I can't get over how cheap these machines are. I would have thought that these commercial grade machines would be considerably more expensive than the consumer versions.
When I was growing up, a friend of my mothers had a coin-op solid tub Speed Queen commercial machine in his basement. I asked him about it and he said that he got it really cheap from an old laundromat, he just modified the slider so he wouldn't have to put coins in.
I thought it was really quaint to have a coin-op machine in a normal home, but it did the job quite nicely and worked just fine.
I was kind of under the impression that commercial machines were built to a different standard, rather than just being coin-op versions of consumer machines. Maybe that impression is wrong?
I can't get over even how cheap the front loading commercial machines are, they're even cheaper than Speed Queens. I don't know how an owner would trust their business with them, unless they just couldn't afford to replace a broken machine.
(Maybe Whirlpool prices them cheap because of the volume of machines they produce?) I need some clarification on this! I apologize if I sound ignorant!
Peter, I agree about the higher water levels... I'll gladly take my business to a laundromat which has superior machines.
So, what is the motivation for buying top loaders in a modern laundromat these days? It is just cost and machine density?