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Reply to: test please delete

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Previously on "test please delete"

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  • ladymuck
    replied
    Originally posted by NickFitz View Post

    I got some little air wedges that you pump up manually to raise mine so I could get sliders in, but that was for getting it in not pulling it out. But maybe raising at at the side of the front would also lift the back foot on the same side? It also depends on how much space there is above it, of course

    Is there anything in the manual about a door release? If not, maybe you can find a service manual online by searching for the model number or something.
    Thanks, will take a look. That might just do the trick. I only need to be able to raise it a smidge to get the sliders under.

    I don't know what the model is other than it's an Indesit. The specific model is on a label inside the door! There is no manual.

    I usually hunt down manuals when they're missing but all I seem to have done is obtain a print out of the details of each washing cycle. A basic search has revealed that many Indesit manuals don't mention anything about opening the door manually.

    One tip I've read is to take something like fishing wire and sort of wrap it around the door to get it into the lock mechanism. Will have a rummage in the garage when I'm at Mum's tomorrow to see if there's anything suitable I can try.

    I think I'll take the duvet cover down with me tomorrow and use Mum's WM and dryer so at least that part gets cleaned.

    Leave a comment:


  • NickFitz
    replied
    Tea was brought to me from the Turkish place, mainly because I needed to order something from them by Monday to get a voucher for £8 off

    Leave a comment:


  • NickFitz
    replied
    Originally posted by ladymuck View Post

    I've been looking at sliders but they seem to assume you're able to tilt the WM to get them under it; something I don't have room to do.

    A video on YouTube helped me get the panel at the bottom open but there's no door release catch there.
    I got some little air wedges that you pump up manually to raise mine so I could get sliders in, but that was for getting it in not pulling it out. But maybe raising at at the side of the front would also lift the back foot on the same side? It also depends on how much space there is above it, of course

    Is there anything in the manual about a door release? If not, maybe you can find a service manual online by searching for the model number or something.

    Leave a comment:


  • ladymuck
    replied
    Originally posted by NickFitz View Post

    My washing machine turned out to be plugged in to a socket lurking at the back of a cupboard, down near ground level. I couldn’t work out where it was for ages because it was concealed by the stuff in the cupboard!

    Washing up liquid is good for lubricating the feet to slide it out. You can get smooth plastic boards that go under the feet and can be used to drag it out, but the question then is how to get them under there. If I ever have my kitchen redone, I’m going to insist that the washer-dryer isn’t boxed in - it’s a pain

    Oh, and there’s almost certainly a manual release for the door; they're usually hidden away behind a flap or something, somewhere down the bottom of the front
    I've been looking at sliders but they seem to assume you're able to tilt the WM to get them under it; something I don't have room to do.

    A video on YouTube helped me get the panel at the bottom open but there's no door release catch there.

    Leave a comment:


  • NickFitz
    replied
    Originally posted by ladymuck View Post
    Laundering of the bed linen hasn't gone well. I thought the WM was a bit quiet but I hadn't heard it beep. When I went to check, all its lights were flashing and the on/off button didn't do anything. Although it looks like the cycle was complete, it won't release the door lock.

    A quick squizz at the manual says I need to turn the machine off at the mains, wait a couple of minutes and turn it back on. If the error doesn't clear then it needs a repair person to attend. There are five fused switches in the kitchen, two of which are located in a position I'd consider sensible as a means of controlling the WM power. None turn it off. This makes me think the switch is behind the WM and I'll have to work out how to pull it out of the cupboard. This would be easy if I could get the door open!

    Now on the hunt for some contraption that can slip under the WM and do some kind of lift and slide manoeuvre so I'm not dragging it across the floor. There's got to be something that runs on bearings.
    My washing machine turned out to be plugged in to a socket lurking at the back of a cupboard, down near ground level. I couldn’t work out where it was for ages because it was concealed by the stuff in the cupboard!

    Washing up liquid is good for lubricating the feet to slide it out. You can get smooth plastic boards that go under the feet and can be used to drag it out, but the question then is how to get them under there. If I ever have my kitchen redone, I’m going to insist that the washer-dryer isn’t boxed in - it’s a pain

    Oh, and there’s almost certainly a manual release for the door; they're usually hidden away behind a flap or something, somewhere down the bottom of the front

    Leave a comment:


  • NickFitz
    replied
    Lunch: pâté on toast

    Leave a comment:


  • ladymuck
    replied
    Laundering of the bed linen hasn't gone well. I thought the WM was a bit quiet but I hadn't heard it beep. When I went to check, all its lights were flashing and the on/off button didn't do anything. Although it looks like the cycle was complete, it won't release the door lock.

    A quick squizz at the manual says I need to turn the machine off at the mains, wait a couple of minutes and turn it back on. If the error doesn't clear then it needs a repair person to attend. There are five fused switches in the kitchen, two of which are located in a position I'd consider sensible as a means of controlling the WM power. None turn it off. This makes me think the switch is behind the WM and I'll have to work out how to pull it out of the cupboard. This would be easy if I could get the door open!

    Now on the hunt for some contraption that can slip under the WM and do some kind of lift and slide manoeuvre so I'm not dragging it across the floor. There's got to be something that runs on bearings.

    Leave a comment:


  • NickFitz
    replied
    Afternoon denizens

    It’s a sunny day with just a few wisps of very thin cloud here and there, and the snow has almost completely gone - just a few traces left on the lawn. It’s 1°C and not getting any warmer. Looks like a warm spell will be kicking in tomorrow though, and lasting for a few days! The barometers are recovering from the storm at 1007/1015mB

    Leave a comment:


  • ladymuck
    replied


    Afternoon all

    Cloudy but quite bright. Cold and dry. Currently 4 degrees ('feels like' 2) and that's the high for the day. Barometer up to 1017 mBar.

    Sunrise 08:04; Sunset 16:14 GMT

    Lazy morning. Bed has been stripped and is airing. The first load is in the WM. I toyed with going to the farmers' market but didn't bother in the end.

    Leave a comment:


  • xoggoth
    replied
    Saw an odd white trail across my lawn, turned out to be feathers. Went up the garden and saw a pigeon wandering about, looked fine but clearly unable to fly. Darn cat maybe. Got me oil tank topped up. Anyway, ll1 bit later.

    Leave a comment:


  • WTFH
    replied
    Morning all
    CBS, etc, a rather chilly 4C right now and I’ve delayed the walk as long as possible.
    After that it will be: empty the Wife’s car of the garden tools I picked up from her uncle’s house - he’s about to move into an apartment and his daughter wants family to take everything. I’ve got my name on a pressure washer, petrol brush cutter and petrol edge mower (its deck is only 51cm), but they might still be used at his house in the next month before he moves out.
    Next job is to finish the apple trees.
    And that’s probably my day done.

    Leave a comment:


  • DoctorStrangelove
    replied
    Morning.

    Saturday.

    Blue sky.

    Sunny.

    Frosty. Chilly in here at 10.7 deg, 8 in the kitchen, 4 in the leanto, 3 in the saltinghouse.

    1013 mBar, 29.91 in Hg, 759.8 Torr, 14.69 psi, (up from 1006 last night), 56% RH (Lidl electric).

    Meanwhile on the 11th of March 2020 SimonMac and BR14 popped in, LM was railing at the disruption of the tube trains and having to work 5 days onsite, WTFH met a chap who'd lost £350k due to cancellations and eek popped in to agree that The Ides of March bode ill and worse was to come. .

    Rather than a) doing the washing or b) going to that Swansea on the bus, I chose c) go for a walk. Cold out there & slippery on the pavements. Nearly went arse over tit a couple of times.

    Big funeral up at the cemetery.

    Lunch: brunch. Entertainment: FOOC.


    Maigret


    Gosh an Anthony Price Doctor David Audley epic on "Together", being "Deadly Recruits (1986)": the 2nd ep of the "Chessgame" series with Terence Stamp.
    Last edited by DoctorStrangelove; Today, 20:27.

    Leave a comment:


  • NickFitz
    replied
    Tonight’s major motion picture premiere was Goebbels and the Führer (2024). This addresses the rise and fall of the Third Reich from the perspective of Hitler’s propagandist, and the filmmakers state at the start that although they realise that presenting the views of these people is risky, they think it’s important to do so in order that we can recognise it when such opinions arise again. Given that in the last couple of days I’ve seen reports of people in Trump’s inner circle endorsing assertions that are mere paraphrases of things Goebbels said, I conclude that they are right to sound a warning, and that Trump’s cronies don’t have any creative abilities and can only recycle what those they admire have said. I don’t know whether this will make it any easier to destroy them and grind them into the dust they deserve to be. It’s a very good film, but it did make me wonder where we’ll end up this time; as somebody said, history doesn’t repeat itself, but it does rhyme

    After that I felt the need for something more lighthearted, and what’s more lighthearted than That Thing You Do! (1996)? Not many things is the answer! It’s a great film, and ever so much fun to watch even if it does mean I’ll have the song as an earworm for the next few days. It’s a good song!

    Goodnight all

    Leave a comment:


  • NickFitz
    replied
    Tea: ribeye steak with fried onions and chips. Very nice steak, that was

    This was accompanied by Kegworth: Flight to Disaster on iPlayer, about the plane that crashed on the M1, just short of EMA, back in 1989

    For many years afterwards there was a big V-shaped gap in the trees pointing up the embankment there, but it seems to have grown back now.

    Leave a comment:


  • ladymuck
    replied
    I did venture to the great outdoors and returned the poorly sized coffee cups.

    The person serving in at the till recognised immediately that I was the customer who had emailed in to advise of the need to return and why. They said they did some investigations and discovered that the cups range in size from 70ml to 90ml capacity so they've updated the info on their website as a result. This is why I like independent shops.

    Bitterly cold out, biting wind. Thankfully dry.

    Leave a comment:

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