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rainman14624  
#1 Posted : Saturday, May 1, 2010 7:31:25 AM(UTC)
rainman14624

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Dryer works fine on timer only but will not heat and the timer doesn't advance when set on Auto Dry. Does this indicate a bad control thermostat?
Thanks in advance.
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denman  
#2 Posted : Sunday, May 2, 2010 5:06:18 AM(UTC)
denman

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Here are your parts includes wiring diagrams
Replacement parts for MAYTAG PYET344AYW Dryer - Ele | AppliancePartsPros.com

Note that the diagrams have some of the right side cut off. The second wiring diagram is better just note that the far right line goes to L2.
Also it has the timer chart which may help you troubleshoot this.

[COLOR="Blue"]Does this indicate a bad control thermostat?[/COLOR]
Probably not as the unit uses the same thermostats in both auto and timed dry.

Very strange symptoms.
In timed dry the timer motor gets power directly from Neutral and L1 (120 volts).
In auto mode it gets power from L2 and L1, through the heating coil when the heater is shut off. The 3.77 Kohm resistor then reduces this to 120 volts for the timer motor.

I am sort of stumped on this one. I would have thought it would be the L/H timer contacts but they do not supply power to the timer motor so would not cause the the timer to not advance.
My guess would be the timer but for the life of me I cannot figure out what scenario would give the symptoms you see.
I am assuming this unit used to work OK and it is not a used unit that you have purchased.

Hopefully someone else will jump in with a solution.
THIS FORUM IS DEAD!!!!!!!
rainman14624  
#3 Posted : Sunday, May 2, 2010 8:34:53 AM(UTC)
rainman14624

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Not sure what's going on, either. I pulled the top up and pulled the wires off the thermostat at top of heating coils to check for continuity, which was fine. Plugged it back up and plugged up the dryer and ran a small load on Auto Dry and it started working again. Dried a very large load this morning and put it on More Dry and it feels like the load got very close to being totally dry but not quite. Is there a sensor that tells it when the load is dry enough?
denman  
#4 Posted : Sunday, May 2, 2010 10:06:48 AM(UTC)
denman

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[COLOR="Blue"]Is there a sensor that tells it when the load is dry enough?[/COLOR]
No.
The way it works is that in auto modes the timer is advanced only when the heating coil is off. The idea is that as the clothes/air get dryer the heater will take less time to heat the air to where the thermostat shuts off so the heater will be off more as the clothes get dryer.

Often if it is taking a long time to dry clothes it is a dirty vent system, vent louvers not opening fully or a dirty blower wheel.
THIS FORUM IS DEAD!!!!!!!
rainman14624  
#5 Posted : Sunday, May 2, 2010 10:40:12 AM(UTC)
rainman14624

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Gotcha! I'll take the vent hose off and do a thorough cleaning inside the dryer with the Shop Vac, as far as I can reach. Thanks.
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