SOFTengCOMPelec
Platinum Member
- May 9, 2013
- 2,417
- 75
- 91
Well, given your apparent wardrobe problems, it's no wonder.
Okay, someone feel free to correct me if I'm wrong, but I cannot imagine any circumstances where a maintenance guy would need to take a dryer to a repair shop. (To me) it sounds like a lie that someone with little knowledge about dryers would make. They are incredibly simple pieces of machinery. A motor, a belt, a pair of rollers, a few switches, controller, and either electric heating elements, else controls for a gas burner, and a few minor (though common problems) such as thermal fuses. Diagnosing the problem is child's play for any decent mechanic. The body of dryers are incredibly simple to open, and a trip to the shop to repair the dryer would more likely be a trip to go get a part. Why haul a dryer out, rather than return with the needed part?
edit: if I'm wrong, then I'm really surprised that "dryer to the repair shop" and "dryer back to the repair shop" turned up a grand total of 1 hit on Google. OP is lying.
Before your post, I thought pretty much, exactly the same thing. Worse still, referring back to a similar, but older thread they wrote (on a similar but different appliance going faulty). It is actually technically/physically IMPOSSIBLE, for what they say to have occurred. Without literally re-writing the laws of Physics/Chemistry.
Last edited: