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LG TD-H802SJW 8kg Heat Pump Dryer $1239.20 + Delivery (or Free C&C) @ The Good Guys eBay

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PTGGS20

LG TD-H802SJW 8 kg heat pump clothes dryer with 9 star energy rating and Choice recommended. Heat pump and sensor is great for confined laundry with poor ventilation. Comes with a free stacking kit for LG front loaders, plus a drying rack for bulky items such as shoes.

No heat, no moisture, and 9 star energy efficiency if you're doing a few loads will save $$$ compared to a regular sensor dryer.

+$54.94 delivery

Selling elsewhere at;

Appliances Online - $1432 delivered
Harvey Norman - $1539 pickup
Betta - $1599 pickup
Bing Lee - $1699 pickup

Colour/Finish: White
Drying Program Type: Cotton, Mixed Fabrics, Easy Care, Bulk Item, Jeans, Towel, Sports Wear, Quick Dry, Delicate, Wool, Rack Dry, Cool Air, Warm Air, > Download Cycle
Manufacturer's Warranty: 2 Year
Height (mm): 850
Energy Rating: 9 Star
Drying Capacity: 8kg
Additional Features: Smart ThinQ (Wi-Fi); No External Venting Required; Stacking Kit Included
No. Of Programs: 14
Type: Heat Pump
Width (mm): 600
Depth (mm): 670

Original PTGGS20 20% off The Good Guys on eBay Deal Post

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closed Comments

  • how good are these things compared to the regular dryers?

    • Mostly positive, but some issues raised https://www.productreview.com.au/p/lg-td-h802sjw.html

    • +1

      There's four kinds of clothes dryers - in increasing order of cost;

      1. Vented - heating element blows hot air through the drum, and hot/moist air is vented (either directly outside dryer, or via a venting kit to the exterior of a building)
      2. Condenser - heating element blows hot air through the drum, but the hot/moist air is condensed to remove the moisture, and hot air is vented outside the dryer
      3. Heat pump - a heat pump adds heat to drum, and then condenses/cools air so there's little to no waste heat and no moisture.
      4. Gas

      I went for the heat pump as my laundry has no ventilation, so the lack of waste heat and moisture was a big consideration (i.e. I was going to at least get a condenser). The heat pump costs more initially, but substantial savings in electricity, so I consider it will pay off in the long term.

      I believe the heat pump is also gentler on clothes. Some are used to clothes coming out of a dryer baking hot, so complain that the heat pump doesn't dry clothes properly.

      • +1

        "…so complain that the heat pump doesn't dry clothes properly."

        I have another brand of heat pump dryer, and its default setting sometimes leaves clothes feeling just ever-so-slightly damp. Although if you leave it in the dryer and let it do its anti-crease thing where it gives the clothes a flip every couple of minutes then they come out dry. If I manually change the drying level to its highest things come out bone dry - but unlike a regular dryer, they don't come out cooked.

    • My Bosch heat pump dryer is awesome. Don't know about LG ones.

  • What am I doing wrong.

    EBay always tells me "This code can't be applied to your order." when I type in the code!

  • Not sure about heat pumps by itself but the first gen heat pumps with washing machine combo (2 in 1) were crap as hell.

    We ordered a bunch for a building and it worked fine for the first 6 months, then a heap of people had issues with the drying doing weird things.

    Most of the time, it was people complaining it didn't work that well.

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