Thread Number: 39193
/ Tag: Major Appliances
Dryer Troubles |
[Down to Last] |
Post# 415790   11/11/2019 at 17:12 (1,599 days old) by human (Pines of Carolina)   |   | |
Checkrate/Likes
 
     
So yesterday was my bi-weekly laundry day. I had washed three loads and dried two without incident but the third load ended up taking an inordinate amount of time to dry. It was a fairly large load, so I took part of it out to see if that would help but it didn't. I also realized that the interior of the dryer (a very basic Roper by Whirlpool large capacity model) was stone cold. So after spending two and a half hours trying to get this last load dry, I carried everything to a nearby laundromat (first time I've used one of those since about 1998) and got everything dried in about 15 minutes for 75 cents. A bit of an aggravation but a bargain nonetheless.
That task accomplished, I turned my attention to a little Internet research and found the problem was likely a thermal fuse, a thermostat or (less likely) the heating element. I then found a kit on Amazon that contained all of the above for $35 and free Prime shipping. Coincidentally, the repair kit cost the same as I paid for the dryer itself at a thrift shop five years ago. It's a little overkill for sure, but still way cheaper than calling a repairman. I figure that once I've got the dryer torn down, I might as well go ahead replace all of those parts and thus reduce the odds of my having to go into it again anytime soon. I'll test the ones I remove with an ohm meter to determine what's still good and save those for spares. I've never torn a dryer down but there's always a first time. Besides, the online video I watched made it look pretty simple. Any job that can be accomplished with just a screwdriver and a pair of needle nose pliers can't be all that difficult, right? All in all, it makes me even more thankful to have a traditional style washer and dryer instead of one of those newfangled loads of self-destructing circuit boards they're selling these days. |
Post# 415797 , Reply# 2   11/11/2019 at 19:41 (1,599 days old) by vacuumlad1650 (Wauponsee, IL)   |   | |
Checkrate/Likes
 
2    
|
Post# 415800 , Reply# 3   11/11/2019 at 20:43 (1,599 days old) by human (Pines of Carolina)   |   | |
Checkrate/Likes
 
     
A friend of mine has a Samsung washer that has had repeated circuit board failures. She loves the washer and its matching dryer when they work but she's definitely gotten her money's worth out of the extended warranty she bought. I have a Maytag refrigerator and a Kenmore range that both experienced circuit board failures. I was thankful to have a home warranty for those. The refrigerator's circuit board was readily available but the stove is old enough that the circuit board was NLA, so they had to send the original one off to be stripped, cleaned and fitted with new components.
|
Post# 415808 , Reply# 4   11/11/2019 at 22:12 (1,599 days old) by MadMan (Chicago, IL, USA)   |   | |
Checkrate/Likes
 
1    
Any part can fail. Naturally, the simplest machine will also be the most reliable - purely on the basis of probability. Imagine each part has a 1% chance of failure. Well if you have more parts, that's a higher chance of a breakdown. Whether or not a part is a circuit board is somewhat irrelevant. It's a matter of how well engineered each part is.
Good that you're fixing the dryer. $35 is chump change, compared to a new dryer or a service call. While you have it open, open up all the exhaust passages and clean out the lint! My dryer took a dump the other week. Would heat for a few minutes then quit. The gas valves where going open circuit when warm. Apparently a very common failure mode. |
Post# 415820 , Reply# 5   11/11/2019 at 23:32 (1,599 days old) by suckolux (Yuba City, CA)   |   | |
Checkrate/Likes
 
1    
|
Post# 415822 , Reply# 6   11/11/2019 at 23:37 (1,599 days old) by huskyvacs (Gnaw Bone, Indiana)   |   | |
Checkrate/Likes
 
1    
Also while you have the dryer pulled out and apart, and if you have those crappy Jiffy-Pop tinfoil flex hoses that comes with the dryer, throw it out and replace it with new rigid HVAC ductwork (you will have to custom cut and run it depending on your setup). It will help your dryer exhaust and dry better, and reduce the risk of fire greatly. Do not use screws to hold it together either, just HVAC foil tape.
I did it to mine in 2010 after my dryer started having trouble drying and the pipe was just packed solid with lint. The flex ducts are just so dangerous at trapping lint in the hose and restrict airflow with all the ridges in them. Not my photo, but an example. Some HVAC techs might be able to do it if you can't DIY.
View Full Size
|
Post# 415828 , Reply# 8   11/12/2019 at 07:49 (1,598 days old) by kb3pxr (Waynesboro PA USA)   |   | |
Checkrate/Likes
 
     
I'm under the impression that those flex vents are illegal at least in some jurisdictions. A proper vent replacement is idea, could be the airflow restriction that caused the original problem too. |
Post# 415858 , Reply# 9   11/12/2019 at 20:08 (1,598 days old) by human (Pines of Carolina)   |   | |
Checkrate/Likes
 
2    
My dryer repair kit arrived today. Gotta love Amazon Prime shipping. Getting to the parts to install them was a lot easier on my dryer than the one in the video I watched. Everything was behind a large metal back panel, held in place with a half dozen screws. Everything was easily accessible behind it. The replacement parts all fit perfectly and the whole operation was child's play compared to some car repairs I've successfully undertaken.
I haven't put it back into place yet because I was using a friend's chimney sweep style brush to clean out the vent and I lost the bush head. I think it may be in the vent in the wall. I'm going to push the flexible pole/handle through from the outside to try and push it back into the laundry room. I couldn't believe how much lint was in the wall. Didn't find any missing socks, though. I'll get it all back together tomorrow and give the renewed dryer a test run. I'm expecting it to work better than ever. As for my vent configuration, I have a flexible metal vent tube connecting the dryer to the wall. What's in the wall is HVAC style metal duct. |
Post# 415863 , Reply# 10   11/12/2019 at 21:56 (1,598 days old) by MadMan (Chicago, IL, USA)   |   | |
Checkrate/Likes
 
2    
Adding to Husky's post - no screws in the rigid vent, and use welded elbows that do not have rivets sticking inside that would catch lint.
kb3pxr - those flexible ducts are illegal in pretty much anywhere that has a building code... at least long runs of them. Short runs of 3 feet or less from the dryer to the rigid duct is legit, mostly because of how difficult it would be to connect a dryer straight to rigid. human - good work! Glad you cleaned up the vent to outside. It's a maintenance job that a LOT of people forget about. (And the reason for a lot of house fires.) I wouldn't be at all surprised if that flow restriction had a hand in breaking your dryer. ----- This reminds me of my friend's house, which because it has TWO (well, technically three) additions added onto the back of it, has about a 30 foot horizontal dryer vent run. It used to be longer, including 3 completely unneeded turns which I eliminated a few years back. Still, in the winter, the water vapor from the clothes (and gas combustion) actually cools down so much that it condenses, then freezes right near the end and blocks up the vent. Yet another project on the long list for his house, is to reroute the vent into the garage, then up out the garage roof. It would be a 15 or 20 foot vertical run, but the hope is that accessing the duct for cleaning or de-icing would be much easier done inside the (attached) garage, than in the 2-foot-tall crawlspace under the addition(s). :( |
Post# 415872 , Reply# 11   11/13/2019 at 10:00 (1,597 days old) by human (Pines of Carolina)   |   | |
Checkrate/Likes
 
     
As I was heading out to work this morning, I walked around back and found the brush head on the ground. I'd had the idea of pushing the brush in from the outside but it was almost dark when I went out to do it, so I couldn't see where the brush head had fallen. That idea wouldn't have worked anyway since my dryer vent has a louvered opening. I'm going to give the vent one last good brushing when I get home this afternoon, then button everything back up. I've got a few odds and ends that need washing, so I'll run a small load and see how the refurbished dryer works.
|
Post# 415892 , Reply# 12   11/13/2019 at 18:22 (1,597 days old) by human (Pines of Carolina)   |   | |
Checkrate/Likes
 
1    
I got the dryer duct reamed out from both ends a little while ago. Just had to remove the louvres from the outside vent cover. I couldn't believe the mountain of lint that came out. I hadn't used either of my Electrolux 1205s in a while, so since they were both sitting in the hallway, waiting to go back into the laundry room where they live, I decided to press one of them back into service to clean up some of the lint. It probably sucked up three fourths of it with no problem but some of it was so dense it clogged the hose and I had to blow it back out. It will definitely be getting a new bag. There is no doubt in my mind that air flow—and drying time—will be significantly improved by my efforts.
Getting the vent tube reconnected between the dryer and the wall has been the real challenge. I've got it hooked up. Now I just have to get the elbow connecter turned around the right way so the dryer can snug up closer to the wall. I did turn it on for about 30 seconds and verified it is heating up like it's supposed to. I'll be doing a small load of laundry in a bit just to verify that it's actually working like it should. |
Post# 415970 , Reply# 14   11/16/2019 at 12:06 (1,594 days old) by human (Pines of Carolina)   |   | |
Checkrate/Likes
 
1    
My whole dryer project took me almost three hours. Replacing the heating element and sensors took maybe 45 minutes. Cleaning out the ductwork (approx. 8-10 ft. straight through the walls to the outside) took about 30 minutes and putting all back together and cleaning up the mess took about as long as everything else.
As I said, the hardest part was getting the flexible vent tube (presently stretched to about three or four feet) back into place. It's kind of crunched up and the dryer can't go back as close to the wall as it was before I repaired it, so the damaged part will need to be cut off or the whole thing replaced. I may invest in a set of sheet metal shears to try the former first. |
Post# 416111 , Reply# 15   11/17/2019 at 22:45 (1,593 days old) by texaskirbyguy (Plano, TX)   |   | |
Checkrate/Likes
 
2    
A few hours of work and 35 bucks was a darn good deal in itself. However the satisfaction of accomplishing it yourself is priceless. Great job - go enjoy a drink while your laundry dries. :o) |
Post# 416124 , Reply# 16   11/18/2019 at 10:07 (1,592 days old) by human (Pines of Carolina)   |   | |
Checkrate/Likes
 
2    
|
Post# 416785 , Reply# 17   12/1/2019 at 12:58 (1,579 days old) by human (Pines of Carolina)   |   | |
Checkrate/Likes
 
     
So I'm doing laundry again and the dryer working great but it seems to be getting stuck in different parts of the cycle. The first load I did, it got stuck in cool down mode. My clothes were perfectly dry but room temperature. The dryer continued to run until I shut it off. On the second load, the dryer got stuck in the middle of the sensor dry cycle. The clothes again came out quite dry but but quite warm also. My cat enjoyed that while I was folding them. Methinks one of the sensors I put on from the repair kit is defective, but which one? I saved the heating element and sensors I took off and since the symptom is different than before, I feel safe in assuming a different sensor is presenting a problem this time, so I'd be putting one of its old counterpart back back on. I'll wait until I'm finished doing laundry to tear it down and figure out which one that is. I'm just hoping the problem isn't in the timer. That piece is expensive.
|
Post# 416790 , Reply# 18   12/1/2019 at 13:54 (1,579 days old) by gottahaveahoove (Pittston, Pennsylvania, 18640)   |   | |
Checkrate/Likes
 
1    
|
Post# 416791 , Reply# 19   12/1/2019 at 14:15 (1,579 days old) by human (Pines of Carolina)   |   | |
Checkrate/Likes
 
     
So I dried another load on "sensor dry" and the knob never moved. It just ran until I shut it off after about 45 minutes to find that the clothes were thoroughly dry. I put in my last load for the day and instead used the timed mode (high heat). The knob moves normally in that mode, but it doesn't shut itself off at the end of the cycle. So it begs the question whether it is the timer or one of the sensors I previously replaced. Inquiring minds want to know...
|
Post# 416795 , Reply# 20   12/1/2019 at 16:49 (1,579 days old) by vacuumlad1650 (Wauponsee, IL)   |   | |
Checkrate/Likes
 
     
|
Post# 416808 , Reply# 21   12/1/2019 at 21:58 (1,579 days old) by human (Pines of Carolina)   |   | |
Checkrate/Likes
 
1    
That's my plan. Since I have all of the components I took off, I intend to start with the sensor on the exhaust vent. While I'm in there, I'll put the fuses to a continuity test, just to rule them out. It'll be later in the week before I get a chance to do any of that. The end of the semester is upon me and I'll have very little free time until all my grading is done.
|
Post# 416814 , Reply# 22   12/2/2019 at 02:57 (1,579 days old) by MadMan (Chicago, IL, USA)   |   | |
Checkrate/Likes
 
     
The sensor on the exhaust vent is likely a thermal limit switch. You seem to have two problems. One being the moisture sensor is either not reporting or whatever it hooks up to is not receiving. The second is that the timer apparently cannot move all the way to the off position. But since you know the timer is working to some degree, it's likely just stuck. Assuming it's an old fashioned mechanical timer. It may simply need to be opened and lubricated.
|
Post# 416831 , Reply# 23   12/2/2019 at 14:02 (1,578 days old) by human (Pines of Carolina)   |   | |
Checkrate/Likes
 
     
Yes, it's an old fashioned electro-mechanical timer. It moves when it's in one of the timed modes; it just doesn't move all the way to the 'off' position. In the sensor mode, it doesn't move at all. From the online reading I did yesterday, I'm pretty convinced the sensor on the exhaust vent is the most likely culprit but I haven't ruled out the timer as an accomplice. I may tear into it this evening to see what's what. Stay tuned...
|
Post# 416837 , Reply# 24   12/2/2019 at 19:31 (1,578 days old) by human (Pines of Carolina)   |   | |
Checkrate/Likes
 
3    
Well, It looks as if I may have just solved the problem. When I took the back off of the dryer, I immediately spotted a disconnected wire. The middle wire (the small orange one) that connects to the sensor on the heating element was hanging loose. I don't know whether I had neglected to connect it during the installation process or it had come loose as I was putting one of the other parts in but the connector did not fit snugly on its terminal. A quick crimp with my trusty Leatherman tool gave it a snugger fit. Once I got the dryer back together, I washed and then dried my sheets on the sensor cycle to prove the repair. The dryer cut itself off automatically and the sheets came out perfectly dry and just slightly above room temperature, thus I'm going to pronounce it fixed (at least until something else breaks on it) and with no need for any further parts.
|
Post# 416841 , Reply# 25   12/2/2019 at 21:47 (1,578 days old) by MadMan (Chicago, IL, USA)   |   | |
Checkrate/Likes
 
     
|
Post# 419350 , Reply# 27   1/31/2020 at 14:43 (1,518 days old) by human (Pines of Carolina)   |   | |
Checkrate/Likes
 
1    
Thanks. In the two and a half months since I started this thread, the dryer has been working perfectly—better than it has ever worked before, in fact. It will now keep pace with the washer and sometimes outpace it. I'm sure it's probably using a bit less energy, too. And it turned out there was nothing wrong with the timer.
|
Post# 420035 , Reply# 29   2/15/2020 at 15:13 (1,503 days old) by human (Pines of Carolina)   |   | |
Checkrate/Likes
 
     
|
Post# 421770 , Reply# 30   3/16/2020 at 21:03 (1,473 days old) by human (Pines of Carolina)   |   | |
Checkrate/Likes
 
1    
|
Post# 421876 , Reply# 31   3/18/2020 at 22:51 (1,471 days old) by electrolux137 (Los Angeles)   |   | |
Checkrate/Likes
 
1    
~ |