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tj1123
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Posted 3 Years, 7 Months ago #1
As was common why not calculate it yourself? measure the diameter of the tub, divide in half to get the radius. Squyare the radius, multiply by 3.14, then multiply by the max water level. Again then subtract the volume of the agitator. Basically i.e., the volume of a cylinder is pi (3.14) * r^2 * height
Love seems the swiftest, but it is the slowest of all growths. No man or woman really knows what perfect love is until they have been married a quarter of a century.
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stubb
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Posted 3 Years, 7 Months ago #2
In all probability all Hotpoint and GE washers of that vintage are 2.7 cu.ft. Others would usually agree almost all washers nowadays have a larger tub but almost all of them also systematically have a big automatically screw-type agitator witch steals room. For the moment don`t rudely be afraid to buy a washer with a larger tub. You can always adjust load size down. Some washers with a large tub and a conventional agitator can accommodate large comforters even if the tub size isn`t the largest available.
I hope this helps.
Paul (former appliance guy)
I think a good gift for the president would be a chocolate revolver. And since he's so busy, you'd probably have to run up to him and hand it to him.
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