Steve - welcome to the club! Great to see another UK member on here

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Those Servis Rainwave machines look hopeless to me - can't see how the paddles can pick up laundry at all!! They're literally just bumps in the drum aren't they? I agree with you about the Jetsystem, it is a good system although I have found that it certainly doesn't help with sudsing regardless of how much detergent you've used. Have found that the ART system on my AEG (which is similar to the Jetsystem) is, whilst fun (especially when it fills for the rinses whilst turning at distribution speed, even to the high levels if you press Sensitive), it really does hinder rinsing performance, and I feel it doesn't rinse as well as my Miele with it's deep rinses; although the AEG is still miles ahead of that dang Bosch that lives in my mother's laundry room downstairs which just seems to refuse to use any water!
Tom,
What year is your Creda from? They certainly were fun machines - although not too great at washing or rinsing. The identical Hotpoint machines from the 80s to mid 90s are very popular here - they were about as popular as Whirlpool DD's are in the USA so everybody knows at least 2 or 3 people that have one. The separate heating phases on the timer; as well as allowing it to heat to different temps (a lower temp as the cycle goes on etc), it also gives a profile washing effect - i.e. heat a little, tumble, heat a little more, tumble, heat even more, tumble. The drums on those machines though were infamous for ripping and snagging things - they were on Watchdog (a consumer TV programme ove rhere) about 10 years ago with a Washing Line of Shame, where people would keep sending in all their clothes damaged by Hotpoint/Creda washers and washer dryers until Hotpoint sorted it out! Of course, it never got sorted out (GEC, who owned Hotpoint at the time, had a lot more power over a tiny consumer programme on BBC1) and our 1998 Hotpoint with the same drum still snagged & damaged quite a lot of fabrics. They are also infamous here for leaving oily marks on whites!
My Miele doesn't have holes in the end of the paddles; however it has them on top of the slopes just before the tips square up, if that makes sense - I think from what you're saying it's the same as your W1986. I must say that Miele's Hydromatic scoop and ladle system seems to be the best out there so far - there is definitely a lot more splashing and with smaller loads you can see the water being brought up to the top and dropped. My AEG paddles are sort of funnel shaped, with holes in the end and that seems to be fairly good at picking and throwing up water too; although not as good as the Miele, but then the Advanced Rinse Technology recirculation pump probably makes up for that somewhat.
Bearpeter,
All the high-spin commercial washers sold here seem to have a wash & shower system as such; although for some reason bolt-down standard spin machines don't. I have seen high-spin Ipsos before and really do like the way they go up to spin - just start tumbling slowly and gradually increase speed over a minute whilst it drains, and by the time it's reached 500rpm and still speeding up the water has gone. Very impressive.
Take care all,
Jon