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LG DLGX4001W Gas Dryer vs Miele T1 Heat Pump Dryer

Honest head-to-head from real owner consensus
Miele T1 Heat Pump Dryer comes out ahead overall (6.9 vs 6.5), but the breakdown below shows where each one wins.
Dimension by dimension
 LG DLGX4001W Gas DryerMiele T1 Heat Pump Dryer
Reliability & Durability 6.0 6.7
User Sentiment 3.8 6.5
Complaint Severity 7.0 7.1
Consensus Strength 3.5 2.9
Value for Money 6.6 5.3
Owner Advocacy 8.4 7.8
LG DLGX4001W Gas Dryer

A feature-rich gas dryer with genuinely useful AI sensing and steam dewrinkling that works well day-to-day, until the control board relay sticks in the on position and the drum spins indefinitely through the night. The relay failure is documented across multiple units: the dryer ignores the cycle end, ignores the door opening, and keeps tumbling until you unplug it. The fix is a $70 board and a YouTube video, so it's survivable if you're handy, but it's the kind of flaw that makes you second-guess the whole appliance. If you want the capacity and smart features and don't mind occasional DIY repairs, it's capable. If you want a dryer that just stops when it's supposed to, buy something simpler.

Miele T1 Heat Pump Dryer

Miele's heat pump dryers once defined longevity, T1 owners routinely saw 15 years of quiet, 120V plug-and-play service, but the warranty collapse from ten years to two tells you everything about where the engineering went. Recent buyers report F47 and F99 error codes within months, and Miele support has turned glacial when owners need help. The three-hour cycle is heat pump physics, not a flaw, but you're paying £1200, 2500 for a machine the manufacturer itself only trusts for 24 months. Hunt down a used T1 if you find one; otherwise, Bosch delivers five-year coverage at half the cost.