To Timborrow
Hey Tim,
If you haven't bought a machine yet, just don't go out and buy the first thing you see, you could really regret it.
I grew up in a family of five, we did about ten loads a week using a 12 lb GE Filter-Flo washer. We eventually replaced it with an early 80's Inglis (Aka Downmarket Whirlpool) washer which held up until I moved out.
Let me put this into perspective... Let's say that your typical sub-$1000 GE/Whirlpool/Maytag/WCI machine has a rated specification of about 3,000 cycles.
Assuming 10 loads a week for your family of four, that's 520 cycles a year. With that kind of usage, the machine will last approximately six years before it will be outside of its rated specification.
Then take Miele, which rates their machines at 10,000 cycles. With the same workload, that machine will last about 19 years before it will be outside of its rated specification.
Then take Speed Queen/Huebsch, which rates their machines to 25,000 cycles. With that same workload, it will take 48 years before reaching that specification.
Then again, they're not designed for a domestic workload, they're designed for a much heavier commercial one. In a small hotel, bed and breakfast or other hospitality use, they could see up to 16 cycles a day.
Even doing 16 cycles a day, it could run for just a bit over four years before needing overhauling. In comparison, a 3,000 cycle machine would last about six months, then it would be disposable because they're not meant to be repaired.
That kind of puts things into perspective, doesn't it?