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M8 hex nut secures washer components and panels. Replace if damaged, stripped, or missing to restore proper clamping force and eliminate loose connections.
Usually ships within 4 - 14 days
Flat metal washer that distributes fastener pressure and maintains secure connections on washer assemblies. Replace if worn, missing, or damaged.
This M8 x 48mm bolt secures internal washer components and panels. Replace if bolt is stripped, corroded, missing, or no longer holding parts firmly.
Replacement mounting screw for washer assembly. Secures internal components and panels. Order a new screw if the original is stripped, missing, or damaged.
Replacement mounting bolt for washer assembly. Secures internal components and housing panels. Needed when original bolt is stripped, missing, or damaged.
Self-tapping screw for washer control panels, trim, and internal brackets. Replaces missing, stripped, or damaged screws during repairs and maintenance.
Ordered part recommended and followed directions on vudeo. Should have listened when the guy said wear gloves. Got bit a couple of times from the sharp edges. Everything worked well after unstall. Saved me hundreds. Read more
Replacement mounting screw for washer pedestals. Secures panels and trim pieces to the pedestal base. Needed when original screws are lost or stripped.
Found the part easy and bought it but got over charged for shipping Read more
Flat head screw secures internal components in your washer. Replace if screw is stripped, missing, or damaged during appliance maintenance or repair.
Replacement mounting screw for washer assembly. Secures internal components and panels. Order a new screw if yours is stripped, missing, or damaged.
Secures the wash basket to the drive hub assembly in top-load washers. Replace if stripped, cross-threaded, or missing to properly mount the basket.
Fix washer overfilling and water spilling over the tub with this pressure switch. Simple 3-wire installation stops overflow issues. DIY-friendly repair.
I followed the rubber tubing attached to the outside of the washer tub and it was attached to the pressure switch. The switch is the only component in the system that could potentially fail, so I guessed that it had to be the culprit. I ordered the new one, it arrived in less than 36 hours, installed it, plugged the wires in just like the old one (only three wires) and voila, it now shuts off the water flow just like a new washer. Read more