This 7.3-cubic-foot dryer handles king comforters and stops when clothes are actually dry, not when a timer says so, which is rarer than it should be. The sensor tech works well and the app control is genuinely useful if you run loads between errands, but LG dryers across the lineup share a pattern of thermistor and control board failures that can strike in the first year or two, turning a working machine into an expensive cold tumbler. If you need the capacity and features and can stomach a potential early repair bill, it delivers when it works; if you want a dryer you don't think about for a decade, look at simpler models with longer proven track records.
A roomy 7.4 cu ft dryer with AI sensors, steam cycles, and smart-home hooks that one owner called the best they'd owned for quiet operation and capacity. The filter assembly feels cheap, and LG dryers broadly have scattered control-board failures (one viral post described a unit that ran nonstop for four weeks when the relay stuck) plus rhythmic clicking noises some trace to drum design. If you draw a good unit, you'll likely get years of quiet, spacious service; if you don't, you're stuck in LG's slow warranty queue with no data proving this model dodges the category's quality-control lottery.