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big e lewis October 11th 06 03:16 AM

dryer tripping circuit breaker
 
I have a Whirlpool Estate electric dryer. Sunday, the dryer wouldn't
come on, found the breaker in the basement fusepanel was tripped. I
reset it, all was well for several more loads that day. Now today, the
dryer will only run for about 1 minute before the breaker trips, I reset
the breaker, and it will run for another minute before it trips again.
The dryer is only about 2 year old, this is the 1st problem, and there
are no stange noises. Any ideas/suggestions are greatly appreciated!
Thanks, Earl


Tony Hwang October 11th 06 03:30 AM

dryer tripping circuit breaker
 
big e lewis wrote:
I have a Whirlpool Estate electric dryer. Sunday, the dryer wouldn't
come on, found the breaker in the basement fusepanel was tripped. I
reset it, all was well for several more loads that day. Now today, the
dryer will only run for about 1 minute before the breaker trips, I reset
the breaker, and it will run for another minute before it trips again.
The dryer is only about 2 year old, this is the 1st problem, and there
are no stange noises. Any ideas/suggestions are greatly appreciated!
Thanks, Earl

Hi,
Heating element problem?(partial short or burn out)
Or something loose.

[email protected] October 11th 06 03:41 AM

dryer tripping circuit breaker
 
probably a failed element....

partial now cmplete short to ground......


[email protected] October 11th 06 03:41 AM

dryer tripping circuit breaker
 
probably a failed element....

partial now cmplete short to ground......


jeffreydesign October 11th 06 08:24 AM

dryer tripping circuit breaker
 
DANGER Will Robinson, DANGER

When you breaker tripped the first time, that should have been a clue.
When it tripped the second time, you should've stopped using the dryer
until you positively determined and remedied the problem.

A circuit breaker is foremost a safety device.

Usually when it trips, it is overloaded or shorted. Overload can be a
result of a loose connection (read: fire danger) or a bad heating
element (less dangerous but still a possible fire danger) and a dead
short is also a dangerous situation especially with 220 volts.

**First, unplug your dryer then make SURE the dryer's breaker is shut
OFF**. Follow the cord up into the back of the dryer and check the
connections (you will probably have to remove a small metal panel) make
sure each one is tight and there are no signs of heat (look at the wire
insulation) at the junction. If it's a three-wire cord, make sure the
neutral to ground strap is sound. If everything there looks good there,
open the dryer outlet cover (remember, you shut off the breaker,
right?) and look in there for signs of heat or spark. If everything
looks clean, then button it all back up and open your breaker panel and
shut off the big MAIN (this should shut off ALL electricity to your
home.) Pull the panel cover and tighten up all the connectons
(especially the neutral wires [white]) and if ANY of your wires are
aluminum (as opposed to copper) inspect them first. Aluminum tends to
loosen first and a loose connection can generate some heat, further
loosening it. Look at the wires that go into your dryer breaker. Make
sure they are SNUG. Don't mess with the wires that go into the MAIN
breaker.

If you've done all that and your breaker still trips, it's likely the
dryer.

Jeff




big e lewis wrote:
I have a Whirlpool Estate electric dryer. Sunday, the dryer wouldn't
come on, found the breaker in the basement fusepanel was tripped. I
reset it, all was well for several more loads that day. Now today, the
dryer will only run for about 1 minute before the breaker trips, I reset
the breaker, and it will run for another minute before it trips again.
The dryer is only about 2 year old, this is the 1st problem, and there
are no stange noises. Any ideas/suggestions are greatly appreciated!
Thanks, Earl



Joseph Meehan October 11th 06 01:38 PM

dryer tripping circuit breaker
 
jeffreydesign wrote:
DANGER Will Robinson, DANGER

When you breaker tripped the first time, that should have been a clue.
When it tripped the second time, you should've stopped using the dryer
until you positively determined and remedied the problem.

A circuit breaker is foremost a safety device.

Usually when it trips, it is overloaded or shorted. Overload can be a
result of a loose connection (read: fire danger) or a bad heating
element (less dangerous but still a possible fire danger) and a dead
short is also a dangerous situation especially with 220 volts.

**First, unplug your dryer then make SURE the dryer's breaker is shut
OFF**. Follow the cord up into the back of the dryer and check the
connections (you will probably have to remove a small metal panel)
make sure each one is tight and there are no signs of heat (look at
the wire insulation) at the junction. If it's a three-wire cord, make
sure the neutral to ground strap is sound. If everything there looks
good there, open the dryer outlet cover (remember, you shut off the
breaker, right?) and look in there for signs of heat or spark. If
everything looks clean, then button it all back up and open your
breaker panel and shut off the big MAIN (this should shut off ALL
electricity to your home.) Pull the panel cover and tighten up all
the connectons (especially the neutral wires [white]) and if ANY of
your wires are aluminum (as opposed to copper) inspect them first.
Aluminum tends to loosen first and a loose connection can generate
some heat, further loosening it. Look at the wires that go into your
dryer breaker. Make sure they are SNUG. Don't mess with the wires
that go into the MAIN breaker.

If you've done all that and your breaker still trips, it's likely the
dryer.

Jeff




big e lewis wrote:
I have a Whirlpool Estate electric dryer. Sunday, the dryer wouldn't
come on, found the breaker in the basement fusepanel was tripped. I
reset it, all was well for several more loads that day. Now today,
the dryer will only run for about 1 minute before the breaker trips,
I reset the breaker, and it will run for another minute before it
trips again. The dryer is only about 2 year old, this is the 1st
problem, and there are no stange noises. Any ideas/suggestions are
greatly appreciated! Thanks, Earl


Good response. Especially the first few lines. This is a safety
issue.

I will add one possible issue. Old circuit breakers and even some new
ones can become weak and need replacement. I suggest keeping that in the
back of your mind. It is also possible that you replaced your old dryer
with one that requires a larger breaker. You may want to check the breaker
size specified in the manual for your current dryer. However remember to
check for safety issues first.

--
Joseph Meehan

Dia duit



Edwin Pawlowski October 11th 06 03:30 PM

dryer tripping circuit breaker
 

"big e lewis" wrote in message
...
I have a Whirlpool Estate electric dryer. Sunday, the dryer wouldn't
come on, found the breaker in the basement fusepanel was tripped. I
reset it, all was well for several more loads that day. Now today, the
dryer will only run for about 1 minute before the breaker trips, I reset
the breaker, and it will run for another minute before it trips again.
The dryer is only about 2 year old, this is the 1st problem, and there
are no stange noises. Any ideas/suggestions are greatly appreciated!
Thanks, Earl


You did get some good advice about connections and heating elements. The
motor can also be a problem, as can the drum and the rollers it rides on.
If the bearings are going, they will be difficult to turn and can overload
the motor. Check to see that it turns freely.



Stormin Mormon October 12th 06 03:58 PM

dryer tripping circuit breaker
 
Is your dryer all electric (big plug) or gas heat (small plug)?

--

Christopher A. Young
You can't shout down a troll.
You have to starve them.
..

"big e lewis" wrote in message
...
I have a Whirlpool Estate electric dryer. Sunday, the dryer wouldn't
come on, found the breaker in the basement fusepanel was tripped. I
reset it, all was well for several more loads that day. Now today, the
dryer will only run for about 1 minute before the breaker trips, I
reset
the breaker, and it will run for another minute before it trips again.
The dryer is only about 2 year old, this is the 1st problem, and there
are no stange noises. Any ideas/suggestions are greatly appreciated!
Thanks, Earl



Mike March 17th 13 04:44 PM

dryer tripping circuit breaker
 
replying to big e lewis, Mike wrote:
e01e wrote:

I have a Whirlpool Estate electric dryer. Sunday, the dryer wouldn't
come on, found the breaker in the basement fusepanel was tripped. I
reset it, all was well for several more loads that day. Now today, the
dryer will only run for about 1 minute before the breaker trips, I reset
the breaker, and it will run for another minute before it trips again.
The dryer is only about 2 year old, this is the 1st problem, and there
are no stange noises. Any ideas/suggestions are greatly appreciated!
Thanks, Earl


This happened to me on Friday. I replaced the cord and all is well.

--
posted from
http://www.homeownershub.com/mainten...er-155117-.htm
using HomeOwnersHub's Web, RSS and Social Media Interface
to home and garden related groups


bob haller March 17th 13 09:50 PM

dryer tripping circuit breaker
 
On Mar 17, 12:44*pm, Mike
wrote:
replying to big e lewis, Mike wrote:

e01e wrote:


I have a Whirlpool Estate electric dryer. Sunday, the dryer wouldn't
come on, found the breaker in the basement fusepanel was tripped. I
reset it, all was well for several more loads that day. Now today, the
dryer will only run for about 1 minute before the breaker trips, I reset
the breaker, and it will run for another minute before it trips again.
The dryer is only about 2 year old, this is the 1st problem, and there
are no stange noises. Any ideas/suggestions are greatly appreciated!
Thanks, Earl


This happened to me on Friday. *I replaced the cord and all is well.

--
posted fromhttp://www.homeownershub.com/maintenance/dryer-tripping-circuit-break...
using *HomeOwnersHub's *Web, RSS and Social Media Interface
to *home and garden related *groups


when the breaker trips AGAIN, replace the breaker! Its the likely
problem, they are designed to get more sensitive as they age........


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