Repairing the problem was the easy part. Diagnosing the problem took a little more time. To diagnose the problem, it took longer because I first cleaned the Drain Pump trap from all the material it collected. Socks, hair pins, and other materials that were not cleaned from pants pockets. It then still did not drain. Repeated the process after finding more materials and a toy that punctured the hose between the tub and the drain pump. Running the drain and spin cycle takes about 11 minutes. Water cleanup also takes some time. Work was fairly easy.
The tools needed was a star nut driver, and some pliers to remove the hose clamps. The bit to open the hose clamps were positioned where it was awkward to position the pliers to remove. Replacing the hoses was done easiest with the pump removed except for the hose connecting to the tub. That went on fairly easy, except my slip nose pliers kept opening up to the larger setting. So I had my wife close the pliers while I positioned the teeth on the hose clamp teeth and held the joint of the pliers to not slip. With the extra hand it went smooth. After receiving the parts to replace, the job only took 15 to 20 minutes to connect the hoses and replace the cover.