Bought a "long vent" GE dryer a few years ago. Long vent means it'll handle up to 125 ft of vent.I have a 20 year old GE electric dryer that will power up but that is all, none of the control options work. Time to replace..probably!
Suggestions on a new replacement would be appreciated (brand/model/etc). Has to be left side outlet. Thanks!
interesting!Bought a "long vent" GE dryer a few years ago. Long vent means it'll handle up to 125 ft of vent.
It moves a lot more air than our old dryer did (even when the old dryer was new), drys clothes fast.
Wasn't looking for a long vent, didn't even know they were a thing. It was a special at the scratch n dent store.
But we like it enough we'll get another long vent when the time comes.
I think the safest dryer ever built is a Whirlpool. The heating element is in a metal tube away from the clothes. They have been making them the same way for at least 50 years. If I recall it has a center discharge. Whirlpool getsI have a 20 year old GE electric dryer that will power up but that is all, none of the control options work. Time to replace..probably!
Suggestions on a new replacement would be appreciated (brand/model/etc). Has to be left side outlet. Thanks!
Most (a lot) exhaust heat from the rear and come as factory standard. In some installations the exhaust vent has to go either left or right. Not a big deal, usually need a factory kit to adapt as needed.I'm curious, what do you mean by "left side outlet?"
GE may have been the last to make a simple washer. No locking lid. You set the water level and temp. All manual controlsI agree with all others who said buy as simple as possible. Not only for simplicity and longevity, but also for ease of fixing and part replacing if something ever does go wrong.
My washer and dryer are 15+ years old, basic, bare-bones, manual-dial units. Both are functioning just fine. They did start to develop some problems last year, but very easily and cheaply fixed. Last year the idlers in the dryer started squeaking, so I bought an aftermarket combo idler, belt, and bearing kit for $20 on Amazon and it's as good as new. My washing machine timer stopped advancing a few months ago, so once again I bought an aftermarket timer on Amazon for $50 and it's also as good as new. The good thing about the bare-bones units is that all brands have pretty much the same internals, and you can buy aftermarket parts for peanuts.
To compare: My wife's house came with a brand new Maytag washer and Whirlpool dryer when she bought the house two years ago. Both exceptionally fancy with digital display, touch-screen controls, bazillions of options. Both have had non-stop problems. The washing machine control board fried and half the buttons stopped functioning. The dryer keeps going though thermal fuses and element control modules - it's apparently a know problem with that model (I bypassed the thermal fuse and I'm getting pretty good at replacing the control modules in under 2 minutes). The dryer auto-sense function quit working ages ago - also a known problem with the control boards on that model. The washing machine has always been exceptionally slow (again, a known problem - apparently due to its very time-consuming 'load-sensing' feature). And there are no cheap nor aftermarket parts available for them - you have to buy the OEM parts for crazy prices.
What really got me is that the dryer started leaking shortly after she bought the house. No, that's not a typo. the dryer started leaking. The dryer had a water hook up because it has a 'steam' function, and the solenoid valve inside started leaking. When I saw it I thought I could just disconnect and cap off the supply line to it (we'd never use the 'steam' function anyway). But it had an in-built pressure switch that wouldn't let it function at all unless it sensed water pressure at the inlet. I was able to bypass the pressure switch, but I should have known right then it was more trouble than it was worth.
When our society's come to the point where we're connecting water lines to our dryers, I'd say we've gone a little too nutty.
Thanks, I'd never heard of such a thing.Most (a lot) exhaust heat from the rear and come as factory standard. In some installations the exhaust vent has to go either left or right. Not a big deal, usually need a factory kit to adapt as needed.
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