings on these things tend to be oversized, I doubt overloading it would damage them. Unless you're washing steel.

How about recording the sound?
Posted by: K447

Re: Washing machine: busted bearings? - 30/12/2010 03:59

Originally Posted By: Roger
My front-loading washing machine has started making a nasty noise during the spin cycle...
Brand? Model? Year/age?
Posted by: Roger

Re: Washing machine: busted bearings? - 30/12/2010 06:24

Originally Posted By: K447
Brand? Model? Year/age?


Hoover HNL7146. About 5 years old.
Posted by: mlord

Re: Washing machine: busted bearings? - 30/12/2010 11:29

Originally Posted By: Roger
My front-loading washing machine has started making a nasty noise during the spin cycle. I suspect that SWMBO has overloaded it and that the bearings are now shot.

How cool/warm is the location where the washing machine is used?

A little advertised fact about Samsung (not your brand, but..) front-loaders is that they will not operate below about 60 degrees F. Some models even detect the ambient temperature and refuse to run, or spin more slowly than normal.

The reason being, they use a special bearing lubricant that doesn't work at cooler temperatures.

This is why we ended up getting a modern top-loader rather than a front-loader here last spring -- our laundry area is in a mostly unheated basement. The modern (Maytag) top-loader spins almost as quickly as a front-loader, but the bearings are not stressed as much by the top-loader design.

Overall, it's a surprisingly efficient machine, not at all like the older top-loader it replaced.

Cheers
Posted by: graynada

Re: Washing machine: busted bearings? - 02/01/2011 17:19

I have had bearings go on a Hotpoint front loader. The noise was like a very metallic grinding. When replacing them the cause of the failure was obvious, the seal on the shaft had failed allowing water into the bearing leading to the inevitable.
Posted by: Phoenix42

Re: Washing machine: busted bearings? - 02/01/2011 18:46

Could the underwire from one of SWMBO bras be caught on the outside of the drum? Not that I know anything about your wife's bras, or anything....
Posted by: Roger

Re: Washing machine: busted bearings? - 22/01/2011 13:45

Originally Posted By: Roger
I suspect that SWMBO has overloaded it and that the bearings are now shot.


It wasn't the bearings. In the end, we called out a repair guy. It turns out to have been the concrete block. It was no longer secured properly. Fixed.

He also pointed out that, had it been the bearings, and even though new bearing sets only cost about £5-10, the work involved (and labour cost) to replace them is prohibitive, and a new washing machine is about the only answer.
Posted by: mlord

Re: Washing machine: busted bearings? - 22/01/2011 14:07

Gotta love those blocks.. I dismantled our old top-loader to make it easier to cart out from the basement, and that concrete block was one of the heavier pieces.

The cast-iron (or steel?) tub was the heaviest, though. I think it weighed more than the entire new washing machine does.

Cheers