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LG WashTower vs LG WT7900HBA Top Load Washer

Honest head-to-head from real owner consensus
LG WashTower comes out ahead overall (8.4 vs 7.4), but the breakdown below shows where each one wins.
Dimension by dimension
 WashTowerWT7900HBA Top Load Washer
Reliability & Durability 7.5 6.7
User Sentiment 9.8 9.3
Complaint Severity 7.4 7.5
Consensus Strength 5.2 3.1
Value for Money 6.8 2.9
Owner Advocacy 8.5 8.5
LG WashTower

This single-tower unit delivers serious capacity in a narrow footprint, running quietly enough for installation near bedrooms while LG's direct-drive washer motor earns long-term trust. The detergent drawer drains liquid soap through a pinhole before the cycle starts, forcing you to pour detergent straight into the drum, and the dryer sometimes leaves clothes damp on default settings until you dial in your preferred cycle. If you need full-size performance in half the floor space and can tolerate a couple of design oddities, owners who've lived with it report genuine satisfaction, though warranty service can drag if you draw a lemon.

LG WT7900HBA Top Load Washer

This is LG's attempt to make a top-loader feel modern, huge 5.5 cu. Ft. Tub, 29-minute TurboWash cycles, smart alerts, but it can't escape the physics problem all impeller washers share: clothes float above the waterline on heavy loads and come out half-cleaned. You'll burn extra rinse cycles chasing detergent residue off dark clothing, and the agitator fins tear within two years even under light use. Buy it if you need top-loading convenience and can live with mediocre cleaning on work jeans or gym clothes; skip it if a front-loader fits your laundry room, because one at this price will simply wash better.