Short engineering history of the front load washer:
Initially the only washers that were front load were commercial units with massive belt drives on a planetary reduction at the back of the machine. The planetary set with bearing goes for 200 bucks on
ebay fyi, you can find these pulled from any laundrymat from the 80s and 90s.
The first home "high efficiency" washers suffered two issues, they were initially DC brushed motors with a heavy duty inverter circuit (high cost) usually built into an assembly at the back of the drum. The second initial design was a belt driven standard brushed AC motor that was fed varying voltage and the belt was cogged. This was terrible and I'm sure some of you have seen the plastic "big end" pulley all torn to bits.
About...ohh fifteen years ago? they started using ac induction motors, 24 pole, single phase. Some of you know this design well as its the big copper ring at the business end of the drum. It is set up exactly like old yamaha motorcycle stators. A board feed high frequency pulses into the motor and there is a hall effect sensor to tell the "computer" where the motor is. This design suffered board failures, of which I used to sit down and do repairs on. In fact the washer at my house is this stator design.
What alloy is showing is a solid state variable frequency drive. The VFD on the board is only rated for a few amps. This system allows for longevity. The ac induction motor regardless of it being single or 3 phase can be "soft started" so no more chewing up belts, no chewing up the planetary reductions or gear boxes. This motor can also be set to run the machine in what is called "delicate" mode, in addition to allowing the variation of speed for the spin cycle. Some of these systems are linked to a electronically controlled transmission that will spin a large agitator in the bottom of the machine and move the drum back and forth in rhythm. No matter what the most valuable component on even a BROKEN washer is the board. They all work essentially the same of this type and if your handy and have appliance store contacts...there's some money to be made.
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