DIYbanter

DIYbanter (https://www.diybanter.com/)
-   Home Repair (https://www.diybanter.com/home-repair/)
-   -   Hoover Washer Dryer HSWD 126 (https://www.diybanter.com/home-repair/189153-hoover-washer-dryer-hswd-126-a.html)

[email protected] January 14th 07 10:18 PM

Hoover Washer Dryer HSWD 126
 
Hi All,

I have a Hoover HSWD 126 washer dryer which keeps tripping the
thermostat. What I mean by this is there is no heated air coming out on
the tumble dry cycle even through it still goes through the cycle. The
machine is now just over 12 months old (out of manufacturer warranty).

The engineer came out a month ago (when it was still in warranty) and
showed me how to reset it (3 screws at the back, slide the top off and
press one or both of the reset switches). He explained this had
probably just tripped as a one-off but mentioned they commonly go after
2 or 3 years due to the fluff build up in the condensor.

How can I clean the condensor on this - if I unscrew the main back
panel, is it obvious? The engineer made it sound straight-forward...

Any help would be greatly appreciated.

Mat G
Birmingham, UK


Sparks January 14th 07 11:58 PM

Hoover Washer Dryer HSWD 126
 
wrote in message
ups.com...
Hi All,

I have a Hoover HSWD 126 washer dryer which keeps tripping the
thermostat. What I mean by this is there is no heated air coming out on
the tumble dry cycle even through it still goes through the cycle. The
machine is now just over 12 months old (out of manufacturer warranty).

The engineer came out a month ago (when it was still in warranty) and
showed me how to reset it (3 screws at the back, slide the top off and
press one or both of the reset switches). He explained this had
probably just tripped as a one-off but mentioned they commonly go after
2 or 3 years due to the fluff build up in the condensor.

How can I clean the condensor on this - if I unscrew the main back
panel, is it obvious? The engineer made it sound straight-forward...

Any help would be greatly appreciated.

Mat G
Birmingham, UK


If this machine is failing due to clogging of non user serviceable parts
(meaning you need to take it apart rather than just cleaning a user
cleanable filter to rectify) then this machine is not performing adequately
so is not "fit for the purpose" (assuming you are using it in a normal
domestic environment and are operating it according to the manual)

Just because you are out of warranty, does not mean the retailer can just
wash their hands of it.

www.tradingstandards.gov.uk have loads of advice leaflets to read advising
you of your consumer rights.
Specifically this page
[http://www.tradingstandards.gov.uk/c...0043-1011.txt]

If I were you, I would firstly call Hoover and ask them the same question
you have asked here.
Explain to them you have had problems with the machine before, they will
probably have a log of the visit (assuming it was Hoover who fixed it
before)

They might, seeing that this item has had this problem before, fix it for
you free. - You don't ask, you don't get!
They have no legal obligation to fix your machine (unless you bought it from
them directly as a normal consumer rather than a business)
They may just tell you how to clean the condenser, but it is up to you
whether you do so, or continue with the suggestion below...

Failing this, speak to the store you bought it from explaining you have had
this same problem before. If they just tell you that you are out of your
guarantee, politely remind them they are liable under the sale of goods act
(do have a read on the link I supplied above, so you know the facts)

I would not mention to them you have taken the top off to reset the cut-out,
as they might try and use this against you.

If you do remove the cover, PLEASE make sure you unplug it first, there are
usually live parts all over the place in these things!

Sparks...



[email protected] January 15th 07 06:43 AM

Hoover Washer Dryer HSWD 126
 


On Jan 15, 3:18 am, wrote:
Hi All,

I have a Hoover HSWD 126 washer dryer which keeps tripping the
thermostat. What I mean by this is there is no heated air coming out on
the tumble dry cycle even through it still goes through the cycle. The
machine is now just over 12 months old (out of manufacturer warranty).

The engineer came out a month ago (when it was still in warranty) and
showed me how to reset it (3 screws at the back, slide the top off and
press one or both of the reset switches). He explained this had
probably just tripped as a one-off but mentioned they commonly go after
2 or 3 years due to the fluff build up in the condensor.

How can I clean the condensor on this - if I unscrew the main back
panel, is it obvious? The engineer made it sound straight-forward...

Any help would be greatly appreciated.

Mat G
Birmingham, UK



CDET 14 January 15th 07 02:11 PM

Hoover Washer Dryer HSWD 126
 
I have seen dryers trip the heating element when the temperature gets
too high. Many times this is due to a clog or restriction somewhere in
the dryer vent. You can clean it yourself or call a professional. In
the US, chimney sweeps are the dryer vent cleaners.

Alisa LeSueur
Certified Dryer Exhaust Technician
http://CleanYourOwnDryerVent.com



wrote:
Hi All,

I have a Hoover HSWD 126 washer dryer which keeps tripping the
thermostat. What I mean by this is there is no heated air coming out on
the tumble dry cycle even through it still goes through the cycle. The
machine is now just over 12 months old (out of manufacturer warranty).

The engineer came out a month ago (when it was still in warranty) and
showed me how to reset it (3 screws at the back, slide the top off and
press one or both of the reset switches). He explained this had
probably just tripped as a one-off but mentioned they commonly go after
2 or 3 years due to the fluff build up in the condensor.

How can I clean the condensor on this - if I unscrew the main back
panel, is it obvious? The engineer made it sound straight-forward...

Any help would be greatly appreciated.

Mat G
Birmingham, UK



Andy Hall January 15th 07 02:38 PM

Hoover Washer Dryer HSWD 126
 
On 2007-01-15 14:11:39 +0000, "CDET 14" said:

I have seen dryers trip the heating element when the temperature gets
too high. Many times this is due to a clog or restriction somewhere in
the dryer vent. You can clean it yourself or call a professional. In
the US, chimney sweeps are the dryer vent cleaners.

Alisa LeSueur
Certified Dryer Exhaust Technician
http://CleanYourOwnDryerVent.com




How on earth do they fit small children into dryer vents and keep the
soot out of the washing?



stevelup January 15th 07 03:52 PM

Hoover Washer Dryer HSWD 126
 
CDET 14 wrote:

I have seen dryers trip the heating element when the temperature gets
too high. Many times this is due to a clog or restriction somewhere in
the dryer vent. You can clean it yourself or call a professional. In
the US, chimney sweeps are the dryer vent cleaners.

Alisa LeSueur
Certified Dryer Exhaust Technician


I've missed my vocation in life. Can someone please tell me how I
become a Certified Dryer Exhaust Technician.

I will proudly put the letters CDET at the end of my name and look
forward to the flood of job offers that swamp my postbox.

Thanks!


Tony Bryer January 15th 07 04:32 PM

Hoover Washer Dryer HSWD 126
 
On 15 Jan 2007 07:52:55 -0800 Stevelup wrote :
I've missed my vocation in life. Can someone please tell me how
I become a Certified Dryer Exhaust Technician.

I will proudly put the letters CDET at the end of my name and
look forward to the flood of job offers that swamp my postbox.


Back in my BCO days our trainee got fed up with the staple job
assigned to trainees - refolding submitted plans in the prescribed
manner. As we all did, he would send off for technical literature
on products of interest and he chose to express his frustration by
adding some letters after his name, and when the literature came
back the replies were eyeballed by our boss. Fortunately he
responded to Frank's self-awarded MIPF in the intended manner!

--
Tony Bryer SDA UK 'Software to build on' http://www.sda.co.uk


Andy Hall January 15th 07 06:19 PM

Hoover Washer Dryer HSWD 126
 
On 2007-01-15 16:32:14 +0000, Tony Bryer said:

On 15 Jan 2007 07:52:55 -0800 Stevelup wrote :
I've missed my vocation in life. Can someone please tell me how
I become a Certified Dryer Exhaust Technician.

I will proudly put the letters CDET at the end of my name and
look forward to the flood of job offers that swamp my postbox.


Back in my BCO days our trainee got fed up with the staple job assigned
to trainees - refolding submitted plans in the prescribed manner. As we
all did, he would send off for technical literature on products of
interest and he chose to express his frustration by adding some letters
after his name, and when the literature came back the replies were
eyeballed by our boss. Fortunately he responded to Frank's self-awarded
MIPF in the intended manner!


??


Minnesota Institute of Public Finance
Metal Industries Provident Fund
Meghalaya Indigenous People's Forum
Medical Innovation Prize Fund
Management Ignited Prescribed Fire




Tony Bryer January 15th 07 06:43 PM

Hoover Washer Dryer HSWD 126
 
On Mon, 15 Jan 2007 18:19:36 +0000 Andy Hall wrote :
MIPF in the intended manner!


??


You're slow today, Andy!

Member of the Institute of Plan Folders

--
Tony Bryer SDA UK 'Software to build on' http://www.sda.co.uk


Johnti July 25th 09 02:30 PM

Hoover Washer Dryer HSWD 126
 
Johnti had written this in response to
http://www.thestuccocompany.com/main...26-185079-.htm
:

Hi Mat,

Seems we may have the same problem as you did with our Hoover HSWD126
dryer ie. no heat in the dryer and need to re-set the tripped thermostat.

Did you (or anyone) find out how to check/clean the condensor? If so I
would be obliged if you could please pass on the brief details of how to
do this.

Regards John.



wrote:


Hi All,


I have a Hoover HSWD 126 washer dryer which keeps tripping the
thermostat. What I mean by this is there is no heated air coming out on
the tumble dry cycle even through it still goes through the cycle. The
machine is now just over 12 months old (out of manufacturer warranty).


The engineer came out a month ago (when it was still in warranty) and
showed me how to reset it (3 screws at the back, slide the top off and
press one or both of the reset switches). He explained this had
probably just tripped as a one-off but mentioned they commonly go after
2 or 3 years due to the fluff build up in the condensor.


How can I clean the condensor on this - if I unscrew the main back
panel, is it obvious? The engineer made it sound straight-forward...


Any help would be greatly appreciated.


Mat G
Birmingham, UK




-------------------------------------




##-----------------------------------------------##
Delivered via
http://www.thestuccocompany.com/
Building Construction and Maintenance Forum
Web and RSS access to your favorite newsgroup -
alt.home.repair,uk.d-i-y - messages and counting!
##-----------------------------------------------##

Harry Stottle[_4_] July 25th 09 04:13 PM

Hoover Washer Dryer HSWD 126
 
"Johnti" wrote in message
m...
Johnti had written this in response to
http://www.thestuccocompany.com/main...26-185079-.htm
:

Hi Mat,

Seems we may have the same problem as you did with our Hoover HSWD126
dryer ie. no heat in the dryer and need to re-set the tripped thermostat.

Did you (or anyone) find out how to check/clean the condensor? If so I
would be obliged if you could please pass on the brief details of how to
do this.

If this is a common problem, which it appears to be, and the condenser is
not user serviceable, then it would probably be classed as an inbuilt fault
from manufacture, (a fault waiting to happen) which is just the sort of
problem the sale of goods act covers. If you go to the BBC Watchdog site on
the following link, you should find some advice on the right way to
complain, and hopefully get the retailer to sort out the problem as it is
their responsibility under the sale of goods act, not the manufacturers.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/watchdog/consumer_advice/


Harry Bloomfield[_3_] July 25th 09 09:41 PM

Hoover Washer Dryer HSWD 126
 
Johnti presented the following explanation :
Johnti had written this in response to
http://www.thestuccocompany.com/main...26-185079-.htm


Hi Mat,

Seems we may have the same problem as you did with our Hoover HSWD126
dryer ie. no heat in the dryer and need to re-set the tripped thermostat.

Did you (or anyone) find out how to check/clean the condensor? If so I
would be obliged if you could please pass on the brief details of how to
do this.

Regards John.



wrote:


Hi All,


I have a Hoover HSWD 126 washer dryer which keeps tripping the
thermostat. What I mean by this is there is no heated air coming out on
the tumble dry cycle even through it still goes through the cycle. The
machine is now just over 12 months old (out of manufacturer warranty).


The engineer came out a month ago (when it was still in warranty) and
showed me how to reset it (3 screws at the back, slide the top off and
press one or both of the reset switches). He explained this had
probably just tripped as a one-off but mentioned they commonly go after
2 or 3 years due to the fluff build up in the condensor.


How can I clean the condensor on this - if I unscrew the main back
panel, is it obvious? The engineer made it sound straight-forward...


Any help would be greatly appreciated.


Not sure what make ours is, but probably the idea is the similar....


Ours did not have a reset-able trip, or at least one designed to be
reset - the trip was intended to trip and as a sealed unit, then to be
replaced. Whilst seeking a replacement, an engineer suggested that if a
tiny hole were carefully drilled in the centre between the terminals,
that a pin could be pushed in to reset the bi-metal disc.

The above overheat trip, is mounted in a cast alloy(?) duct, which
houses an heating element and a fan. The duct can be separated into its
two halves simply by removing about 6 torque headed screws holding the
upper half. The duct was mounted at the top of the machine and needed
the top cover of the machine to be taken off, to access it. It is this
duct and circulating fan blades which becomes choked up with lint,
causing the unit to overheat and trip.

--
Regards,
Harry (M1BYT) (L)
http://www.ukradioamateur.co.uk




All times are GMT +1. The time now is 07:34 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 DIYbanter