tommo_79
14th September 2011, 10:45 AM
Hi all, we're having trouble with our front loader washing machine shaking the whole house during the spin cycle. I've done a bit of searching about this common problem but cant find the answer.
The machine is on a suspended wood floor (highset house), I-beam joists with steel posts (I can provide some extra sizes if necessary). The laundry floor is tiled.
The washing machine is about 2 years old, front loader with 'inverter technology to reduce noise and vibration'!!! but is still feels like an earthquake when it spins. So far we've tried the following:
Checked the transit bolts are removed
adjusted the feet and used a spirit level to make it level
bought a recycled rubber mat from the retailer - no use
bought anti vibration dampening feet from an online store - little use (they actually reduce friction with the floor so the machine now walks)
Reduced the spin speed - helps but results in wet clothes.
The user manual recommends bolting the machine to the underlying structure where mounted on a suspended wood floor. This would obviously involve making holes in our new floor tiles, so I thought I'd seek a bit of advice before doing so. I'm guessing since its already shaking the structure, bolting it will only make the situation worse?
If I did bolt it down, would it be worth reinforcing the floor structure around the machine? Would putting an extra support post under the floor below the machine help (the location of the laundry is about 2.4m about ground level)?
Do I even need to do anything? I'd only be concerned if it is potentially damaging the structure of the house.
The other solution would be to move the machine down to the garage where it can sit on a slab. This would be fairly impractical and require a bit of plumbing, but the added advantage would be I could convert the laundry into a homebrew room :U
The machine is on a suspended wood floor (highset house), I-beam joists with steel posts (I can provide some extra sizes if necessary). The laundry floor is tiled.
The washing machine is about 2 years old, front loader with 'inverter technology to reduce noise and vibration'!!! but is still feels like an earthquake when it spins. So far we've tried the following:
Checked the transit bolts are removed
adjusted the feet and used a spirit level to make it level
bought a recycled rubber mat from the retailer - no use
bought anti vibration dampening feet from an online store - little use (they actually reduce friction with the floor so the machine now walks)
Reduced the spin speed - helps but results in wet clothes.
The user manual recommends bolting the machine to the underlying structure where mounted on a suspended wood floor. This would obviously involve making holes in our new floor tiles, so I thought I'd seek a bit of advice before doing so. I'm guessing since its already shaking the structure, bolting it will only make the situation worse?
If I did bolt it down, would it be worth reinforcing the floor structure around the machine? Would putting an extra support post under the floor below the machine help (the location of the laundry is about 2.4m about ground level)?
Do I even need to do anything? I'd only be concerned if it is potentially damaging the structure of the house.
The other solution would be to move the machine down to the garage where it can sit on a slab. This would be fairly impractical and require a bit of plumbing, but the added advantage would be I could convert the laundry into a homebrew room :U