Aside from having actual delicate items, I can vouch for lower temps. I've never found any use drying things on high except on rare occasions when things are needed in a hurry. On high heat clothes come out feeling over-dried, something that Kenmore wrote in depth about to push their auto dry and sensor dry models. Personally, I do not believe the issues observed with North American clothes dryers comes from people using timed dry, rather the operating stat lets things get way, way to hot. In my experience clothes do not come out "cooked" on delicate or medium heat even when timed dry is inadvertently set to long for the load, but certainly do on high heat even with the slightest extra time be it timed dry or sensor dry.
If Sean does not have 120 minutes of timed dry available on his Maytag, his only option would be the auto dry route.
If Sean does not have 120 minutes of timed dry available on his Maytag, his only option would be the auto dry route.