Washer Low Severity
F3 Appliance Error Code

Asko Washer F3 Error: Unbalanced load

Asko washer F3 error is a common issue reported by Asko appliance owners. What Asko Error Code F3 Means Error code F3 on Asko washing machines indicates an imbalanced load during the spin cycle. Asko’s balance detection system monitors drum vibration in real time; when the drum cannot reach the target spin speed due to […]

Sometimes

DIY Fixable

From $130

Typical Repair Cost

30-60 min

Pro Repair Time

Quick Assessment

Answer to continue safely

Is it safe to keep using?

Yes. F3 is generally a load or levelling issue rather than a mechanical fault. The machine is safe to use — redistribute the load, re-level if needed, and restart.

Can I reset the code?

Yes. Open the door to reset the fault, redistribute the load, and restart the cycle. No mains power reset is required for a standard F3 imbalance fault.

When to stop immediately?

Stop if you notice: A loud grinding or metallic scraping noise accompanies the vibration — bearing failure suspected., The machine moves more than 30 cm from its installed position during spin..

Symptoms You May Notice

Machine vibrates violently and walks across the floor

During the spin phase the machine shakes excessively, may move forward from its installation position, and produces loud banging sounds as the drum contacts the tub.

Spin speed limited to a very low RPM

The machine attempts to spin but reduces the drum speed to a very low level (often audible as a slow rhythmic thump) and cannot reach the set spin speed before displaying F3.

Cycle completes but clothes are very wet

The wash completes without a mid-cycle abort, but laundry is much wetter than normal because the spin ran at reduced speed due to repeated imbalance attempts.

Machine pauses repeatedly during spin phase

The drum slows down, redistributes, and attempts to spin up again several times before either succeeding at low speed or displaying F3 and stopping.

Possible Causes

1

Overloaded drum or unsuitable load mix

Exceeding the rated load capacity, or washing a single heavy item such as a duvet or towel with no other items to balance it, consistently causes imbalance during spin.

DIY Possible
2

Machine not level on the floor

If the four levelling feet are not adjusted correctly, even a balanced load will cause excessive vibration during spin, triggering F3 repeatedly.

DIY Possible
3

Worn drum bearings or shock absorbers

Worn rear drum bearings or failed suspension shock absorbers allow excessive drum movement, causing the machine to interpret normal loads as unbalanced.

Requires Professional

Safe Checks You Can Do

These checks are safe for homeowners. No disassembly required. Do not remove panels or access internal components.
  1. 1

    Redistribute the load manually

    Open the door (after the spin attempt has stopped). Redistribute the laundry evenly around the drum by hand — spread items out rather than letting them clump on one side. For single large items such as a duvet, add 2–3 towels or similar-weight items to help balance.

    Asko washers handle imbalance better with loads at 60–80% of rated capacity. Avoid washing single heavy items alone.

  2. 2

    Check and adjust levelling feet

    Place a spirit level on top of the machine in both directions. All four feet should be firmly in contact with the floor. Adjust feet by turning them clockwise (down) or anticlockwise (up) until the bubble is centred. Tighten the locking nuts against the machine base when level.

    On wooden or sprung floors, an anti-vibration mat under the machine significantly reduces vibration transmission and F3 recurrence.

    Tools required
  3. 3

    Restart with a reduced spin speed

    Select a lower spin speed (e.g., 1000 RPM instead of 1600 RPM) for the first test cycle after redistribution. Once the machine completes the cycle successfully you can test at full spin speed on the next wash.

    Permanently running bulky items at 1000–1200 RPM rather than maximum speed reduces bearing wear and F3 frequency on Asko W6098 and similar high-capacity models.

When to Call a Professional

Contact a qualified technician if:

  • Loud rumbling from the rear of the drum at all spin speeds — rear drum bearings are failing.
  • Shock absorber legs visibly collapsed or leaking oil — suspension replacement required, from $160.
  • F3 occurs on every cycle regardless of load size or distribution after confirming the machine is level.

Need Professional Help?

Find qualified technicians in your area for proper diagnostics and repair.

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