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Clothes dryer repair?

leebee

DIS Veteran
Joined
Sep 14, 1999
AH, the joys of home ownership! Our dryer is pretty old, but it's a real work-horse, or it was until recently. It's now taking three full cycles to dry a load of clothes. We aren't overloading the dryer or anything, not putting in towels or jeans, it's just not drying the way it used to. Yesterday DH and I took down the vertical dryer exhaust duct work and cleaned it out, and then took the back off the dryer. We cleaned out all the lint from the wires and such and removed the housing from the lint trap to clean that out, too. BOY was I shocked to see what gets thru the lint trap... bobby pins, paper clips, and three of DH's "missing" tie chains! Anyhow, we put it all back together, put in a load of wet laundry, and crossed our fingers. Nope... still took three dryer cycles to dry the clothes. Next weekend we will go up into the attic (ICK) and deal with the duct work there, but I'm beginning to think it might be something else. Anyone have any ideas? I don't know if dryers have sensors or heat detectors or whatever that, if they "go bad" will make the dryer not work properly? Three cycles to dry one load of clothes is excessive, and you can imagine what it's doing to our electric bill!
 
Replacing the dryer heating element is usually a relatively simple job if the person doing the work is at all handy.

I recommended replacing the thermal fuse and thermostat(s) at the same time.

For most older brands you can usually find a kit that includes all three for around $25-$35.

Youtube will be your friend. Look for a video for your model or atleast brand and watch to see if it appears to be something you are willing to do yourself. If not call a repair person. It should still be cheaper than a new dryer if you have to hire a repair person.
 
Replacing the dryer heating element is usually a relatively simple job if the person doing the work is at all handy.

I recommended replacing the thermal fuse and thermostat(s) at the same time.

For most older brands you can usually find a kit that includes all three for around $25-$35.

Youtube will be your friend. Look for a video for your model or atleast brand and watch to see if it appears to be something you are willing to do yourself. If not call a repair person. It should still be cheaper than a new dryer if you have to hire a repair person.

Also recommend you tube. You tube has saved me thousands of dollars over the years. Something that looks hard on paper no idea what I will be doing. Look at you tube and you will see most things are not that hard. Might have to pause and watch a section over a few times. But eventually it will get done.
 
Watching videos online won't hurt but may not help either. You have to be able to diagnose what is causing the issue with little/no heating. Could be a sensor, something electronic or the heating unit. You can randomly replace parts and still not have it working correctly. I would look at the videos and if the solution isn't obvious, would call a repairman to properly diagnose and fix the issue. Repairman can diagnose the problem far faster and likely has the necessary parts with him to get it fixed.

My mom had an issue with her older clothes dryer and it turned out the repair part for the heating unit was no longer available. She ended up buying a new dryer.
 
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You have to be able to diagnose what is causing the issue with little/no heating.
That is why I recommend buying a kit that includes the heating element, thermal fuse, and thermostat(s).

For $30 and 1-2 hours time you can skip the diagnosis phase and just replace 99% of what normally causes little/no heating and have a working dryer.

I went through the diagnosis phase with one repair. Testing the heating element with my multimeter. Then using an electric griddle to test the thermostat. Replacing just the part that had failed. In the end I found it much easier and much quicker to just replace all the parts and skip the testing and diagnosis on future repairs of other dryers. I order the kit and only have to take apart the dryer once.
 
Replacing the dryer heating element is usually a relatively simple job if the person doing the work is at all handy.

I recommended replacing the thermal fuse and thermostat(s) at the same time.

For most older brands you can usually find a kit that includes all three for around $25-$35.

Youtube will be your friend. Look for a video for your model or atleast brand and watch to see if it appears to be something you are willing to do yourself. If not call a repair person. It should still be cheaper than a new dryer if you have to hire a repair person.
Yep did this exact thing last year. My W/D set is over 15 years old, dryer quit working. Hubs did the replacement in few hours -works like new.
He also did YouTube repairs a couple times on our 20+year old fridge. That thing would NOT quit-and I’m too cheap to justify a new one when old working fine. Funny thing-did end up with newer fridge when friends remodeled and gave us their “old” fridge. It’s only a few years old but matches the rest of our stainless appliances (our fridge was white).
 
Our heating element on the dryer failed several months ago. The clothes were still cold. He was able to hook up the multimeter to the element and determined it failed. We got a new one and now it’s working fine.
could be clogged ducts too, so I would try and get all the lint out first. Our vent line runs out to the side of the house and it’s a straight shot there. I would assume the ones that vent to the roof clog more often cause you have gravity working against you.
 


Yet...no odd socks??? The mystery lives on! :earboy2: Sorry, no advice. You've already gone beyond the effort I'd have put it before ordering a new dryer. Hope you figure it out:)
Hahaha, from the amount of lint everywhere, I am pretty sure I found ALL the missing socks!
 
So your dryer vents out the attic? If you had that much lint in the dryer itself, the attic vents have just as much, or more. Ours vents out the basement wall right behind it. Whenever I notice clothes not drying, husband cleans that vent tubing to the outside & it fixes the issue.
 
So your dryer vents out the attic? If you had that much lint in the dryer itself, the attic vents have just as much, or more. Ours vents out the basement wall right behind it. Whenever I notice clothes not drying, husband cleans that vent tubing to the outside & it fixes the issue.
Yeah, and there is about 20' of duct-work laying on the attic floor, to get it to the vent in the window. Guess how we will be spending Saturday? Actually, I'm not sure if we'll bother to clean it out, or just put down new duct-work. It's about $25 for the ducting. Seems like a bargain, compared to taking the time to brush out all the lint, making such a huge mess, etc.

SIL did laundry yesterday and said it only took two cycles to dry his towels, so that's good, I guess.
 

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