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.
This is Maytag's commercial laundromat dryer repackaged for your home, with a 7.4 cu. Ft. Drum, mechanical knobs instead of fragile touchscreens, and a warranty that runs five years on everything and ten on the motor. The problem is straightforward: not a single owner has surfaced online to confirm the thing actually lasts, so you're paying a premium for industrial-grade components with zero proof they deliver in residential use. Buy it if you trust Maytag's commercial reputation enough to gamble on an unproven model, or if that extended warranty gives you enough peace of mind to offset the silence.