This front-loader delivers genuinely cleaner clothes and high-speed spins that cut dryer time, but the reliability ceiling is low. Bearings fail within two to five years, producing a roaring noise during spin and costing $700 to $1,000 to rebuild; drain pumps quit mid-cycle, and control boards die before the warranty expires. Buy it only if you accept the repair gamble and have a good local tech on speed dial, otherwise LG and Speed Queen offer steadier track records at similar price points.
GE built a front-loader with genuinely clever features, auto-dosing that actually works, a vent system that fights mold better than most, then strapped them to electronics that fail like clockwork. Inverter boards die at two to three years and frequently take the main control board with them, turning a $160 part into a $450 repair once you pay labor. Some three or four board replacements in the first few years, and GE's ten-year motor warranty covers parts only, leaving you with the $250-300 technician bill every time. Skip this unless you're getting a steep discount and extended labor coverage, or you enjoy maintaining a relationship with your appliance repair guy.