JJ Husker
Donor
I can now add appliance repairman to my repertoire.
We have a Whirlpool Duet steam dryer that quit working. Well, let me back up, for a couple weeks it was getting extremely hot (like burn your hands hot when removing clothes). It was wrinkling the clothes and doing a crap job....then it quit working altogether. So I did some searching online and found the common causes. Blown thermal fuse, bad thermistor, bad cycling thermostat, bad or shorted heating element, possible bad high limit thermal fuse. So I watched some YouTube videos (some helpful & some questionable advice). I ordered all the aforementioned parts from Amazon for about $80. Dragged the dryer out to my garage, lifted it about 3 feet off the ground cuz I don't crawl around on the floor like I used to anymore and tore the sucker apart. Accessing the components requires a lot of disassembly. I wouldn't say it was tough or required much technical expertise but it was fairly involved. Once I got to the components I replaced all of them even though the only one I tested that was bad was the thermal fuse. The thermistor was off a couple ohms from what it was supposed to be so it may have been bad. Anyway put it all back together, haul it back in the house and the SOB got super hot again and quite working after about 15 minutes. Do some more research and find the only other possible component involved is the main control board. So I order that, $240ish, and a couple more thermal fuses because those blow whenever the temp exceeds 360 degrees (a safety to prevent things from catching fire). The control board arrived today so I replaced it and the thermal fuse (in place this time since I knew where everything was now). Working like a champ.
Figure I saved about $300-$400 on the service call and likely the additional cost of a complete new dryer because their price would've been at least $600-$700 to repair it and it wouldn't have been worth it at that point.
We have a Whirlpool Duet steam dryer that quit working. Well, let me back up, for a couple weeks it was getting extremely hot (like burn your hands hot when removing clothes). It was wrinkling the clothes and doing a crap job....then it quit working altogether. So I did some searching online and found the common causes. Blown thermal fuse, bad thermistor, bad cycling thermostat, bad or shorted heating element, possible bad high limit thermal fuse. So I watched some YouTube videos (some helpful & some questionable advice). I ordered all the aforementioned parts from Amazon for about $80. Dragged the dryer out to my garage, lifted it about 3 feet off the ground cuz I don't crawl around on the floor like I used to anymore and tore the sucker apart. Accessing the components requires a lot of disassembly. I wouldn't say it was tough or required much technical expertise but it was fairly involved. Once I got to the components I replaced all of them even though the only one I tested that was bad was the thermal fuse. The thermistor was off a couple ohms from what it was supposed to be so it may have been bad. Anyway put it all back together, haul it back in the house and the SOB got super hot again and quite working after about 15 minutes. Do some more research and find the only other possible component involved is the main control board. So I order that, $240ish, and a couple more thermal fuses because those blow whenever the temp exceeds 360 degrees (a safety to prevent things from catching fire). The control board arrived today so I replaced it and the thermal fuse (in place this time since I knew where everything was now). Working like a champ.
Figure I saved about $300-$400 on the service call and likely the additional cost of a complete new dryer because their price would've been at least $600-$700 to repair it and it wouldn't have been worth it at that point.
Last edited by a moderator: