I didn't intend my reply to be a snap back.. I was excited when those units came to town... I just wasn't expecting the problems I found when I started taking things apart..
I was looking through the Wascomat Crossover installation and operating manuals and found that default cycle selection, wash and rinse water levels, number of pre-washes and number of rinses can be programmed..
It's a rather simple machine, you load your poopoo undies, select the temperature and press start...
I'm seeing this machine run from 1400-1800.. We're going to inquire and see if maybe I can't get something like this...
If I'm not mistaken, the 3.5 cu.ft. is bigger than what the SpeedQueens would have and is considerably larger than the Mieles..
From what I have seen the unit has a 10 year warranty... With 15,000+ cycles this is the kind of reliability I'm looking for... (The Warranty I'm trying to pin down to a direct answer.)
But the search gets dumb for the fact that I keep looking for a reverse tumble dryer... GE makes a few models that have the tangle assist, electrolux has one but its in the cool down mode only, wascomat makes dryers that reverse but I don't need 40# capacity.. I looked at the GE, then I see the RightHeight washer/dryer pairs and its like why not get that set and be done? But I don't see any reviews or opinions offered on that line... I mean I see a lot of speculation but not a lot of pairs out in houses.. laundry.reviewed has the lower-end rightheight unit, but nothing on the higher-end units.
The question first on my mind is what is the transportation trail of the units? Where does the Crossover come from? The RightHeight units are from Appliance Park, right? The Miele's are from Germany and SpeedQueens are from Wisconsin? LG and Samsung are Chinese made, no?
The next question is what can I buy to avoid planned obsolescence? The crossover seems to be the best contender for the price. How long would the GE's last? The Maytags? LG's? The speedqueens and Mieles will last a long time, thats a given, but look at the cost.
The third question is about water usage in both level and temps. The Crossover is adjustable for level, the manual says the hot valve is open on hot fill, so its not dumbed down by epa guidelines. Speedqueen is the same for temps, right? What about the rest? I mean the idea of using an internal heater doesn't bother me but why pay to heat the water that was already heated to begin with? The biggest thing is I want the clothes to get wet... I want flushed clothes not moist.
I think the crossover might be the best decision for me for the washer, but I think one of the GE dryers with steam and detangle would be the best choice... I just have to get over the fact that I wouldn't have a matched set. It really is too bad the crossover dryer doesn't have reverse tumble.
Anyways I have emails sent out to my suppliers.. We will see what the week brings.[this post was last edited: 11/30/2014-18:02]