This is Amana's cheapest electric dryer stripped to the studs: a dial, a timer, 6.5 cubic feet, and zero digital parts to fail. The thermal fuse blows often enough that repair techs call it out by name, and when it does you'll need to replace both the fuse and sometimes the melted wall outlet, a $50 fix if you're handy or $200 if you call someone. Six years with one belt change is solid value at this price, and the mechanical guts mean you can actually fix it yourself with parts from any appliance store. Buy it if you need the cheapest thing that dries and you're comfortable with occasional fuse swaps; skip it if you want moisture sensing, wrinkle prevention, or anything resembling refinement.
This dryer exists for people who literally cannot install a vented model, apartment dwellers, closet stackers, anyone without access to an exterior wall. It does dry clothes without a vent, uses half the electricity, and runs quiet, but you pay for that flexibility with 90-minute cycles, bedding that tangles into damp wads, and three separate filters to clean every week. The control board can fail and run the drum nonstop for days until you physically unplug it, and some units develop odors that never go away. Buy it only if your living situation leaves no other option and you accept the maintenance burden as the cost of doing laundry at home.