| Thread Number: 9644 Antique Wascomat-In New York |
Post# 178408-12/26/2006-22:17 ||| exploder3211 (Back in Montreat NC) |
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Heres a Blue top Wascomat.. Very old (i think).. CLICK HERE TO GO TO exploder3211's LINK |
Post# 178422-12/27/2006-00:02 ||| gansky1 (Omaha, NE) |
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Jon, you NEED these! ![]() |
Post# 178532-12/27/2006-14:04 ||| Toggleswitch (NYC & Long Island, NY) |
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OMG OMG OMG
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Post# 178538-12/27/2006-14:58 ||| seeitrun2006 (Hoschton GA) |
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Taking home wet clothes
When my mom's Hotpoint would ever so often need service we did exactly that. Took the clothes to the laundromat to wash. When finished we took them home wet and either dried in the dryer (after1968) or hung them outside on the line. Unless of course it was raining.
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Post# 178581-12/27/2006-18:40 ||| sudsman (Fort Worth Texas) |
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OMG
Those are the old "Mae West" Style and were fantastic machines. There are still a lot of them here in Ft Worth. |
Post# 178768-12/28/2006-11:16 ||| PeterH770 (Atlanta, GA) |
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I believe you can still get parts for these guys from Wascomat. |
Post# 178887-12/28/2006-19:44 ||| alr2903 (new orleans) |
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Sudsman
were these the ones that had the plastic strips that were program cards? labeled blankets, sheets towels, drapes, i realize the ones in the pic are coin ops, but hotels had the ones if IIRC, that you pushed the the plastic strip/cycle card or whatever it was called into a slot. the strip moved out as the cycle advanced, they were all labeled with metal tags that described the wash load? LOL, after school job one year, I had forgotten all about them, would of been around 1975 or 76. Im sure it had been in use for years before I first saw it. alr2903 |
Post# 178908-12/28/2006-20:56 ||| Toggleswitch (NYC & Long Island, NY) |
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Those are the old "Mae West" Style and were fantastic machines.
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Post# 178977-12/29/2006-00:01 ||| oxydolfan1 (Bergenfield, New Jersey ) |
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AFAIK the laundromat in Fort Lee, NJ, still has 'em.
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Post# 179033-12/29/2006-04:03 ||| sudsman (Fort Worth Texas) |
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air2903
Yes, The non coin models had "program" card that could be cut for any formula you wanted . Most were grey but all colors were avail. We had Red for blood loads Blue for scrubs green for rewash white for general wash and yellow for blankets and black for patient gowns.. Can't beleive after 30 years I still remember all the codes// They were sold in 18, 25, 30 45 &75 lb machines. They did a fine wash job. |
Post# 179245-12/29/2006-19:21 ||| alr2903 (new orleans) |
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Thanks Sudsman
I thought that was the one and thanks for replying, alr2903 |
Post# 179286-12/29/2006-22:12 ||| nasadowsk (NY/NJ) |
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Hey, where's that LM in Fort Lee? It'd be neat to see one of these in action. What vintage are they anyway?
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Post# 179327-12/30/2006-07:38 ||| sudsman (Fort Worth Texas) |
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air2903
I think these are the machines you are refering to. They are the Wascomat F L models Fl stood for Full load . In the St Mary's hospital plant we had 10 of them .. They run 2 shifts a day for almost 15 years with only minor problems such as belts , gaskets.. ect things one would expect to replace.. They produced the cleanest work of any machine I have ever seen.. LOL |
Post# 179328-12/30/2006-07:39 ||| sudsman (Fort Worth Texas) |
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Wascomat Pic
Lets Try again ![]() |
Post# 179365-12/30/2006-11:24 ||| alr2903 (new orleans) |
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sudsman
Thats the one's i remember. Hey thanks for taking the time to locate and post that picture. At my job back then they had ONE, must of sounded like an airport in that hospital basement. thanks again. alr2903 |
Post# 179806-12/31/2006-22:23 ||| oxydolfan1 (Forest Hills, Uzbekhistan) |
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Phil, it's on Lemoine Avenue in the Coytesville section.
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