This 8-cubic-foot dryer dries clothes gently and handles bedding well, but the blower wheel traps lint deep inside where you can't reach it without disassembling the machine. Some owners tear down the entire unit twice a year to clean blades that shouldn't collect debris in the first place, a flaw Electrolux acknowledged in a service bulletin only after shipping thousands of units. Others burn through multiple service calls chasing airflow that never meets spec, even with extended warranties covering the parts. Buy a Whirlpool or LG instead and spend the savings on detergent.
A no-frills electric dryer that dries clothes and nothing else, built on the same mechanical platform Whirlpool has used for decades. The heating element will burn out eventually (typically after several years of regular use), but replacement runs under $50 and takes an hour if you're handy. Skip this one: little enthusiasm, Maytag's quality reputation has slipped from its glory days, and competitors at the same price point offer better long-term reliability without asking you to become an appliance technician.