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Frigidaire Gallery French Door Refrigerator vs GE Side-by-Side Refrigerator

Honest head-to-head from real owner consensus
GE Side-by-Side Refrigerator comes out ahead overall (5.5 vs 3.1), but the breakdown below shows where each one wins.
Dimension by dimension
 Frigidaire Gallery French Door RefrigeratorGE Side-by-Side Refrigerator
Reliability & Durability 5.0 4.0
User Sentiment 0.5 8.3
Complaint Severity 7.5 7.1
Consensus Strength 1.7 1.6
Value for Money 2.9 4.1
Owner Advocacy 0.0 2.5
Frigidaire Gallery French Door Refrigerator

Frigidaire's Gallery line sits in the awkward middle: not cheap enough to forgive flaws, not premium enough to inspire confidence. The flex drawer that toggles between fridge and freezer modes is genuinely useful, and pre-2015 units earned their keep for a decade or more, but there's almost no data on current models. One brand-new unit arrived with oxidation spots on the stainless within a week, which shouldn't happen at any price point. If you need a French door fridge tomorrow and this one's on clearance, it won't ruin your life, but LG and Bosch have earned their reputations with years of owner feedback. This one's asking you to trust a thin resume.

GE Side-by-Side Refrigerator

GE built refrigerators that outlasted marriages and mortgages, but that company sold in 2016 and the new owner hasn't fixed the known problems. French-door models fail systematically: the fridge compartment won't hold safe temperatures (43-49°F when milk spoils at 40°F) while the freezer works fine, a sealed-system fault that costs as much as replacement. Basic top-freezer models without ice makers hold up better, but you're still buying a nameplate that once meant indestructible and now means service calls. If you find a pre-2000 unit secondhand, grab it; if you're buying new, the score reflects the gap between the badge and what actually arrives.