How Does a Dryer Work?
A dryer is one of the most convenient and time-saving appliances in modern homes. While it’s easy to toss in damp clothes and expect them to come out warm and dry, have you ever stopped to wonder how a dryer actually works? Let’s dive into the science and mechanics behind this indispensable household appliance.
KEY TAKEAWAYS
- Dryers work by combining heat, air circulation, and tumbling action to efficiently dry clothes.
- Heat evaporates water, a fan circulates the air to carry away moisture, and the drum’s tumbling motion ensures even drying while preventing wrinkles.
- Regular maintenance, such as cleaning the lint filter after every cycle, inspecting the exhaust vent duct system, and avoiding overloading the drum, improves efficiency, reduces drying time, and minimizes fire risks.
The Basics: Heat, Air, and Movement
At its core, a dryer operates using three fundamental principles:
- Heat: Dryers generate heat to evaporate the water in your clothes. This is typically achieved through an electric heating element or a gas burner, depending on the type of dryer.
- Air Circulation: A fan circulates hot air throughout the drum to evenly distribute heat and carry away the evaporated moisture.
- Tumbling Action: The rotating dryer drum gently tosses clothes around to expose all parts of the fabric to the hot air, ensuring efficient drying.
Step-by-Step Process
1. Loading the Dryer
Once you load your damp laundry into the drum, you’ll need to shut the dryer door before the cycle will begin.
Select a drying cycle and settings.
Press the start button and the dryer’s motor begins to rotate the drum.
2. Tumbling Action
The drum’s rotation ensures that clothes are consistently tossed and exposed to the hot air. This motion also helps prevent wrinkles and promotes even drying.
3. Air Circulation
A fan pulls air into the dryer. The air passes over the heating element or burner, becoming hot before entering the drum. Moist air is then vented out through an exhaust system.
4. Generating Heat
In electric dryers, heating element coils powered by electricity warm the air.
In gas dryers, the burner ignites natural gas or propane to create heat.
Air passes through the electric heating element or gas burner to heat the air and the warm air passes through the garments tumbling in the dryer drum.
5. Moisture Removal
As clothes dry, water evaporates and turns into humid air. This moist air is expelled to the outside of your home through the exhaust vent duct system.
6. End of Cycle
Some dryers have sensors to detect moisture in tumbling garments. The control uses the signal from the moisture sensor to end the cycle when clothes are dry.
A timed cycle will end when the set drying time runs out.
Most dryers use a brief cool-down period at the end of the cycle by tumbling the clothes with the heating system shut off. This helps reduce wrinkles in clothing.
Some dryers use a wrinkle-prevent routine to help prevent wrinkled garments when you don’t remove clothes promptly after the cycle ends. The dryer will periodically tumble the clothes until you remove them or until the wrinkle-prevent feature times out and ends.
Many dryers have an end-of-cycle signal that will sound when the cycle ends or when the wrinkle-prevent feature times out.
Dryer Use and Maintenance Tips
To get the best performance from your dryer follow these expert tips:
Clean the Lint Screen Filter
A clogged lint screen filter restricts airflow, reducing efficiency and increasing fire risk. Clean it after every cycle.
Monthly, wash the lint screen filter with water and a soft-bristled brush to remove fabric softener residue and other obstructions that build up on the screen and inhibit air flow. Here’s a video that shows how to wash the dryer lint screen:
Inspect and Clean the Exhaust Vent Duct System
Ensure the exhaust vent duct system to the outside of your home is clear and free of obstructions to avoid long dry times and dryer overheating.
Follow these steps to clean the exhaust vent duct system in your dryer:
- Check the dryer damper vent on the outside of your home. Clear any obstructions that are blocking the damper from opening properly. Clean the damper vent and make sure that it swings freely on its hinge so that exhaust air flows freely out of your home.
- Disconnect the flexible exhaust duct from its wall connection. Vacuum lint and dust from the exhaust duct going to the outside of your home.
- Use a lint brush or leaf blower to clear lint and debris from the exhaust duct system going through the wall behind your clothes dryer to the outside of your home.
- Vacuum lint and debris from the exhaust outlet on the dryer. Reassemble the flexible exhaust duct to restore the air path going to the outside of your home.
Some vent duct systems can be challenging to clean on your own. If you need us to clean the dryer vent duct system for you, schedule dryer vent cleaning and we’ll send a technician to thoroughly clear lint and debris from the entire dryer exhaust vent system in your home.
Avoid Overloading the Dryer
Overloading can reduce airflow, leading to longer drying times.
Follow the guidelines in the owner’s manual to load the dryer properly and avoid overloading the drum.
Schedule Professional Maintenance and Cleaning Yearly
To keep your dryer operating safely and efficiently, schedule professional dryer maintenance and we’ll send a service technician to your home to thoroughly inspect, clean and maintain your dryer.
The technician will check all gas lines and connections in a gas dryer for safety. He or she will check wiring and heating components in an electric dryer. The tech will also check all dryer components and operations and make any adjustments necessary so the dryer operates safely and efficiently.
During dryer cleaning and maintenance service, the technician will open your dryer cabinet and vacuum lint and debris out of the cabinet. Lint inside the dryer cabinet is one of the leading causes of fires in homes.
Yearly professional maintenance will keep your dryer working safely and efficiently. It will also help keep your dryer lasting longer.
Understanding how your dryer works can help you maintain it better so it works efficiently and lasts for year to come.
Schedule your dryer maintenance now!
Keep your dryer working efficiently and lasting longer with regular professional maintenance.
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Schedule your dryer maintenance now!
Maintain Dryer Resources
Learn how wool dryer balls work and whether they’re right for you.
Learn how clothes dryer sheets work and how to maximize their effectiveness.
Discover the 10 reasons why dryer sheets are bad. Protect your family from harmful chemicals. Learn more at Sears Home Services.
Learn how long dryers last and get expert tips on extending their lifespan at Sears Home Services.
Glossary Terms
Natural gas is a fossil fuel used primarily for heating, cooking, and electricity generation. It's a hydrocarbon gas mixture consisting mainly of methane, but it also contains smaller amounts of other hydrocarbons and sometimes sulfur compounds.
A gas dryer is a laundry appliance that uses natural gas or propane to generate heat to dry clothes.
A furnace filter is a component installed in HVAC systems to trap and remove dust, pollen, and other airborne particles from the air, enhancing indoor air quality and protecting the furnace's inner workings.
Hard water is water that contains high levels of dissolved minerals, particularly calcium and magnesium. It contrasts with soft water, which has lower concentrations of these minerals.
Common Repair Dryer Symptoms
The most common reasons your Whirlpool dryer won't turn off are an open heating element, defective electronic control board or a failed thermistor.
The most common reasons your Whirlpool dryer won't start cycle are a faulty thermal fuse, failed door switch or a broken drum belt.
The most common reasons your Whirlpool dryer won't heat up are an open heating element, failed thermal cut-off fuse or a defective electronic control board.
The most common reasons for a Whirlpool dryer will not come on issue are a faulty thermal fuse, a failed door switch, or a broken drum belt.
The most common reasons your Whirlpool dryer takes 3 cycles to dry are an open heating element, a clogged vent tube, or a faulty thermal fuse.
The most common reasons your Whirlpool dryer stopped working are an open heating element, faulty thermal fuse or a worn drum bearing.