Thread Number: 43063
1957 PINK Lady Kenmore Dryer PGH Craigslist |
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Post# 633519   10/22/2012 at 19:38 (4,174 days old) by moparwash (Pittsburgh,PA )   |   | |
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Post# 633524 , Reply# 1   10/22/2012 at 19:40 (4,174 days old) by appnut (TX)   |   | |
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Post# 633753 , Reply# 2   10/23/2012 at 16:31 (4,173 days old) by Kenmoreguy64 (Charlotte, NC)   |   | |
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Interesting machine!
Seller says "try to find one of these anywhere". The seller is surely correct, but I think there are three of these in pink in the club (Justin, Robert and Dick_S). Are there others? Big question - were all the WP/KM dryers of this time equipped with porcelain drums? I just noticed that. Seems like something that would have been nice to keep making... Gordon |
Post# 633777 , Reply# 3   10/23/2012 at 17:57 (4,173 days old) by goatfarmer (South Bend, home of Champions)   |   | |
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Post# 633790 , Reply# 4   10/23/2012 at 18:41 (4,173 days old) by combo52 (50 Year Repair Tech Beltsville,Md)   |   | |
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We have this dryer in white at the warehouse, it is a neat dryer not only did it have a porcelain drum but the entire cabinet was finished in porcelain. Gordon I think that the porcelain drums were a Sears exclusive, as far as I can tell only the 1957-8-9-1960 LKMs ever got them and even though the porcelain drums are a better finish I do feel that there is not enough benefit to justify the huge amount of energy that making them takes. I feel the same way about SS dryer drums today, not only are they a waste of expensive materials but they are often so thin that they [ as in the case of Samsung dryers ] that they actually split in use are are therefore not nearly as durable as a plain power coated steel drum. |
Post# 633811 , Reply# 5   10/23/2012 at 20:03 (4,173 days old) by Kenmoreguy64 (Charlotte, NC)   |   | |
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John,
I thought you had one too, but I just couldn't place it in pink. I never noticed the porcelain drum before today, and while I always liked them in GE dryers, I have wondered how necessary they were. Besides energy usage, porcelanizing is very non-environmental as well. My father sold acid to WP in the 1960s and 1970s (I think it was HCL) when we lived in Michigan. He visited the St. Joe plant many times, but I only learned this fairly recently. They bought rail tanker car loads of it to etch the metal of baskets, tops, lids and other parts before the glaze was applied. The finish in my 1977 KM dryer is 50% gone without any effect on its performance, and my Mom's isn't far behind. Hers has a drum light which shows off the wear, but there seems to be no issue otherwise. Had all those 29" WP/KM dryers been porcelanized, there would have been a lot more industrial acid waste to dispose of! Gordon |
Post# 633812 , Reply# 6   10/23/2012 at 20:10 (4,173 days old) by Kenmoreguy64 (Charlotte, NC)   |   | |
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Gotta love using something for its intended purpose! This is the '77 when it received a new (used) motor this past February. The bearings in the old one had turned their last mile and it locked up. This dryer had a GE motor, I was expecting an Emerson. This picture is pre-vacuuming...It was last cleaned internally in 2007.
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