My pleasure Mike.
Boy you said a mouthful about the weight of those Tags. The lid switch on ours also became stuck when it got older, and because of this, it would walk when a load was unbalanced. Pushing that machine back into place was a b**tch. In 1999, my parents replaced it with a Kenmore, which must have been about 100 pounds lighter. When the delivery men hauled the Tag out to the curb, they could not believe how heavy it was. Originally I thought these guys must be new on the job, but then again, how often do delivery men actually get to haul a Maytag out of a house? To my knowledge, our family was the first in our neighborhood to replace one. Clearly those guys must have brought a few new Tags to peoples' homes, but I assume that newer Tags were a bit lighter by 1999, and probably had been for a few years.
As far as the Maytag/Speed Queen question: If you combined a Maytag console with the Speed Queen agitator, that would be one beautiful washer.
I always thought the Speed Queens washed more vigorously. There was a lot more thrashing due to the protruding fins on the agitator shaft. However the Maytags seemed to have more rollover, and greater water wave currents perhaps due to the flexible fins. This was especially true on the Medium setting. I remember when my mother washed a small bathroom rug, the waves that resulted made the introduction to Gilligan's Island look like nothing.
Have a good one,
James