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Amana NTW4519 Top Load Washer vs Speed Queen TC5

Honest head-to-head from real owner consensus
Speed Queen TC5 comes out ahead overall (8.4 vs 5.2), but the breakdown below shows where each one wins.
Dimension by dimension
 Amana NTW4519 Top Load WasherSpeed Queen TC5
Reliability & Durability 3.3 8.6
User Sentiment 6.9 7.8
Complaint Severity 6.2 7.4
Consensus Strength 1.1 6.2
Value for Money 4.5 7.7
Owner Advocacy 4.0 8.9
Amana NTW4519 Top Load Washer

This sub-$700 Whirlpool-built basic washer ships with a documented control board defect: the water level sensor fails and locks the drain pump into continuous operation, sometimes starting itself in the middle of the night to run empty. The $225 board replacement plus labor costs more than buying a used machine, and the failure hits reliably at 12-18 months, confirmed by techs as a known service bulletin issue. Even if you dodge that sensor lottery, the auto-sensing chronically underfills, leaving clothes half-dry during wash. Save another $200 for a machine without a systematic failure mode baked into the design.

Speed Queen TC5

The TC5 is a commercial laundromat machine shrunk to fit your house, with a metal transmission, full tub of water, and an agitator that actually beats dirt out of clothes instead of gently tumbling them. Owners who can live with the jet-engine spin cycle report flawless performance for a decade or more, handling everything from baby clothes to muddy work gear without the mold, odor, or three-hour cycles that plague modern front-loaders. At $1,649 you're paying for longevity over features: no app, no steam, just a dial and decades of service. Skip it if you want quiet or eco-friendly; buy it if you're done replacing washers every five years and don't mind your laundry room sounding like a laundromat.