Neppy Impressions
It's noisier than I expected. Not exactly loud, but it has a husky rumble when tumbling, and sometimes clatters, squeaks, thuds, and vibrates during spin. The pump sounds like a Neppy frontloader.
The lid cannot, of course, be open more than a crack during fill due to the water flowing through the lid liner via jets aimed at the rear edge. Even the water flow for flushing the bleach & softener cups channels through the lid, and flows into the dispensers via "shower heads" set into the corners of the lid liner. The softener dispenser doesn't flush very well. The water flow is more of a trickle than a power-flush, leaving some softener remains behind. This may be objectionable if one doesn't want *any* softener at all in the next load ... it would have to be flushed manually or wiped with a cloth or paper towel. I haven't yet tried LCB (and rarely use it anyway) ... but I suspect the bleach dispenser may have a similar glitch ... which is a more serious potential issue.
Washing action seems perfectly adequate on the four loads done thus far ... although wash time is shorter than I expected at Medium soil level (default for most cycles). There are pauses in the tumbling pattern, longer pauses on less-aggressive cycles. As the video clips illustrate, the clothes are lifted pretty high up on the rollover, and shifted/rolled laterally as well. There is some tangling, but not as much as I expected, perhaps on-par with the Calypso. I've had large loads of jeans (8 pairs) come out of the F&P tangled about the same as the 5 pairs from the Neppy.
The final rinse fills to about the center-hubs of the tumblers, as does the bulky cycle. The cycle can be changed on-the-fly, so a workaround for more wash-water is to start on Bulky then switch to another cycle when fill is complete.
It has an interesting balance routine. Tumbling does not reverse, since reversing the motor shifts the drive to spin. For balance/distribution adjustments, it tumbles for a few seconds, which mixes the clothes and shoves them up to one side of the basket. When shifting to spin, the tumblers turn for a moment in the opposite direction which moves the load back toward the center axis of the basket.
ATC cold is a balmy 85°F!
There is no rinse/spin selection! Perhaps Maytag's marketing department concluded that the average consumer doesn't use rinse/spin. Running after-the-fact extra rinses would have to be done via a full cycle (Quick or Eco). Or manually by starting a wash, then canceling for spin-only.