Quote: "that outer tub looks large for the basket doesnt that waste water? David"
When GE swtiched from a solid wash tub to a perforated tub, they really didn't change the construction of the machine that much. So with a solid tub, you had it susspended on the transmittion holding the water. When GE went perforated, they put the tub still susspended on the transmission within the old outer tub, so filling both takes beaux coudles of water. The GE outer tub is stationary and basically part of the cabinet. In other manufacturer's desgins, they made the outer tub "float" with the inner tub within the cabinet. This allowed the inner tub to be a couple inches to less than an inch from the outer tub, using much less water. With the GE, they had to leave all that room in which the tub can swing around in during spin.
When a GE goes out of balance, it does not shut down. Instead, the belt and the clutch prevent the tub coming up to speed, and the wash tub swings around within the outer tub, many time scraping the outer tub and chipping the porcelain off and rusting around the top.
This is also why the tub boot looks like some kind of black, warped, horned crown that maybe Voldermort or Hillary Clinton would wear. The outer edge has to clamp to the stationary outer tub, while the inner edge clamps to the transmission. All the horns inbetween allow maximum flexibility.
OK, so maybe George Bush wears one too...
