low levels are "saved $$" for laundry managers
Hi Steve,
what you wrote about low levels and bearing is indeed true about "new millennium" average household fronloaders. Not only the "el cheapo" ones .... but sadly expensive brands as Bosch/Siemens nowadays are into this trend. Bearings are "melted" into the outer tub and can't be replaced.
This is not the case of modern heavy duty machines or vintage household ones. Not only Mieles, but even ASKO, Zanussi, AEGs, Constructas, Bosches... Philco/Bendix household machines were so sturdy that were used even as small commercial ones
Those machines lasted for ages, despite they rinsed full loads of towels up to five times each wash with a half door high level. They hadn't modern inbalance controls, yet survived lots of OOB spins ... but they costed much more than recent 200--->500 € machines. Launderess just wrote it
So I think : from our point of view we hate low levels ... but from a laundry plant or coin-op manager one low levels are a great feature to save on water/power bills . They even use some acids (peracetic)as rinse enhancers, to neutralize alcalins .
I' ve touched just once a SQ, but can say they much stronger than Duets or Nexxt