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Miele W1 Washer vs Speed Queen TR7 Top Load Washer

Honest head-to-head from real owner consensus
It's close — Miele W1 Washer (8.2) and Speed Queen TR7 Top Load Washer (7.9) score nearly the same. Pick on the trade-offs that matter to you.
Dimension by dimension
 Miele W1 WasherSpeed Queen TR7 Top Load Washer
Reliability & Durability 8.0 8.0
User Sentiment 9.5 9.0
Complaint Severity 7.3 7.4
Consensus Strength 4.1 3.6
Value for Money 5.6 4.5
Owner Advocacy 8.9 8.8
Miele W1 Washer

This compact front-loader built its name on machines that genuinely ran 15-20 years with almost no repairs, the kind of longevity that makes $2000-3000 feel reasonable. The newer W2 and Nova models show a troubling slide: rattling and ticking noises on brand-new units, TwinDos detergent systems clogging within months, and service reps dismissing legitimate complaints as non-defects while refusing warranty coverage. The 2.4 cubic foot drum is the other constraint, perfect for tight spaces and couples but forcing American families into multiple loads for king bedding or bulky items a standard washer handles in one. Buy an older W1 if you can find it and need the compact footprint; skip current stock unless you're prepared to fight for warranty service or pay steep out-of-pocket repair bills.

Speed Queen TR7 Top Load Washer

Speed Queen builds this washer with commercial laundromat guts, all-steel construction, simple mechanical controls, a 25-year design life, but the original 2018 TR7 cleaned so poorly that Consumer Reports called the factory thinking the test unit was broken. It wasn't. A 2019 update improved things to adequate, yet stain removal still lags competitors at this price, requiring more pre-treatment and manual fiddling with water levels. Buy it if you want a tank that will outlast your mortgage and you're willing to do some of the heavy lifting on tough stains. Skip it if you expect a thousand-dollar washer to handle laundry effortlessly on its own.