Customer Support 7 days a week

Welcome Guest! To enable all features please Login or Register.

Notification

Icon
Error

New Topic Post Reply
Options
Go to last post Go to first unread
AlexanderK  
#1 Posted : Wednesday, March 13, 2024 1:37:06 PM(UTC)
Quote
AlexanderK

Rank: Member

Groups: Registered
Joined: 3/13/2024(UTC)
Posts: 0
United States
Location: Boston

Hi all,

I have two Amana NED7300WW1 Electric Dryers. One works perfectly, one trips the dedicated breaker randomly, and rarely. Once it started doing this, I replaced the electric cord, checked the contacts (looked good), cleaned out the exhaust, disassembled and cleaned out the lint trap. Using multimeter, checked the heating element to see if it was in contact with the casing, which it was not.

Once the problem returned, I plugged the problematic dryer into the non-problematic dryer's outlet, and vice versa. The problematic dryer tripped the non-problematic breaker. Using deduction it seems that the breaker, outlet, and cord are all ok, therefore it must be something inside the dryer itself.

I'm preparing to disassemble and test as many parts individually as I can to try and hunt down the misbehaving part.

Has anyone run into this before? Or have any suggestions? I don't mind doing the footwork, but not finding anything obviously wrong is what I'm trying to avoid.

Thanks.
Sponsor
See inside of your appliance - diagrams and part photos for virtually every model.

powered by AppliancePartsPros.com
 
Guest  
#2 Posted : Thursday, March 14, 2024 4:35:14 AM(UTC)
Quote
Guest

Rank: Guest

Groups: Registered
Joined: 8/10/2018(UTC)
Posts: 0
United States
Location: 99556

Was thanked: 4 time(s) in 4 post(s)
My suggestion is to look at the wire connections inside the dryer. I have found on rare occasions a wire /wire connector almost in touch with a ground path. It will happen when it gets warm and when it cools back down it works again for a while!!! The one I had trouble finding took me 2 days to find it.
WilliamM/APP Team  
#3 Posted : Friday, March 15, 2024 5:37:15 AM(UTC)
Quote
WilliamM/APP Team

Rank: Member

Groups: Moderators, APP Team, Registered
Joined: 2/27/2024(UTC)
Posts: 0
United States
Location: TN

Was thanked: 5 time(s) in 5 post(s)
The main voltage supply wires going through to the control would need to be checked for any indication of grounding out. The control would also need to be checked for any damage that may indicate it shorted out.
Quick Reply Show Quick Reply
Users browsing this topic
New Topic Post Reply
Forum Jump  
You can post new topics in this forum.
You can reply to topics in this forum.
You can delete your posts in this forum.
You can edit your posts in this forum.
You cannot create polls in this forum.
You can vote in polls in this forum.