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It's difficult to come to one conclusion on which washer is the "best" as everyone has different qualities they like to see in a washer. No washer is perfect, they all have their strong and weaker points.
As for me: I have to agree with many that the Frigidaire 1-18 is a real winner. I have found it cleans well, clears the tub of suds in flash when it begins to spins, rinses very well with a long spray rinse (available in warm as well!) and I never got y out of balance. Cons: lint collection is so-so and difficult to clean the lint filter, at least in comparison to some other brands. The biggest downside for me is lack of rollover in a too heavily loaded tub, especially with hard fabrics such as jeans. things bob up and don't get pulled down. the optional fabric softener actually helps to prevent this from happening, to a degree, by holding the clothes down as they attempt to rise up near the agitator. With normal sized mixed loads, the Frigidaire is a WONDERFL well engineered machine. Not known for reliability, though. Always got top rating in Consumer Reports for washingy, but consistently ranked below average in repairs/reliability. I love miy 1-18's with a passion.
GE Filter-Flo, versatile, unsurpassed lint removal, extraordinarily easy to clean lint filter, holds a lot of clothes and rolls them even in an overload situation. Downside: The ones I have had tend to get out of balance without much provocation, accompanied by severe banging and sometimes walking. Noisy fill and spin. Real classic machines and a real winner at getting clean, lint free laundry. Despite the loud spinning, but soothing and calming agitation sounds. A real work horse of a machine.
Whirlpool Belt Drive. My parents had a 60 or 61 model-- Imperial Mark XII. Coolest control panel I can ever remember. Fluorescent lights backlight the controls. Color coordinated controls, as well. Each of the 10 buttons had a color next to it, and you just turned the cycle knob toward that color until it would stop at the appropriate place as determined by the button you had depressed. Offered a wide range of temperatures, not only cold warm and hot, but lukewarm. Love the discrete interval advancement of the timer. Timer is stationary, until the next interva, then silently moves (and visibly moves) to its next interval station. Seemed cool and spooky to me when I was a small child. Seemed as if the machine was alive and operating its own controls (which it was!) Comforting sound as it agitated. Downsides: Not good at rinsing. I remember seeing suds left in the bottom of the tub frequently, and my mom would have to re-rinse them. Worse machine my mom ever had at staying in balance. Frequently she would have to run downstairs to turn it off as is walked across the smooth concrete basement floor. Sometimes to the extend it was pulling on its hoses. The "Surgilator" agitator gave good roll over. the lint filter caught good amounts of lint in its brushes, but a little difficult to get completely clean. A fun, impressive looking machines, built from quality and heavy materials, with many amenities engineered into it.
The White-Westinghouse" front loaders. From the original Westinghouse Laundromat design. The most ingratiating washer I ever owned. You just wanted to pick it up and hug it. So fun to watch the clothes tumble. Got the clothes clean and fresh smelling. Really cool with a startlingly loud click when the gigantic spin solenoid grabbed and tightened the spin belt against the pulley with the tub almost instantly from tumble to full speed spin... good spray rinse and two full rinses after. Once in a while it did get out of balance and banged. The other downside is clothes sometimes came out tangled as the tub did not periodically reverse as more modern front loaders do. A fun, fun machine...mesmerizing to watch (better than color TV!) Saved lots of water and detergent. I miss it.
Best looking control panels? In my opinion General Electric and Westinghouse both had some beautiful control panels with their polished and brushed aluminum/chrome.
Have yet to own a Norge, Kelvinator, Maytag, etc. Would love to.
Most unique washer? One of the contenders is the Bendix Economat. My parents had one before I came along. They told me of its unusual rubber tub that came in from the sides, closed in on the clothes and squeezed the water out in lieu of spinning. Bendix should have called it the Anaconda washer.)