Great thread. You opened a pandora's box.
Lets see, Mom had a 1950's Speed Queen that Dad fixed and fixed kept it running until 1969 when it finally died. I hated that machine, I found it boring and LOUD. Next was a 1969 M. Wards Norge that had a huge capacity, like 20lbs with a continuous lint filtering system...but that washer was LOUD too. Sometime in a mid 70's was a new Speed Queen that was ok but smaller capacity, not so loud. That lasted into the mid 80's when Mom got a cool TOP filter-flo. The first great washer we ever owned. After it started leaking oil, another GE and it started leaking oil only after 5 years of use. The last machine my Mom bought before she passed on was one of the last Dependable Care Maytags that were made, a true Maytag and is the one I own now. I seem to remember nothing but LOUD washers that you could hear a mile away, I thought it was embarrassing whenever company came over, esp. the Speed Queen monster. Like a Toyota, you couldn't kill a Speed Queen.
As I wrote in my profile, my babysitter had the best washer ever...to this day I wish I had it. Early 60's Kenmore with the different colored control panel, scrubber cap, and lint filter. Oh and don't forget the Salvo!! KEWL!
Grandmother (Dads mom) had an early 60's Frigdaire. Loved that up and down action.
Grandma, Mom's mom, had a wringer washers as there was no indoor plumbing in the farm house at all. Oh the memories of washday. Drawing the water from the cistern, heating it on the stove in buckets (usually 4-6 large buckets of hot boiling water mixed with 3 buckets of cold water) and poured into the Western Auto Wizard wringer washer. Fab was the detergent. More buckets of water was pulled from the cistern for the two wash tubs for rinsing, the same wash tubs that we bathed in on Saturday nights (no I'm not kidding here). The last tub of rinse water she would put in Final Touch. [Water was NEVER wasted, after finishing the wash, the wash water was used to wash down the porch and the rinse water used to water the plants around the house and yard...yes plants do thrive on Final Touch rinse water!] All clothes were hung out on the line, or on the porch, no matter the weather. This process took all morning with an early start, right after breakfast, no later than 8:00am. Tuesday's was ironing day, and that would take all day. Life on the farm in northern Arkansas. It was the best. Move over Beverly Hillbillies, you had nothing on us. Life was good!!!