Quiet enough to forget it's running and thorough enough to handle daily loads, but condensation drying leaves plastics and cup bottoms wet every single time. The rack tines sit too close together for thick stoneware or oversized plates, and a handful of pump failures just after the warranty expires. If you're willing to towel off stragglers and your dishes are standard-sized, it's a sensible buy at half the cost of premium models. If bone-dry results matter or you own chunky dinnerware, the daily annoyance will wear you down.
This is the dishwasher you buy once and never replace, the kitchen appliance equivalent of a mechanical watch that gets passed down. It cleans baked-on casserole without pre-rinsing, runs quieter than your refrigerator, and the AutoOpen drying leaves glassware spotless. You'll pay two to three times what a Bosch costs, and if you live outside a major metro, finding a technician when the circulation pump eventually fails means long waits and expensive parts. Buy it if you're staying put for 15 years and have local service access, or if you simply want the best and can budget for the repair reality. Otherwise, Bosch delivers most of the magic at half the cost.