Hi, The answer is ,,,, drum role please,,,,, YES!!!!!,,,,, there are in fact conditions that can develope within your dryer by overload that can not only break your heater but also your drive system and so on. A certain amount of room is required within those things for necessary air flow to happen. If you block that air flow off substantially in anyway ( such as overloading it with clothes ) then. Hope this helps: Jimiwane
Yes, and it has a heater inside which increases temperature inside the dryer to accelerate drying.
Wash in cold water and avoid putting in dryer. Alternatively, buy pre-washed clothes.
* Dryer duct is clogged. * Vent screen is clogged. * Heater element is burned open. * Thermal switch is covered with lint. * Thermal switch does not close. * Air is humid. * Dryer outlet air not ducted away from the dryer. * Too many clothes. * "Air Dry" cycle selected. * Timer assembly broken, or no connection to allow the heater element to operate. * "A watched pot never boils", maybe you are impatient. * clothes lines are "green" technology.
Forget the tumble dryer, sperm dies on clothes. Assuming you washed the clothes prior to putting them in the tumble dryer, if any sperm were left on the clothing (and survived the heat from the dryer) they die after 72 hrs anyway! Hope this helps. xx
Hair dryer: U.S. Clothes dryer: France
No, but putting them in the dryer might. Heat is the culprit in shrinking natural fibres such as cotton and wool.
yes
take it apart. dry each bit on a heater then put it back togeth----- Put it in the clothes dryer
If, after washing your clothes, you can avoid putting them in the dryer at all, you can avoid shrinking them. If the clothes are made primarily of polyester, after washing all you have to hang them up WITHOUT drying them, and usually they look good, all without shrinking. The shower rod is a good place to hang them.
my clothes dryer wiil not stop when the time has expired
Get a new dryer
pictures of the first ever clothes dryer