A drum dryer is a drum rotating on a horizontal axis with heat applied either from the outside of the drum or with hot gas (usually air) blown across the drum contents. The rotation of the drum causes the contents to tumble, thus assuring uniform drying and mixing. A good example of a drum drier is a home laundry drier.
I use bleach mixed with soap. but my dryer is different then most. I hope it works if you wanna use it.
The chassis of a dryer is what you see when you look at the dryer. It is a frame work of metal that contains the rotating drum and motor assembly. When you ground a dryer it is this framework that the ground wire, from the cord, is connected to.
Brake locked up? Broken return spring? (Drum brakes)? Parking brake cable frozen and not releasing? Disk brake? Frozen caliper? Bad wheel bearing?
if it is not spinning or is hitting the side of the dryer then it is out of balance. For more information please submit a full question with more details.
It depends on the dryer but it sounds like the belt might be slipping or one of the drum rollers rubbing. Unplug dryer and see if you can access it workings from the bottom, if not remove the back dryer panel. You can try some 'Belt Dressing Spray - Found in automotive shops" on the dryer belt or some WD-40 on the drum rollers should it be one of them. If all else fails replace the dryer belt but that can be a bit of a job and it could be cheaper to just buy a new dryer.
I use a used dryer sheet.
A gas dryer uses natural gas to heat air which is then passed through a rotating drum which tumbles the clothes through the heated air.
Remove wheel. Then spray some penetrating oil around the hub of the drum. Then get the biggest hammer you got, pound the drum, rotate the drum a quarter of a way, pound the drum again, repeat. Be careful not to hit the studs that hold the lugnuts. Once it's broken, you gotta replace it. It's a pain! There are two threaded holes on the drum, just get two bolts that fit those and tighten until it pops off. It wont hurt anything, a mechanic told me about it. I tried the hammer on mine and got nothing.
Centrifugal force - the spinning motion sends everything in the drum as far from the centre of rotation as possible. The side of the drum stops the clothes, the holes in the drum let the water through.
pull wheel off and then look for a slot in the brake drum on the front of it and rotate drum until you see the gear through the hole in the drum, turn the gear to set up the brakes.
a lot of factors to consider... will the engine rotate at all?