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This is how the post 2017 models act. Look at all of the sudsy water before and even after the spray rinse. Also, the poor aim of the fill flume during the spray rinse. The deep rinse was still very sudsy. This would have been a much lesser problem with a high speed spin and spray rinse. Even less so if Speed Queen properly aimed the fill flume for better coverage. Even more so if the spray rinse was 1 minute. All of these combined would eliminate the need of a second deep rinse while saving water, electricity, and time.

 
The TC5 guesses the amount of water per load, there is no variable user controlled pressure switch :

 

 

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Whirlpool and others do this, they sense the load then add water for what the machine believes is correct for the clothes. Cycles like bulky can of course add some extra water to the final equation, and deep fill defaults to a full tub, however there can and are errors. A machine can not determine the right amount of water like a human can. A human can watch the machine fill, and set the pressure switch to the level that just covers the clothes. Overtime a user knows exactly at what point a pressure switch satisfy for a given setting, knowing where to set the dial based on where the clothes top out in the wash basket.  

 

 

Load sensing is not 100% accurate or full proof. In fact it wastes water in Speed Queens case because there is a tendency to over fill to avoid the possibility of clothing damage from under filling.
 
worse than having load sensing

How is it worse? I know what the levels are, I listed them before.

Eco cycle = 12.5 gallons per fill or 14.5 gallons with deep fill.
Permanent Press/Heavy Duty = 14.5 gallons per fill or 19 gallons with deepfill.
Delicates/Bulky = 16 gallons per fill or 19 gallons with deep fill.

I wash full loads, or my idea of a full load, and it's the perfect amount to cover the clothes/sheets/towels whatever. When I bought it, I ran an empty load to clean it. I guess it shouldn't have filled at all?

You guys really are creating issues that don't exist.
 
Maytag

BTW, even my old Maytag LA211 would fill over half full when set to the lowest point on it's continuously variable water level. Still too much if you just need a couple items washed. So I stuck to full loads.
 
Right, but what if I wanted to wash a small load? What if I only wanted 5 or 6 gallons in a fill for a few hand towels? Or just a bunch of socks? 12.5 gallons is to much. In fact, as mentioned by Dadoes, the load will clump up and become unbalanced. A proper water level just covers the garments when lossley loaded.

 

 

My preference is a manual variable water level control that goes from 1/6th of a tub to a full tub.

 

 

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Kenmore 80/90 series had the best IMO.
 
 
There's no information stated anywhere that TC5 has auto-sensing.  The cycle matrix chart states that the various cycles fill to specific level in inches and gallons (presumably measured on an empty tub, not considering what clothing may absorb and displace in tub volume).

TC5003WN (models AWN632SP116CW01, AWN632SP116TW01, ZWN632SP116CW01) absolutely has a pressure switch per the parts diagram document that I have.  It's on the water valve mounting bracket, not in the console.  And of course, there a pressure tube from the tub to the switch.

Pressure Sensor:  Photo 1, Item 12.

Pressure Sensor P/N:  Photo 2, Ref 12.

Pressure Tubing assembly:  Photo 3, Items 12, 13, 14, 15, 16 (includes a shadow illustration of the pressure switch and the mounting bracket location at the rear corner beneath the machine top).

Pressure Tubing assembly P/Ns:  Photo 4, Refs 12, 13, 14, 15, 16.

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