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Are you speaking of the drum wobbling or the whole machine? If the drum, when the drum is spinning or when off and stopped? If when the drum is spinning, it wobbles somewhat especially if unbalanced (laundry only on one side). If the whole machine, there are leveling feet on the botton of the washing machine. The height adjustment is made by turning each foot which are threaded into the base frame. Many floors are sloped, this is why the machine has to be leveled first.
Yes, it can also cross through a two handled faucet. Both the hot and cold sides of the faucet must be on and the flow of water must be stopped or greatly reduced on the outlet side of the faucet. This can occur when a hose with a spray nozzle is attached to a laundry tub faucet with the faucet on and the spray nozzle off, or when a shower faucet is on but the shower spray head is off. When another cold water outlet in the system is turned on then the pressure on the cold side of the laundry tub or shower faucet in question could be lowered below the pressure on the hot side and hot water can flow into the cold water side. There are faucets which have integral check valves which prevent this from occurring. WWW.WOODBRIDGEPLUMBING.COM
it's 44 degrees on the cold side
One side of it is REALLY REALLY REALLY REALLY cold, and the other side is REALLY REALLY REALLY REALLY hot.
Matt incorrectly noted: "Condensation occurs when air is cooled. If there was an object with both a hot and a cold side, condensation would form on the cold side."IT'S THE HOT SIDE.When dealing with water trapped in air (i.e. humidity), the hot air will lose it's moisture at a certain temperature (dew point). Since the water molecules are trapped in the hot air, water will condense (or assimilate) on the hot side of the material. To test this, take a hot baked potato placed it in an air-tight container and put it into the fridge. The magic will happen on the inside (hot side) of the container with the hot air from the potato opposed to the outside (cold side) of the container. For this reason, in building construction, the vapor barrier on a wall is always placed on the hot side of a material.
The Washing machine door assembles on the right side of a front load washer.
Centrifugal force in a washing machine occurs during the spin cycle. The spinning motion of the washer makes the clothes cling to the side of the washer drum, while the water is being sucked out by centrifugal force.
To get a side by side review of washing machine go to epinions.com or consumerreports.org. For even more reviews got to lowes.com, sears.com, or homedepot.com and look at the reviews from customers who recently purchase the products.
You might not have enough water pressure. there is a screan in the hot and cold sides of the hoses in the back of the washing machine.unhook the hose on the washer side and pull the screan out and clean or replace. make sure you shut the water off first
The supply to the washer, the hot is supposed to be on the left side. On the machine, most have an H or a C beside the connection. Nothing will happen if they are reversed. Turn the washer on set on Cold and if Hot comes out, reverse them.
If your washing machine tub is off center the washer may make a loud thumping sound. This just means the clothes need to be re-distributed because it is too heavy on one side.
Install on cold water line.
It is not okay to turn it on its side. If the washer has been used already, there is still excess water inside it - either somewhere close to the lint screen, the pump or the water hose. If you turn it on its side, the water can leak to the motor and this might damage the machine. Always keep it in an upright position.
Just put the heavier clothes (jeans, etc.) on each side equally. There's no way really to be 100% right as once the machine starts and fills with water, it agitates the clothes any way. If it does unbalance then just put some clothes on the opposite side to even it out.
I have noticed this too - annoying isn't it?. I wondered if it was because the seams of the shirts create some resistance against the water so the outside of the garment moves faster and the shirt turns in-side-out - just a wild guess though.
your washing machine makes noises because all the clothes and other materials are not balanced evenly--one side is heavier than the other--causing the drum to hit the sides of the washer wall.
It depends on the valve, who makes it and what model is it? you have a cross connection in the water system ( I don't think it is the value, most of the time it is on your washing machine hot and cold water valve. Go to a faucet away from the machine and turn on the water. Then go listen at the machine you should hear water going through the hot and cold water valve of the machine, it is where your water hoses connect.) hope this helps If it is a new house and has always done it. It might be that they connected the hot and cold water together somewhere in the wall. You would need a plumber to find it. It is not easy to find though. Would most likely be having to open up a lot of holes in wall to find. Sometimes you will find it by trying fixtures one at a time. The one that gets hotter quicker is where it was tied in with the cold. Open up wall there. Then turn on water at the fixture and feel the pipes and the one that is hotest that is tied to cold would be the one you would have to change. You would have to take pipes apart and connect it back to the hot side. So you would be taking hot and cold apart so i would get plumber to do this. At least if you could find out where they were connected would save you a lot of money.