Metal basses. Necessary to raise the height of doors off the ground to make it ergonomically easier for your customers, cleaners, and you to reach inside the machine.
They make the small washer appear bigger to the customer leading to more turns and revenue.
Bases also provide stability for machines and keep them from "walking out of position" because of vibration. For years the Maytag MAH21 "Neptune" and its previous versions were the dominate player in that space for laundry rooms and laundromats. Those machines are now 20-30 years old. There are plenty of them still out there, but parts are not available so fixing them is getting harder. You decide to bite the bullet and replace them with something. Do you have to replace the bases. In most cases yes, however there are a few where you might not have to. Lets put a few to the test:
With MHN30 and MHN33 washers on MAH21 bases with the round feet cups, the feet on one side will fit fine...
...but the other side will not quite make it. The foot will sit on the edge of the cup. This can also happen with the square feet cups. Usually the rectangle cups are not a problem. This problem can be solved by taking a Dremel or grinder and cutting off the side wall of the circle or square until the foot rests inside the cup.
If your MAH21s were right up against your bulkhead the extra room behind the MHN30 and MHN33 should be a benefit for hoses to fit without having to unbolt and remount the base further away from the bulkhead.
How about a different make and model? Lets try a Huebsch
(note the same machine is also labeled a Speed Queen, Primus, Ipso)
Please note that if your MAH21s were directly next to the bulkhead, your Alliance machine (under the names listed above) will fit,
but there might not be room for hoses.
If you have a couple of inches behind the machine to the bulkhead, or can remove a panel from the inside of your panel to make more room then there is no need to get new bases.
We all like saving money! If you are needing to replace small chassis machines and have to move or replace the bases, it might behoove you for future equipment purchases to not have the new machines directly up against the bulkhead. Give an extra inch or two. In five years when you replace that small chassis washer those couple of inches might save you some money having to replace a base or allowing you to choose another brand without having to replace a base too.
A Heck of A Nice Guy
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