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I don't notice any real difference in drying times when a dryer has a drum moisture sensor and one in the exhaust plenum from one that only has one in the exhaust. Which has priority?
 
A sensor in the exhaust, usually the blower housing, is for temperature. I've not known of any dryers that have a moisture sensor in that location, being that moisture sensors (in the drum) by design require contact with the clothes.

If there are any dryers with a true moisture sensor in the exhaust airflow, perhaps someone in-the-know can bring them to attention with details on the device via part diagrams and part numbers?
 
A sensor in the exhaust, usually the blower housing, is for temperature. I've not known of any dryers that have a moisture sensor in that location, being that moisture sensors (in the drum) by design require contact with the clothes.

If there are any dryers with a true moisture sensor in the exhaust airflow, perhaps someone in-the-know can bring them to attention with details on the device via part diagrams and part numbers?
Ok, then where is the auto dry sensor, as my Whirlpool has auto dry and no drum sensor?
 
Whirlpool uses a power dropping resistor to drop the voltage down to the timer, when the cycling thermostat opens or the high limit thermostat, it completes a circuit and sends power to the timer motor. A little more complicated to understand than a double throw switch thermostat which is a little more straightforward.
 
Personally, I find a thermostat to work just as well as a moisture sensor since it essentially provides the same results without any additional complexity.
 
Personally, I find a thermostat to work just as well as a moisture sensor since it essentially provides the same results without any additional complexity.


My favorite auto dry was the one used on Galaxy dryers. They took advantage of a 240 volt timer motor and made it work with two contacts like timed dry. I think more dryers should have gone this route:


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My SmartLoads are accurate and consistent at normal Dry level across a range of load-types. Jeans, blankets, shirts, towels/socks, sheets, mixed cargo shorts/briefs/some towels.

One of them (presumably either of them) moved to my mother's house, she must set it at Extra Dry to get her loads fully dry but they are and also consistently. There is one difference between here and there that is the only factor I can figure to account for the operational change. Anyone have a guess what is it?
Well one thing that springs to mind is the conductivity of your water compared to your mother's, based on hardness and other water chemistry. Some Miele dryers have a setting to allow for this. Miele says that soft water is less conductive and the dryer will leave clothes damper.

I know that your dryers are electric, so it could be that your voltage is 240 V and your mother's is 208 V or that hers is just generally lower. This would increase drying time but may have no effect on the dryness level, depending on the dryer's logic.

Am I thinking along the same lines as you or shall I try another guess?!
 
Ok, then where is the auto dry sensor, as my Whirlpool has auto dry and no drum sensor?
Thermostatic auto-dry operates the timer according to the heating profile, controlled by the drying temperature thermostat somewhere in the exhaust air path. The timer doesn't run when the heating element is on. The timer runs when the target temperature is reached and the heat cycles off.

Moisture-sensing auto-dry operates the timer according to the "hits" on the sensor bars in the drum, independently of the heating profile.

Perhaps this is the video that Chetlaham was attempting to link? The fellow makes a technical error when he says the thermo-switch is in the basket (drum) ... although it may be on the filter housing, which kinda is in the drum.
 
The video is Seans but it did not work when he originally liked it. You got it working.

Just want to say, the video is spot on and describes auto dry perfectly along with why it works so well regardless of the load size.

The beauty is that auto dry can be implemented even on the most simplest dryers with a two contact timer without extra components except a resistor in the case of a 120 volt timer motor.
 
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