T_R_Oglodyte
TUG Lifetime Member
We've got such a diverse community that I"m sure that someone out there will be able to offer in informed opinion. So here's the situation.
About one week ago the heating element on our electric clothes dryer stopped working. The blower operated, the drum turned; everything operated normally except no heat being delivered. This has happened a couple of times before when the heating element has failed, so I keep a spare heating element on hand. But this time when I pulled the heating element it was fine. The resistance was on spec, and just to be sure I compared resistance of the heating element with my unused element and the two matched perfectly.
So I started looking at what else might be going on. For reference, here is the wiring diagram:
I determined that the 350 °F thermal cutoff had popped. It showed an open circuit. I also verfied that continuity on the red/white back to the power supply and on the black back to neutral. So the only open element on the circuit was the cutoff. The high limit thermostat shows zero resistance. The reinstalled heating element shows resistance on spec.
Replacing the thermal cutoff is an easy repair, so I ordered replacement parts - Whirlpool OEM. The cutoff ships with a replacement hi-limit thermostat; the recommendation is that both units be replaced whenever one is replaced. I made the replacements, reassembled everything, started up the dryer and verified that the heating element was working, and told DW that we were back in business.
A couple of hours later she comes back to me and says that once again the dryer isn't heating. So I open it up again, and determine that the brenad new thermal cutoff has popped.
There are only two things I can thing of here. My first thought is that since the hi limit thermostat is supposed to cut out at 250 °F that unit might be defective, even though it's a brand new OEM part. So I get out the electric skillet that we haven't used for years, set it to 260 °F, let it come to temp, and put the high limit thermostat face down on the skillet surface. After taking about 30 seconds to come to temp, the high-limit thermostat pops open; I hear the click and confirm with the ohmmeter that the unit has gone from closed to open. So that appears to be working fine. I also verify that there aren't blockages in the air flow from the dryer to the outside vent.
Now I am at a loss to figure out what is going on. Perhaps the thermal cutoff I received was defective, except that now two OEM cutoffs have blown in short order. That indicates to me that somehow, someway, there are excessive temps in the heating unit. But that being the case, why isn't the hi limit thermostat shutting off the heating element first?
The air heating unit is about 10-inches in total length. The hi limit thermostat is located about three inches from the inlet end of the unit, and the thermal cutoff is about 1.5 inches further downstream. What could possibly be creating a 100 °F temperature differential over that distance when there is proper airflow through the unit?
I am baffled. Anyone have any thoughts?
About one week ago the heating element on our electric clothes dryer stopped working. The blower operated, the drum turned; everything operated normally except no heat being delivered. This has happened a couple of times before when the heating element has failed, so I keep a spare heating element on hand. But this time when I pulled the heating element it was fine. The resistance was on spec, and just to be sure I compared resistance of the heating element with my unused element and the two matched perfectly.
So I started looking at what else might be going on. For reference, here is the wiring diagram:
I determined that the 350 °F thermal cutoff had popped. It showed an open circuit. I also verfied that continuity on the red/white back to the power supply and on the black back to neutral. So the only open element on the circuit was the cutoff. The high limit thermostat shows zero resistance. The reinstalled heating element shows resistance on spec.
Replacing the thermal cutoff is an easy repair, so I ordered replacement parts - Whirlpool OEM. The cutoff ships with a replacement hi-limit thermostat; the recommendation is that both units be replaced whenever one is replaced. I made the replacements, reassembled everything, started up the dryer and verified that the heating element was working, and told DW that we were back in business.
A couple of hours later she comes back to me and says that once again the dryer isn't heating. So I open it up again, and determine that the brenad new thermal cutoff has popped.
There are only two things I can thing of here. My first thought is that since the hi limit thermostat is supposed to cut out at 250 °F that unit might be defective, even though it's a brand new OEM part. So I get out the electric skillet that we haven't used for years, set it to 260 °F, let it come to temp, and put the high limit thermostat face down on the skillet surface. After taking about 30 seconds to come to temp, the high-limit thermostat pops open; I hear the click and confirm with the ohmmeter that the unit has gone from closed to open. So that appears to be working fine. I also verify that there aren't blockages in the air flow from the dryer to the outside vent.
Now I am at a loss to figure out what is going on. Perhaps the thermal cutoff I received was defective, except that now two OEM cutoffs have blown in short order. That indicates to me that somehow, someway, there are excessive temps in the heating unit. But that being the case, why isn't the hi limit thermostat shutting off the heating element first?
The air heating unit is about 10-inches in total length. The hi limit thermostat is located about three inches from the inlet end of the unit, and the thermal cutoff is about 1.5 inches further downstream. What could possibly be creating a 100 °F temperature differential over that distance when there is proper airflow through the unit?
I am baffled. Anyone have any thoughts?
