Front Load Washer Vibration :: One Way to Fix the Walk and Dance
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I know we are a little late to the high efficiency front load washer party. Fashionably late we will say. And yeah, we had heard we needed to be prepared for the wash and spin, walk and dance of these funky machines.
Maybe you read some of my rantings on grown men and instructions. But, here, it was I who end up missing step in an installation. It resulted in a wicked vibration in our new front load washer.
Always Read ALL the Instructions
The first time we fired up our new Frigidaire Affinity washer — despite logic, I let it in, a little bit of despair. You see, after that first wash, it, the washing machine, ended up about 12 inches from its original location. My thought — maybe these machines really do require a perfectly level floor? The machine, at the time of install, was perfectly level.
Editor’s Note: To read more about selecting this washer/dryer combo, please see the post – Washer and Dryer Shopping: Sizing Considerations.
Anyway, I fought those thoughts back, and I tried leveling it up again. My wife (Mrs. Moxie) ran another load. This time, the machine, at approximately 20 minutes in, shook and shaked and vibrated the floor making its way back toward the wall and then out again. Me, with the fear of the DIY gods in me, went straight for the pedestal’s feet. I did my best to get them extended tight to the floor.
My efforts did do a little something. And with me as spotter that load actually finished. But what the f*ck! I told my wife I was going to have to look into it. And this really wasn’t what she wanted to hear.
The Internet is Community of Learning (or something like that)
Fortunately, this phenomenon, possessed washing machines, is well documented. And it didn’t take me long to find the solution that most individuals have chosen, with marginal success: Anti-vibration pads or mats (like these).
But on further reading, and having already re-visited the installation instructions, I found this — a well written lick that I choose now to re-post here:
. . . Having sold our older home, where we used the same trusty Kenmore top-loading washer for 25 years, I bought a very cool Frigidaire Affinity W/D front-loader set . . . .
I did not read instructions, because men don’t need to read instructions. Big yellow tags on the back of the washer? That’s for simpletons. And women. Us men just plow ahead, even 50 miles and 14 turns after we know darn well we’re lost. No map…maps are for wusses.
Shipping bolts. Meh. Stupid little detail, those four long bolts with either a big red or yellow bushing pointing them out, on the back of the machine. Mr. Blockhead did not remove those before using the machine. Mr. Blockhead complained about the insane noise and shivering dance the washer did every time it went into spin cycle. Mr. Blockhead cursed the name of
Frigidaire Affinity!!(If yours is doing what ours was doing, your problem is just like it says on the huge yellow tag bolted to the back of the washer. You know the tag…the one you tore off when you were hooking up the H & C hoses and drain hose? The one you thought was just about some stupid safety warnings? Nope. That note told you to remove those four big, fat shipping bolts that hold the inner chassis in a fixed position so the vibration-isolating mounts don’t let the drum slam around during shipping.)
So. The problem is that some folks don’t read instructions. That problem can’t be cured with spacers, pads, or special floors. Wives: please understand, the front-loading washer industry is rife with complaints about this problem; most of the manufacturers have this terrible situation. It’s just endemic to the front-loader industry. The problem has no solution; it is apparently one of the impossible vexations of the universe. Men are from Mars.
Anyway, fellows: I love our new front-loading Frigidaire Affinity set; smooth as silk, and after I removed those four long shipping bolts in the back? Boy howdy, this thing is as quiet as a sleeping new-born mouse. Go in there when the wife’s asleep, and remove those bolts. Next day, tell her you figured out an intricate dynamic balancing formula, and made several fine adjustments and, by God, you finally fixed the thing. She’ll think you’re such a stud!
These words of wisdom can be attributed to someone, somewhere with a user name of “dmzuniga” (unfortunately this was/is the only comment he has left on this particular blog, and without a real name). He was dead on. I went home last night, and removed the shipping bolts. We ran a load of the girls’ clothes, and I swear, you could have placed a sleeping baby on top of it.
I am going to include the pics below as they applied to me (hopefully they will help someone); and I will not resist, first, firing off a quick gripe at Frigidaire, and to all the technical writers around the world.
Sure, it was clearly in there, in the instructions, under the section Unpacking, right between items five and seven. And maybe on a yellow tag too. (Note to self :: read the yellow tags from now on.) But come on, an experienced instructions reader skimmed right over it. And I usually do depend more on the instructions — as you might have guessed.
I mean, if this text was online, I’d probably have to have it blinking. You see, those little bolts, and while seemingly minor, could have caused damage to the unit, other property, or, worse, even some bodily harm.
After all — I know it’d probably be too much to ask of a washer manufacturer to work in a fail-safe for these units.
This is one case, I am sorry, where there simply should have been more emphasis placed on the importance of this step.
Mad Props, I shout DMZUNIGA! Digression Done
More Moxie:
Now I am in no way suggesting that my issue is indicative of what everyone else is experiencing. Certainly, there are many causes for excessive vibration with these units. The vibration-retardation pads I highlighted above certainly seem to be a fairly acceptable solution especially when the problem is noise being generated from upper-story set-ups.
You are a lifesaver! I was scratching my head all night and about to return the unit, when I stumbled upon your post. Thanks again :)
Thanks for this. We spent a week working this out and found this to be the problem.
OMG I LOVE YOU!!! and my husband is in trouble! lol. I was scared to death when my brand new out of the box Affinity washer did the “crazy dance” on my and almost killed my water heater! it left it with a bunch of red marks! anyways i was planing on taking the machine back to the store when i desdided to research the reasons why the machine was shaking and going crazy. I am so glad i found this post! i just can’t wait to get home right now and show the yellow bolts to my super smart hubby! for sure he hates reading the instructions!
glad I could help and as I said in the post, don’t be too mad with him…I’m an instructions reader and I missed it. cheers and hope it gets it for you.
OMG . . that did it. Our washer is on a platform and I was sure it would have walked off of the platform and done considerable damage to our newly-completed addition the way it shook so badly on the spin cycle, but our contractor, who unpacked the washer, had not removed those pesky bolts. Thanks so much for the posting. It saved a potentially embarassing call to the applicance store: “Did you remove the shipping bolts?”
Sure did. glad it helped.
After watching my washer (literally sitting on the floor thru a whole cycle) and a few choice words between me and the hubby, and even moving those little legs every way possible. I decided to google and found this! Not only did it make me laugh because I knew as soon as I read it that hubby did not read instructions (he is the kind that often has “extra parts”) and this was our problem. Unfortunately we will have a do a little drywall repair because the washer dances a small hole in the gyprock! Thanks for posting cause this is a life saver!
Glad I could help Jenna … haven’t really done a post on much more than repairing small holes in drywall. but hopefully you have that covered and hubby can do it quick. cheers.
Thank you SO much for posting this!! I was in the same situation as Jenna, with my husband adjusting the legs over & over again for probably an hour (and yes, the choice words were said between us as well) when I too went to the mighty Google to see if I could find a solution. Low & behold my husband didn’t read the installation instructions, (as usual) and didn’t remove the bolts. Thanks for saving the day (and letting me be the hero)! ;.)
So glad we could help Michelle. (and don’t rub it in too much. ha!)
Man your post saved me a trip back to the Sears Outlet store. We purchased our washer as “Returned/Tested”, we thought all was well when we put in our first load. But at 9min remaining that Max spin cycle kicked in…. it sound like there was a nascar race in our laundry room. I came in to find the stucco being scraped of the wall as the washer danced all over the place. As we didn’t purchase new, we had no instructions. Ours only had 2 of the four shipping bolts in, and once removed it flies nice a quietly. Thanks so much for your post.
glad we could help. many happy years of clean clothes. ~jb
Thank you, thank you, thank you. A million times. I never even noticed the yellow sticker on the back! Hahaha. I was getting *worried* that I’d have to take the thing back.
you’re welcome and here’s to many happy years of clean clothes.~jb
Yup…asked my hubby if he removed shipping bolts..he didn’t take me seriously until i read your post outloud. Im sitting here now, waiting for the spin cycle to hit. Machine bore a hole in our floor and knocked a hole in the wall…thank you, you are a lifesaver!!! I Kind of assumed that the store had removed them because it was a floor model, I adjusted feet to no end and was about to find vibration pad then take it back! Thanks again. I love how it cleans and dries, so i am soooo stoked for it to work. Was cursing the thing yesterday, and making my teenage daughter roll on the floor laughing because mom was doing the “HAPPY DANCE” over a washer. Our last one was crazy!!!
glad I could help. thanks for your note Michelle. Here’s to many happy years with your new washer. cheers. ~jb
Another thankful wife here, I thought I was going to die after throwing my body between the dancing machine (with the dryer on top) and our laundry sink. I was trying to save the sink and the machine and all I could picture was my kids finding my crushed body in the laundry room. Took out the bolts as you suggested…perfecto! The laundry room is safe again!
cheers. thanks for the feedback. ~jb