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GE GFD65 Electric Dryer vs Speed Queen DC5 Electric Dryer

Honest head-to-head from real owner consensus
Speed Queen DC5 Electric Dryer comes out ahead overall (8.5 vs 7.2), but the breakdown below shows where each one wins.
Dimension by dimension
 GE GFD65 Electric DryerSpeed Queen DC5 Electric Dryer
Reliability & Durability 6.7 8.0
User Sentiment 8.8 9.7
Complaint Severity 6.8 7.0
Consensus Strength 2.4 5.3
Value for Money 4.8 6.7
Owner Advocacy 7.5 9.5
GE GFD65 Electric Dryer

The GFD65 is a spacious, energy-efficient workhorse that does one thing well: dry clothes without fuss, especially if you stick to the mechanical-dial base models that skip the fragile electronics. Step up to touchscreen controls and you inherit a real problem: control boards fail within a few years, leaving the drum spinning nonstop until you unplug the machine, and replacement boards cost $300 when they're available at all. Buy the cheapest dial-equipped version for a decade of boring reliability, or pay extra for features that might total the dryer before it's paid off.

Speed Queen DC5 Electric Dryer

Speed Queen builds this dryer like a laundromat workhorse: heavy steel, mechanical timer, heating elements you can swap yourself in five minutes. The catch is you're flying blind without a moisture sensor, guessing at cycle times on every load, and one 2022 unit caught fire mid-cycle from a confirmed malfunction. Buy it if you want a 20-year tank you can fix with a screwdriver and accept babysitting timed cycles. Skip it if auto-dry convenience or modern safety engineering matter more than repairability.