Here's two loaves of bread I made earlier (UKWorkshop eat your heart out).
NB the loaf on the the LHS is white (with 10% brown flour - needs must) and on the RHS is a medium 100% wholemeal. The wholemeal loaf stands taller than the white one and is a slight "improvement" too. Most recipes will make a bigger white loaf using the same quantity of ingredients compared to a smaller wholemeal one and that's generally my experience too. The difference here, is that the white one is using a "quick" recipe (2 hours vs 4 hours) and the wholemeal is a "normal" (5 hours vs 3 hours) recipe, so waiting yields a better result.
I use a Panasonic Breadmaker (bought from Amazon recently for about £119). Before that, I had an Aldi bread maker which eventually failed - in the end it cost nothing although I bought it on promotion for £40. I used to think that all breadmakers were essentially the same however I now realise that there are small differences. They are like small imported lathes/bandsaws etc. all look very similar but there are small differences.
The Aldi was pretty decent and probably much like any other. Panasonic is well known (and may have been one of the first to "popularise" making bread with a machine e.g. about my level of cooking). When did you last say "I cooked the Sunday roast in my 'Bosch' oven" - it really doesn't matter - the Panasonic is much quieter.
The Aldi one was "free" because after 3 months, I had trouble with the paddle being a bit stiff to rotate by hand. The Help Line won't give any advice that's not in the manual, but would only offer a complete refund (and you get to keep the product) because they don't keep any spares. (Like the Aldi's bandsaw that's made by Scheppach)? I discovered that the paddle "eases" easily with 5 minute soak with washing up liquid in the bowl - about a week later!
FWIW the Panasonic machines are not all the same. As well as having a Rye paddle or a nut dispenser (even a separate yeast dispenser on some other models) there are other differences. Mine monitors the ambient temperature as well as the temperature of the bowl and varies the time of the individual steps(mid range) - but the total time is always the same specified time with a countdown to when it's done. So waiting longer yields a better result (for me). Mine leaves a hole in the bottom from the paddle - but I don't mind. The included Panasonic recipe booklet is a good source of dozens (50+) recipes - a book I also have (Linda Collister), was a gift and hasn't been used much.
The machine makes M, L and XL loaves and which I think of as small, medium and large. When cool, they get sliced and put in the freezer in bags. I use dried yeast (Allinsons) from a tin and I don't use sachet because they cost more and most recipe's want 3/4, 1 or 1 1/4 teaspoons of dried yeast depending on the size vs 7g packets. I generally only use strong flour from the supermarket - what's on offer. Stats: White is 560g and Wholemeal 620g and both are "M" loaves with same quantities of ingredients but with 20ml (20g) more water specified for the Wholemeal recipe.
I also have circular saw for bread (it's real purpose is for slicing meats) and I'm looking for my first bandsaw for bread! (homer)