Speed Queen Special Military Edition Washer

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Chetlaham

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What does everyone think of these? They seem to be that TR series which I am guessing will now move its way down the commercial lineup. I like the concept of having the temps built into the cycles, but I don't like the lack of water level selector unless the machine is load sensing.







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I like "simple", but that machine's a bit too stripped down for my tastes.
It looks like it was designed for a moron who grew up on a smartphone and cannot handle anything which takes some brain excersize unless it can be done on that tiny screen in their hand.
 
Chetlaham Is this for real oor is this a machine panel you made up? I would think an Army machine might have a camoflage cycle, a Navy one a whites cycle and blue cycle, and an Air Force one a blues cycle.

Nope, not made up, this is a real machine, hence why I included the Reddit link in addition to giving credit to whom it is due.

The PDF:

https://alliancelaundrysystems.wide...al_shortcode_generated=01jvmewb&x.app=portals

From Alliance's Website, scroll down:

https://speedqueencommercial.com/en-us/military/


A lot of the theoretical washer designs I envision and those that I have drawn up are based on "utilitarian design" and "utilitarian function" similar to the Speed Queen Special Military Washer above. A philosophy where bare minimum programmed function and simplicity is prioritized over frills, superfluous design, and bells and whistles. The machine has few functions, few options and limited flexibility but absolutely EXCELS at cleaning and rinsing heavily soiled fabrics. Longevity and ease of service are of course also added in.
 
That one looks like an oversimplified TC5. I'd rather choose my own temp for any cycle, And it looks like it only does a spray rinse in all cycles. Even has capacitive touch buttons.
In other words 5 eco cycles with different time an temps.

Then there is this model, which just seems like an older Speed Queen, rebadged as "military grade":
https://alliancelaundrysystems.wide...al_shortcode_generated=01jvmewb&x.app=portals
 
That one looks like an oversimplified TC5. I'd rather choose my own temp for any cycle, And it looks like it only does a spray rinse in all cycles. Even has capacitive touch buttons.
In other words 5 eco cycles with different time an temps.

Then there is this model, which just seems like an older Speed Queen, rebadged as "military grade":
https://alliancelaundrysystems.wide...al_shortcode_generated=01jvmewb&x.app=portals

You know, that is probably it. The model you linked is even worse, it doesn't have any water level control and no load sensing.

Considering that this model is a TR makes me think Speed Queen will gradually move the TR mechanism down the commercial line and discontinue the TC series. I hope not, but time will tell.
 
You know, that is probably it. The model you linked is even worse, it doesn't have any water level control and no load sensing.

Considering that this model is a TR makes me think Speed Queen will gradually move the TR mechanism down the commercial line and discontinue the TC series. I hope not, but time will tell.
What makes you think these are TR models? The first one claims to be 13 years old now, before the TR series existed, the one I linked is identical this, even has a mechanical timer.
https://www.ajmadison.com/cgi-bin/ajmadison/TV2000WN.html

Don't appear to be TR's at all, just marketing with "Military Edition". Something tells me that the military uses real commercial machines, like these:
batch-washer-updated-image-data-5127992.jpg
 
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