When I bought my house, the previous owners left the washer and dryer. The dryer is fine, but I hate the washer. It's a top loading HE unit, and it ALWAYS throws UE (uneven) errors with almost every load, no matter how small. I even ran it once without anything in it, and it still threw an uneven error on the spin cycle. I've verified it's level, so that's not it. I've even found a few YouTube videos on people having the same problem doing things like putting in springs to try and secure the tub better. I ordered a new set of suspension rods to see if that fixes it.
And the stupid thing is, when it gets the uneven error, it will try (up to three times I think) to add more water and slosh the clothes around to try and even it out itself, so it ends up wasting more water.
I looked into replacing it, and found where Speed Queen made some good washers, but then read they changed the design a few years ago. I then found some video or article saying Maytag has a commercial coinless unit (I think somebody mentioned it earlier in this thread) so I'd probably check out Speed Queen and Maytag.
I'm all for saving energy and water where it really makes sense, but when it comes to household appliances that can't even clean a load of clothes, I call BS. I remember my Mom's old washer from the 70s. Clothes came out clean and I never remember that thing causing problems. It ran forever. I think I'd pay big bucks to get an old washer like that just to have something that works and does its job without all the energy saving crap these new appliances have. Give me a basic washer that fills up the tub with water, agitates the hell out of the clothes, and just works. Keep the rest of this HE crap boxed up in the warehouse for all I care.
EDIT: Almost forgot... if you have one of those washers (like mine) that weighs the clothes at the start to see how much water to use, but it doesn't put enough in, I read a good tip that works. Put the clothes in, then dump a bucket of water on them. That makes the washer think you've got a heavier load in there, so it fills the tub with more water.