Yes, the washer has retractable wheels in the back, they are operated by a lever in the back. That seems to work fine as well. The labels are pretty much toast, the dryer's is completely unreadable, and the washer's is not worth saving, I think they will look better with the labels removed. I cleaned a bit more on the dryer today, trying to remove the layer of tar, and it's just unbelievable what is coming off. Seriously people, when you smoke you're putting all that in your lungs! I am going to pick up some ammonia to clean with, I just finished off a bottle of cheap glass cleaner (with ammonia) and I've got a long way to go. The dryer drum is really nice, one spot about 3" across that looks like maybe something wet was left on it and the paint started to lift/bubble, but not bad. The washer has a bit of hard water staining in the tub (not too bad though), but both seem to have seen relatively little use. The timer knob on the washer looks to be out of whack a little, it won't fill until between the 8 and 10 minute wash, where it should be filling between 12 and 14, it doesn't drain until it's into the rinse, rinses in the spin portion, and spins on "off", shutting off just before the start of the next cycle. It runs through the cycle fine, just the knob is out of tune. The dryer is pretty quick for running on 120v, it takes around an hour for half a load from a normal size washer, and around 1 1/2 hours for a load from it's mate. Not bad at all in my opinion, seeing as our Maytag Performa gas dryer upstairs takes about 1 1/2 hours for an average load. The dryer runs super smooth and quiet, only a slight noise from the front of the drum. I am going to get them cleaned up and offer them to friends who are currently using portables from rent a center, basically the same dryer!. If they don't want them, I may just keep them. It's nice being able to vent the dryer inside in the winter for the heat and humidity, which we can't do with the gas dryers (no 220v in the laundry rooms for a standard electric dryer)