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Question about washing machines
My wife wants a washer with an agitator. Looks like Maytag and GE are the two that Lowes sells. What are your recent experiences with these washers with agitators? I'm not interested in the differences or opinions between with or without agitator, just recent experiences with agitators. Her mind is made up. Thanks.
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I am part of the cult that believes that there is nothing that compares to a Speed Queen but they do not sell these in Lowes or Home Depot. We got ours from DeSantis. They are the only brand where all of the components are made in the USA and these are the exact same machines that you see in most of the laundromats only without the coin slots.
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Our experience has been fantastic with Samsung Front Loaders. Going strong and about three years old and run daily.
I sign up for the online Consumer Report service everytime some appliance goes down the drain. It only costs $7 for a month then you can cancel. I believe they talked about the pros and cons of Agitator Vs Non-Agitator. This report helped me pick out the Samsung Models we have. Others have had no luck with Samsung, we bought the extended warranty which states if they can't fix it for any reason Home Depot will replace them. Interest-free for two years also. Good Luck. No Agitator and it only uses a little water on each load. |
We were having fun, no tension, a little kidding around.
Do we like agitators or not on this site? The answer is NO. |
No problem without the agitators. I think the wash time is longer and the water usage is less. Front loading is easier.
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That is what we have up north. Very few frills, solidly built, outstanding reputation, has an agitator. Speed Queen is carried by some “Mom and Pop” appliance stores. The Speed Queen website should have a “Store Locator” section. There are some old threads on here where Speed Queen was discussed. I tried to do a search so I could link that information. But my computer is a little squirrelly this morning so I gave up. |
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Where to Buy - Speed Queen - Home Laundry Equipment Consumer Reports review rate worse than Maytag or GE Speed Queen TR7 Review - Consumer Reports |
On a separate but somewhat related subject;
Maytag Repairman’s New Job Keeps Him Busy - The New York Times
Has anyone noticed that the Maytag repairman is now in several movies on the Hallmark channel. It is really hard for me to think of him as a romantic interest. I expect to see him running in place. Maytag Man Colin Ferguson on his New Hallmark "Fixer Upper Mystery" | MediaVillage |
We had a GE without an agitator that lasted 7 years. My wife never liked it, so we bought a new GE with agitator last year at Lowes. She likes it much better. It wasn't expensive, so if we get 6 to 8 years out of it that works for me.
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Speed Queen totally redesigned their machines in 2018. The company was allowed to sell their standard design through 2017 but then in 2018 the government regulation (that already affected other manufacturers) would kick in and they'd have to conform. They were allowed to sell through 2017 but then had to switch over to the new "conservation/efficiency" design.
I use a full tub of warm or hot water because I will never believe clothes get clean in 6 inches of water. i had a Bosch front loader up north and I hated it. I will keep this Speed Queen washer until I die. |
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Cold Versus Hot/Warm
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I personally believe facts matter, but I also recognize...that viewpoint isn't shared by everyone. |
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It is true that Cincinnati's great scientists at Proctor and Gamble have figured out how to dislodge and break down dirt in cold water, but many of us have been washing clothes and other things for decades and we have acute observation skills as well. |
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In his tell-all book Trust Me: I’m Lying, Media Manipulator Ryan Holiday writes: “I’m paid to deceive. My job is to lie to the media so they can lie to you. I cheat, bribe, and connive...I orchestrate these deceptions for...high-profile clients... I create and shape the news for them. Usually it’s a simple hustle. Someone pays me, I manufacture a story for them, and we trade it up the chain – from a tiny blog...to cable news and back again, until the unreal becomes real. I am a born skeptic and worked in IT long enough to know how easy this is to do and how often it is done. Believe whatever you want but remember it is just your interpretation of what you choose to believe and not necessarily the absolute truth. |
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I agree with your thoughts. I just read this and thought this is a good example of "clickbait" and skewed facts and headlines and content at odds.; How likely is an earthquake in the Midwest, South? The Big One could be coming |
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Of course some media attempt to skew what they purport to be facts...as we've seen on a national scale of late. :oops: Which is why those who actually care as to what the truth is, will do their own 'fact checking' from a myriad of sources...taking into account the overall veracity of those sources. Back to the point though, the 'fact' that Consumer Reports refuses ads from any industry/company and are transparent and go into detail as to how they test something, makes your original statement that "I don't believe anything that Consumer Reports has to say about anything"...quite interesting to say the least. While I may not always agree with them, I do so with the recognition that I'm looking from a very small and limited perspective...that being only my own experience(s). Which can be very misleading and limiting...for anyone But hey, everyone is entitled to their own opinions...just not their own facts. :ho: |
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Like I said believe whatever you like but don't think that just because you do everyone else is wrong. |
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