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.
Either replace the washer on the hot side in the faucet (or buy a new washerless faucet), replace the "angle-stop" with a "quarter-turn" style, or install a "water hammer arrestor". (There is a real convenient style on the market, it fits between the incoming nut at the angle stop and the thread on the body of the stop itself).
Hot water is typically on the left side of the faucet.
The left side of a faucet typically produces hot water.
The left side of the faucet typically dispenses hot water.
The left side of the faucet is typically associated with hot water, while the right side is associated with cold water.
The hot water faucet is typically located on the left side of the sink.
In most faucets, the hot water is on the left side.
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.
The cold water faucet in the kitchen is typically located on the right side of the sink.
If there is a shut off valve under the sink, shut it off and take the line off going to the faucet. Turn the valve on slightly to see if there is water going through it. If there is, the problem has to be in the faucet. Either the washer in the hot water side has come off and is plugging the faucet, or if it is a single handle faucet, the cup is bad. Either one is easy enough to fix. Message me back if you need help fixing it.
Hot water typically goes on the left side when you turn on a faucet.
The hot side of a faucet is connected to the hot water supply, which is heated, while the cold side is connected to the cold water supply. The hot side releases water at a higher temperature, while the cold side releases water at a lower temperature.