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If you find out what size nut it takes, let me know. Mine fell apart months ago and I can't find the missing piece, so I prop in up on a cinder block.
Laundry fun - I hope you got the drawer under that front-load washer. I didn't - the builder insisted that he build a shelf instead. Well, if your filter plugs up (on the Whirlpool Duet this will give an error code that has nothing to do with a plugged filter, and will tell yo you need a repairman to replace the pump - luckily a nice repair man has posted all the error codes with detailed instructions on how to do each repair on the internet!) Anyways, if your pump filter plugs, and your washer won't drain, you will need to put a bucket in the drawer to catch all the water that will drain when you detatch the drain hose from the filter. I can't even fit a baking sheet under my washer! My filter has plugged 3X (each time from Alex ... BB's left in his pockets that fit through the drain-holes in the washer drum, but not through the pump filter). Each time I need to empty my laundry room and then put nearly every towell I own on the floor to soak up the flood I release!
Still that is preferable to doing laundry when I was a kid. I grew up in California with water rationing. Mom would always stop the washer during the final rinse before anything drained so the water could be used for the next load. I would have to fish everything out and hand-wring each piece, several loads a week for years. I swear this is why my hands are arthritic. I've had arthritis in them since I was a teen.
This is a Kenmore, and was purchased the day before my husband's surgery because our old one (a Frigidaire) bit the dust in under five years. The one before THAT lasted nine years, although it had worsening problems for the last five of them, mostly as a result of going through the Nisqually quake and having the barrel mounts crack. I suspect that this is just a plugged filter, since the gullywasher last week apparently swozzled dirt into the well.
I'm going to drop an in-line filter into the feed hose. Our well is dug down to salmon Springs Formation gravel, but above that there's 12 feet of coarse sand. The younger men (my cousin and BIL) need to drag out their trash pump and clean the bottom of the well, but they're "too busy-" Dad did it once every five years, minimum, just like he reset pasture every seven years and kept the fences and gates in good shape, but that's no argument I can use to them because they worked for him exactly enough to resent his drill sergeant ways and not enough to internalize his values.
For most of the last twenty years my sister and I tried to do things Wesley's Way but we also did all the women's work and after a while you just run out of gas/incur too many injuries to continue that level of striving. And of course I married a city boy, and one with a certified actual major back problem, so we're stymied all around here.