LizzieMaine
Bartender
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- Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
I've posted this in another thread before, but it's worth another look here as the project that I'm perhaps proudest of -- my washing machine.
It's a 1934 model Easy, built in Syracuse, N. Y., and given to me somewhere in the late eighties by a friend who'd found it in his cellar. All the mechanicals needed was a bit of oil and fresh grease and it continues to run without problems to this day. But after ten years or so, the rubber on the lower roller started cracking off. Wringer rolls are not interchangeable, and while Maytag and Speed Queen made wringer machines into the 1990s, their roll shafts are incompatible with the Easy, and no replacement could be found. I ended up retiring the machine for a while until I could come up with a solution, and finally hit upon the idea of reinforcing the remaining rubber with waterproof silicone compound and then sheathing the roller surface with a section of bicycle innertube, held in place by "Tommy Tape," a self-sealing rubber tape used by plumbers and electricians.
I have to replace the tape every couple of years, but in general this repair has held up quite nicely. I'm still looking for an Easy drive roller with a t-headed shaft, but until I find one, this make-do-and-mend is still making do.
It's a 1934 model Easy, built in Syracuse, N. Y., and given to me somewhere in the late eighties by a friend who'd found it in his cellar. All the mechanicals needed was a bit of oil and fresh grease and it continues to run without problems to this day. But after ten years or so, the rubber on the lower roller started cracking off. Wringer rolls are not interchangeable, and while Maytag and Speed Queen made wringer machines into the 1990s, their roll shafts are incompatible with the Easy, and no replacement could be found. I ended up retiring the machine for a while until I could come up with a solution, and finally hit upon the idea of reinforcing the remaining rubber with waterproof silicone compound and then sheathing the roller surface with a section of bicycle innertube, held in place by "Tommy Tape," a self-sealing rubber tape used by plumbers and electricians.
I have to replace the tape every couple of years, but in general this repair has held up quite nicely. I'm still looking for an Easy drive roller with a t-headed shaft, but until I find one, this make-do-and-mend is still making do.