The door strike is used in washers and is attached to the door to activate the switch when the door is closed. This ensures that the washer door remains locked and closed. If your door does not stay o...
This is a replacement screw for your washer or dryer. The screw is approximately half an inch in length and is a Phillips-head screw. It screws in from the outside of the drum, into the vane/baffle. T...
This is a shoulder screw and is used in conjunction with multiple appliances within your home. This specific model is size 10, and it has 16 threads to an inch. This part is made entirely of metal and...
This is a bellow, though it may also be known as a door boot seal, and it is a part for your washing machine. The function of the bellow is to prevent leaks by forming a seal in between the wash tub a...
This part is the replacement screw for your washer. The head is approximately inch in diameter and the screw is approximately 3/4 inch in length. It is made of metal and is sold individually. This is...
This outer door window, or outer lens, is found in your front-loading washer or dryer. Mounted to the door, it provides visibility and allows you to monitor the washing or drying process. It also acts...
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Chuck
January 18, 2020
In spin cycle there is a very high whine noise, it is louder since we bought the set. I thought it might be the drum bearing, or is there any rollers i can't see that might be going out? We bought the set new in 2010. Have not had any issues, except the high spin noise. Do we have a concern?
For model number EIFLS60LT0
Hello and thank you for writing.
It should not be a big issue. It certainly sounds like it could be a faulty shock mounting pin PS417323, you should check for signs of damage, and replace as necessary. We hope this helps. Please contact us anytime if you require further assistance.
Bought new part. #1 Lesson learned: Always inspect the actual part number of the ordered/received part. Verify with number marked on the item somewhere. We did not do this and turned out we reinstalled a slightly smaller bellow (wrong part number received in shipment). We were able to fully install it but it was minutely not laying perfec
... Read moretly around the diameter. So minor we did not notice. We did have great difficulty installing though. Anyway, after 1st test run, bellow already had developed a small hole in bottom right quadrant from rubbing on the drum. Left a bunch of gray powdery debris on the drum too. We did not realize error until that point. Took bellow off again to verify part number on it. It was wrong. That explained why the door was so very tight to close and difficult to open. Other than all that, use the video to do the install. It was free to view and easy to follow.
First, I went to the PartSelect website and easily found the part at a reasonable price. I ordered it early on a Wednesday afternoon, and gladly spent the extra $25 to ship it overnight. That evening, PartSelect sent me an email stating that the part had shipped that very day, and - mistakenly - I took that literally. FedEx tracking predi
... Read morected that the part would arrive on Friday, July 5, which made sense because the 4th was a holiday. But I found out that the part had actually shipped on the 3rd, as the email had informed me. It didn't actually ship until the 4th - up until then, a "shipping label" had been created but it had not shipped. FedEx then revised their arrival date to Monday, 8 July. That clearly wasn't satisfactory. So I went to my local parts distributor, Dayton Appliance Parts, a fifteen-minute drive from my house, and got the same part for $3 cheaper, plus without the $25 shipping fee that PartSelect had charged me for overnight-shipping-that-isn't-actually-overnight-shipping. Once I had the part in hand, installation was a breeze. Two screws removed, pulled the striker, replaced the new part and the screws. Less than two minutes. But no thanks to PartSelect.
Parts took twice as long to arrive shipped from Utah to Houston, Texas. Once arrived parts were straight forward to install. 1) Open the door by tripping the door strike using yard trimmer line. 2) Turned Power off (unplugged unit) 3) Used needle noses pliers to remove door rubber boot retainer 4) Folded right-side
... Read moreof rubber in to removed switch assembly 5) Used Phillips screwdriver to remove switch assembly screws, navigated damaged switch part forward then disconnected line. 6) Connected new switch to line, navigate part back into washer and screwed back in. 7) Repositioned door rubber boot and reattached door boot retainer wire with hands and needle noose pliers. 8) Replaced door strike using Phillips screw driver. 9) Re-plugged washer power to outlet, closed door and ran a test cycle. All good!