Washer won't drain? Water sitting in the drum? We find the cause — standpipe, filter, or pump — and fix it same-day in 10301.
$80 service call · Applied to your repair · Price quoted before any work starts
Why Silver Lake & Grymes Hill residents call us for Whirlpool washer repair:
The 10301 ZIP sits on a geological split that shapes appliance repair calls as directly as it shapes the landscape. Along the lower North Shore blocks — Broadway, Castleton Avenue, Jewett Avenue, the converted two-families running toward Forest Avenue — buildings from the 1920s through the 1940s sit over original cast-iron drain stacks. That plumbing works fine for human waste volume, but a Whirlpool washer draining five or six gallons per minute pushes fine sediment and mineral scale through those lines constantly. The scale flakes off the corroded cast-iron walls and accumulates in the drain pump filter far faster than it would in a home with smooth PVC drain lines. The filter reaches its clogging threshold in a fraction of the time, and the Whirlpool throws F9 E1 — long drain fault — before the homeowner has any warning.
Climb the ridge above Silver Lake Park — past the old reservoir along Clove Road, up Howard Avenue and Grymes Hill Road toward Wagner College — and the problem shifts from plumbing composition to physical geometry. Finished-basement laundry rooms on the Grymes Hill hillside sit against foundation walls, and the WFW7590FW or WFW5000HW tucked into those closets has a drain hose that must travel uphill before dropping to the standpipe — back-pressure that reduces effective drain speed. A pump at the edge of its wear tolerance on flat ground drains fine; that same pump fighting an uphill hose path on Grymes Hill trips F9 E1. On pre-2013 front-load models — the WFW9200SQ and WFW9400SW still running in 10301's older homes — the code displays as F21, but the cause and fix are identical.
There is a third mechanism that comes up in 10301's pre-war attached homes and catches homeowners off guard. In houses built before the 1950s on Broadway, Jewett Avenue, and the side streets off Castleton Avenue, the standpipe often exits the wall laterally rather than straight back — original laundry plumbing positioned for a wringer washer that sat flush against the wall rather than perpendicular to it. When a modern Whirlpool is installed in that space, the drain hose must make an additional horizontal bend before routing downward to the standpipe. That extra bend, combined with the fixed Whirlpool hose diameter, creates a restriction that F9 E1 finds at the exact point when pump output begins to decline with age. The machine ran on that routing for years without a code — then one day the pump aged past the threshold and it didn't. Rerouting the hose eliminates the restriction; if the pump is already worn, it comes out at the same visit.
Before scheduling any F9 E1 repair, check the standpipe. Whirlpool requires the standpipe to be between 39 and 96 inches from the floor to the top of the pipe. In 10301's older buildings — particularly the pre-war rowhouses on Broadway and the converted two-families near Richmond Terrace — standpipes are sometimes original laundry tub drains never updated for modern front-loaders. If the standpipe is shorter than 39 inches, the washer siphons itself mid-drain: water leaves the drum and immediately re-enters through the siphon effect, so the drum never fully empties and F9 E1 fires every cycle, every time, without any pump failure. Correcting standpipe height resolves this completely — no parts needed, no service call required. Check it first. Also confirm the drain hose isn't inserted more than 4.5 inches into the standpipe opening — too deep creates the same siphon effect on any height of standpipe.
When standpipe and hose routing check out and F9 E1 or F21 persists, the diagnostic path is straightforward. The drain pump filter is the first stop — it sits behind a small access panel at the bottom front of Whirlpool front-load machines and accumulates lint, hair, and small garment items. In the cast-iron drain environments of 10301's lower blocks, mineral sediment from the plumbing also collects here. A fully clogged filter blocks suction and prevents the pump from evacuating the drum in time. Clearing it takes under ten minutes and resolves a meaningful share of drain calls without any parts. If F9 E1 returns within a cycle or two of filter cleaning, the drain pump motor itself has degraded — the impeller is worn or the motor winding is drawing out of spec — and pump replacement is the repair. We diagnose the full drain system on every call: filter, hose routing, standpipe, and pump. We never assume pump replacement is needed until the upstream causes are cleared.
After F9 E1, the second Whirlpool fault we see regularly from 10301 addresses is F8 E1 — the flow meter fault indicating the washer couldn't confirm adequate water entry at cycle start. In the older buildings along Castleton Avenue and Broadway, galvanized supply pipes corrode from the inside over decades, releasing sediment and scale into the water supply. That sediment collects in the mesh screens on the hot and cold inlet hose connections at the back of the washer. Before concluding valve failure: unscrew both inlet hoses, pull the small mesh screens, and rinse them clear. Also confirm both supply shutoff valves behind the machine are fully open — a valve left partially closed from a previous move or installation restricts flow below Whirlpool's minimum detection threshold and triggers F8 E1 with nothing mechanically wrong. If screens are clear, valves are open, and F8 E1 persists, the water inlet valve solenoid assembly needs replacement.
| What matters | Whirlpool / Others | Premier ✓ Us |
|---|---|---|
| Response in 10301 | 3–7 days | Same day |
| Standpipe check included | No — parts assumed | Always — first step |
| F21 + F9 E1 both diagnosed | Code-by-code only | Full drain system |
| Knows 10301 plumbing & installs | No | Regular North Shore route |
| Weekend surcharge | Often yes | Never |
| Quote before any work | Sometimes | Always |
| Repair warranty | 30–60 days | 90 days |
Every drain fault call in 10301 starts with a standpipe height check and drain hose inspection before any parts are touched. If filter cleaning or routing correction resolves the fault, that's the repair. If not, we move to the pump — and most drain pump replacements are completed in a single visit.
Real Whirlpool repairs across Staten Island — WFW front-load and WTW top-load models
For F9 E1 and F21 drain calls: standpipe height and hose routing are checked at no extra cost — if correcting the standpipe resolves the fault, that's the end of the visit. If the pump filter or pump needs work, repair cost is quoted on-site after full diagnosis. No work begins without your approval.
Whirlpool showing F9 E1 or F21 in Silver Lake or Grymes Hill? Call or book online to schedule same-day service in 10301.
📅 Book Online — 7 Days a Week 📞 Call (929) 261-4444Tap each code to understand what it means and what we do to fix it same-day in 10301.
The F9 E1 error means the Whirlpool washer could not drain the drum within its programmed window. The cycle locks and the door won't release. This is the fault we see regularly from Victory Blvd, Jewett Ave, and the Grymes Hill addresses — and it has a structured diagnostic sequence.
The F21 code is the drain timeout fault on older Whirlpool front-load models manufactured roughly before 2013 — including the WFW9200SQ, WFW9250WW, and WFW9400SW, which are still in service throughout 10301's older housing stock. The code means the same thing as F9 E1 and the diagnostic sequence is identical: standpipe height, hose depth, filter cleaning, pump test. The only difference is the code number on the display. If your older Whirlpool is showing F21 and it has never shown this before, the filter is the first stop. If F21 has become a recurring problem, the drain pump has worn out from years of service and needs replacement. We handle F21 calls throughout 10301 — these older front-load models are a regular part of the North Shore route.
📞 Same-day F21 drain repair in 10301 →The F8 E1 code means the Whirlpool flow meter couldn't confirm sufficient water entering the drum before the fill timeout. In 10301's older buildings with galvanized supply lines, mineral scale accumulates in the inlet hose mesh screens — small filters inside the hose connection fittings at the back of the machine. Pull both hoses and check those screens first. Also confirm both hot and cold shutoff valves are fully open — a partially closed valve drops supply pressure below the flow meter's minimum detection threshold and triggers F8 E1 with nothing mechanically wrong. If screens are clear, valves are fully open, and F8 E1 persists, the water inlet valve assembly needs replacement. We diagnose and replace inlet valves same-day throughout 10301.
📞 Same-day F8 E1 inlet repair in 10301 →The F5 E2 code means the door latch assembly on a Whirlpool front-load washer failed to confirm a secure close before the cycle started — or lost the latch signal mid-cycle. In tight-install situations common to 10301 — stacked configurations in hillside closets where the door can't swing fully open, or machines pushed flush against a wall with uneven clearance — the latch pawl wears unevenly and eventually fails to engage consistently. Once F5 E2 appears, the door latch assembly needs replacement. We carry door latch assemblies for the WFW5000HW, WFW7590FW, and WFW9500FW series and complete the replacement in approximately 25–30 minutes in a single visit.
📞 Same-day F5 E2 door latch repair in 10301 →On Whirlpool top-load washers — the WTW5000DW, WTW4950HW, WTW7000DW, and the Cabrio WTW8000DW that appear throughout 10301 — a failing lid lock assembly does not produce an error code. The machine simply refuses to start, pauses immediately after the cycle begins, or stops mid-agitation with the display blank or showing only the cycle indicator light. When a top-load Whirlpool won't start and shows nothing on the display, the lid lock assembly is the first component to test. The diagnosis is direct: test lock continuity, inspect the actuator mechanism, confirm the lock signal reaches the control board. This is one of the most misread faults we encounter — callers describe "a dead machine" when the lid lock is the only failed part, a 20-minute repair. We test and replace Whirlpool lid lock assemblies same-day throughout 10301.
📞 Top-load won't start in 10301? Call now →Water sitting in the drum means the machine stopped mid-drain — and the laundry inside isn't going anywhere until it's fixed. Don't run another cycle. On older Whirlpool models, a complete pump stall can happen without triggering F9 E1 or F21 — the motor draws no current, the timeout never fires, and the drum just stays full. Lay towels at the base, slowly turn the filter cap to drain residual water before opening it, then call us. Forcing a spin-only cycle on a top-load with standing water stresses the basket; on a front-load, the excess weight pulls on the door seal. We diagnose and replace drain pumps same-day throughout 10301 — this is a single-visit repair in most cases.
On the hillside streets of Grymes Hill, finished-basement laundry rooms often sit on slightly sloped concrete pad foundations — and a Whirlpool washer that isn't perfectly level will vibrate noticeably on spin even with a balanced load. Level the machine first: adjust the front leveling feet so the machine is stable in all four corners and the bubble on a level sits centered front-to-back and side-to-side. If vibration persists on a properly leveled, properly loaded machine, the internal suspension rods or shock absorbers have weakened. Whirlpool's Vibration Control technology depends on functioning suspension components — once those degrade, no amount of balancing helps. We inspect and replace suspension components on WTW and WFW series same-day throughout 10301.
Whirlpool's FreshHold feature — which tumbles the drum and circulates air after the cycle ends — helps prevent musty odors on machines that sit with wet laundry. But if a persistent mildew smell survives FreshHold and the Clean Washer with affresh cycle, the source is the inner folds of the door boot seal, not the drum. Pull back the folds of the gasket and inspect the rubber surface: visible black mold colonies in the creases, or a smell that intensifies when you press the fold open, means the gasket has reached the point where cleaning no longer helps — the mold is embedded in degraded rubber below the surface. In 10301's tight laundry closets and hillside basement rooms where ventilation is limited, door boot seal mold develops faster than on machines in open laundry rooms. We replace Whirlpool door boot seals on WFW-series front-loaders and test the machine through a full cycle before we leave.
The cycle starts normally, runs for 10–15 minutes, then the machine goes silent — display blank or frozen, drum stopped, no error on screen. Unplugging and restarting gets another partial cycle before it stops again in roughly the same phase. In the older multi-family buildings along Castleton Avenue and the blocks between Forest Avenue and Richmond Terrace, shared electrical panels from the 1940s and 1950s carry more loads than they were designed for. Voltage irregularities from aging panel connections degrade control board components gradually — the board holds up fine under light load, but drops out mid-cycle once the drum is full and the motor is pulling peak current. The fault leaves no code because the board itself is the component that would generate the code. We run a full on-site diagnostic and isolate the failing component — wiring harness, thermistor, or board — before quoting anything. Board replacement is always the last step after the cheaper components are cleared first.
Give us your address, your Whirlpool model number if you have it, and what the machine is doing. For F9 E1 and F21 drain calls, we'll ask whether the standpipe height and drain hose depth have been checked — the answers shape what we prepare before heading out to 10301. Arrival window confirmed quickly. Mon–Sat 8am–7pm, Sun 9am–5pm.
Badma arrives with drain pumps, door latch assemblies, water inlet valves, lid lock assemblies, and thermistors sourced for the most common Whirlpool faults in 10301. For most F9 E1, F8 E1, F5 E2, and lid lock calls, the correct part is ready before we pull up. Standpipe height measurement and hose inspection tools always on hand — no assumptions made before seeing the installation.
We run a complete diagnostic before touching anything: standpipe height confirmed, hose routing inspected, filter checked, pump and valve tested. If the fault is standpipe height, we tell you and show you — no repair charge beyond the service call. If parts are needed, the cost is quoted clearly before any work begins. You approve it, or you don't. No automatic billing.
Before we leave, we run a complete wash cycle — fill, wash, drain, and spin — to confirm the F9 E1 or F21 fault is fully cleared and every phase completes correctly. The 90-day parts and labor warranty activates the moment we pack up. Same fault within 90 days: we come back at no charge.
The 10301 ZIP is one of the most geographically unusual in Staten Island — the elevation shifts nearly 300 feet from Richmond Terrace at the water's edge to the ridge roads above Silver Lake Park. Victory Boulevard cuts across the middle, separating the flat North Shore blocks around Forest Avenue and Broadway from the quieter hillside roads climbing toward Wagner College. Those two halves of the same ZIP code have almost nothing in common architecturally — pre-war rowhouses and converted two-families below, large Victorians and colonials above — and they generate different appliance repair patterns for exactly that reason.
Badma covers both sides of that divide regularly. On the hill: Delafield Avenue, St. Marks Place, Howard Avenue, Grymes Hill Road, and the side streets off Manor Road. On the flat blocks: Jewett Avenue, Broadway, Castleton Avenue, and the residential streets between Forest Avenue and Richmond Terrace. Apartment buildings on Castleton Avenue near the park boundary, stacked Whirlpool units in converted two-families on Jewett Avenue, finished-basement laundry rooms in large hillside homes — all are familiar stops. Same-day service throughout 10301, Mon–Sat 8am–7pm, Sun 9am–5pm. Call (929) 261-4444 or book online.
"F9 E1 showed up on our Whirlpool front-loader every single cycle. Badma came out to Silver Lake, measured the standpipe, and showed us it was 5 inches too short — the machine was siphoning itself every time. He corrected the routing and the code never came back. Didn't even need a part replaced. Incredibly thorough."
"Washer stopped draining completely — standing water every time. Badma cleared the pump filter and tested the pump on the spot. The pump was shot, he replaced it same-day. The whole visit took less than an hour. Great communication throughout, price was fair, no surprises on the bill."
"Our old Whirlpool front-load was showing F21 — we didn't even know what that code meant until we searched it. Badma knew immediately it was the same as F9 E1 on newer models and had the drain pump ready when he arrived. Fixed in one visit. This is exactly the kind of technician you want — knows his stuff cold."
"Our stacked Whirlpool in the laundry closet kept throwing F9 E1. Badma came up to Grymes Hill and traced it to a kink in the drain hose behind the machine — the tight closet had it bent almost double. Straightened the routing, ran a test cycle, the code never came back. Smart, honest service."
"Called Saturday morning, Badma was here by noon. Washer had standing water in it from the night before. He drained it, replaced the pump, ran a test cycle, done. I was expecting to wait days for an appointment. Didn't need the 90-day warranty but nice to know it's there."
"Top-load Whirlpool on Broadway just stopped working — no error, no noise, nothing. Badma came out and diagnosed a failed lid lock in about ten minutes. He had the part ready and it was fixed fast. Didn't try to upsell anything, didn't suggest replacing the machine. Just fixed what was broken."
"Came Sunday off Castleton Ave. Whirlpool was leaving water in the drum every time. Badma pulled the filter — completely packed with sediment, probably hadn't been cleared in years. Cleaned it, tested the pump, confirmed it was fine, and that was the whole repair. No parts, no drama. Didn't charge me for something I didn't need."
F9 E1 means the washer couldn't drain within its programmed time window and locked the cycle. Before calling anyone, check three things: standpipe height (must be 39–96 inches from floor to top of pipe), drain hose insertion depth (no more than 4.5 inches into the standpipe), and drain hose path (look for kinks behind the machine). In 10301's pre-war homes, standpipes converted from old laundry tub drains are often shorter than 39 inches — the washer self-siphons and throws F9 E1 every cycle with nothing wrong mechanically. If all three check out and F9 E1 persists, the drain pump filter is clogged or the pump has failed. Call us for same-day diagnosis in 10301.
F21 and F9 E1 mean the same thing: the drain took too long. F21 appears on older Whirlpool front-load models manufactured roughly before 2013, such as the WFW9200SQ, WFW9250WW, and WFW9400SW — all of which are still running in 10301's older housing stock. The diagnostic steps are identical to F9 E1: standpipe height check, hose depth check, filter cleaning, then pump test if the upstream causes are clear. We handle F21 and F9 E1 drain calls throughout 10301 on the same visit.
Pull the washer slightly from the wall and find the vertical pipe the drain hose empties into. Measure from the floor to the open top — it needs to be between 39 and 96 inches. If it's under 39, the washer siphons itself and F9 E1 fires every cycle with nothing mechanically wrong. That said, if you're unsure what you're looking at or don't want to move the machine, just call us — we check standpipe height on every drain fault call as the first step, at no extra charge. You don't need to figure it out alone before booking.
Yes — stacked WFW-series units in Grymes Hill laundry closets are a regular part of the North Shore route. The drain hose in stacked closet installations often routes uphill before dropping to the standpipe, which adds back-pressure that can push a borderline pump into F9 E1 territory. Mention the stacked configuration when you book so we arrive prepared for the disassembly. We need enough clearance to access the front panel and the drain hose connection at the rear of the unit.
Cast-iron drain lines corrode slowly from the inside and release mineral scale into the drain system over time. When the washer drains, that scale enters the pump filter at a much higher rate than it would in a home with smooth PVC lines — the filter reaches a clogging threshold faster. In the pre-war and early post-war buildings along Broadway, Castleton Avenue, and Jewett Avenue, drain pump filter maintenance on Whirlpool front-loaders needs to happen more frequently than the machine's general maintenance interval would suggest. Clearing the filter every one to two months, rather than every three or four, keeps F9 E1 from appearing prematurely.
10301 is on the regular North Shore route — not a special trip. After you call or book, we confirm an arrival window, typically the same day. Morning calls generally get an early-afternoon appointment; afternoon calls get late-afternoon. Seven days a week: Mon–Sat 8am–7pm, Sun 9am–5pm. No weekend surcharge.
Yes. The $80 covers travel, a full diagnosis including standpipe check and drain system inspection, and a written quote. If you approve the repair, it applies toward your total. If you choose not to proceed after seeing the quote — or if the issue turns out to be a standpipe routing problem that doesn't require parts — you pay the $80 only. No work is started without your explicit go-ahead.
90-day parts and labor warranty on every repair. If the drain pump, pump filter housing, door latch, lid lock, inlet valve, or any other replaced component fails within 90 days, we come back at no charge. For F9 E1 and F21 drain calls in 10301, where cast-iron sediment can accelerate filter wear, the warranty gives real coverage if the fault recurs before the 90 days are up.
Clean laundry today — not in three days when the next available appointment opens. We're in Silver Lake and Grymes Hill same-day, seven days a week. Whatever is blocking the drain, we find it and fix it in one visit. Victory Blvd, Jewett Ave, Howard Ave, Castleton Ave — call now.