A no-frills electric dryer that tumbles clothes dry without asking for your Wi-Fi password, the main selling point in 2026. It shares its mechanical guts with Whirlpool and Amana, which means proven internals and cheap parts when the heating element or thermostat eventually gives out (both DIY-fixable). Most owners blaming slow drying actually have clogged vents, not a bad machine. If you want simple, repairable, and don't mind the electric bill, this does the job, just know you're buying competent mid-range performance, not the tank-like Maytag your grandparents owned.
A competent mid-tier machine with 7.3 cubic feet of capacity, moisture sensing that actually works, and controls simple enough your parents won't call you for tech support. Heating components sometimes fail early (thermostats, gas valve coils), turning your dryer into an expensive tumbler until you replace a $40 part. Not systematic failure, but common enough that repair forums know the pattern. If you want a dryer that handles laundry without fuss and you're comfortable with occasional DIY fixes, this works. If you're chasing the 25-year Maytag your grandparents had, buy Speed Queen or troll Craigslist for pre-2006 units.