dustin92
Well-known member
So we are renting the finished lower level / walk out basement to friends of ours, and all has been going well. Until this week. Tuesday the oven died, parts are on the way for that, and Wednesday the dryer died (29" gas Whirlpool). Well it stopped heating anyway. Diagnosed as bad gas valve coils (or the valve itself, more likely) I had just replaced both coils, belt, tensioner, and rollers last week, and had the thing taken apart 3 times. Enough is enough, used too much when it was new.
I decided to replace it with a used one (newer anyway) so found a decent looking Kenmore HE4 gas model on Facebook marketplace for $50. Went this morning and picked it up, got home and plugged it in outside. Everything sounded ok so I went in, disconnected the old one, and got the new one hooked up. Plugged it in, hit start and thought all was well. I waited for the burner to light, and it did, so I was thinking a job well done. Not so fast. Our friend Pam was watching and looking it over, when all of a sudden she said there was smoke coming out the vent (vents through a removed pane in a window) Uh oh, I thought, this is a Propane dryer. And we have natural gas. Not quite. I immediately looked inside and saw bright orange flames coming out of the heat inlet grill. I said "Get the fire extinguisher, and quick" she took off into the other room and came back with it, I quickly opened the door and sprayed inside, which quickly poofed back, giving me a bath in yellow powder. I then sprayed into a gap in the cabinet, and turned the dryer back on for a second (I didn't know where the fire was or what) to distribute the powder. A few minutes later after recovering from an anxiety attack, I opened the dryer up and found the problem... A mouse had built a decent sized nest in the burner tube and when I started the dryer I incinerated it. I ALWAYS open a dryer up and inspect it before turning it on, but for whatever reason I didn't this time. Bad idea.
No damage to the dryer since the fire was contained to the burner tube, but it stunk and was completely yellow inside (fire extinguisher) and out. And the entire large laundry room had a thick yellow haze. Spent about 4 hours cleaning powder and smoke smell out (vacuumed first, then bleach spray everywhere), and all was well, works fine and almost no smell. The laundry room is a different story, everything has a fine yellow coating. Will work on that tomorrow. It is now running smooth and quiet and seems to dry pretty well, but was a scary situation for a few minutes there.
Hoping the fire extinguisher powder doesn't cause damage down the line. I cleaned everything very well (completely dismantled the dryer), all seals, ducts, etc. and gave all the rollers and tensioner a shot of 3 in 1 oil. When I started it up the first time after cleaning it, (fire extinguisher still handy!) A huge thick yellow cloud came out the vent, completely blocking view of our neighbors house (from the vent pipe, which was cleaned last week, so not cleaning it again.. A little fire protection can't hurt lol). My car was parked at the other end of the house and it even has yellow dust on it!
My first time in 25 years ever using a fire extinguisher, and hopefully last for a very long time! I was in panic mode so forgot to pull the pin at first.... An 18 year old extinguisher, kept "just in case" by the fireplace, gone in seconds. But it did work when it was needed (maybe not needed but I wasn't taking that chance).
I decided to replace it with a used one (newer anyway) so found a decent looking Kenmore HE4 gas model on Facebook marketplace for $50. Went this morning and picked it up, got home and plugged it in outside. Everything sounded ok so I went in, disconnected the old one, and got the new one hooked up. Plugged it in, hit start and thought all was well. I waited for the burner to light, and it did, so I was thinking a job well done. Not so fast. Our friend Pam was watching and looking it over, when all of a sudden she said there was smoke coming out the vent (vents through a removed pane in a window) Uh oh, I thought, this is a Propane dryer. And we have natural gas. Not quite. I immediately looked inside and saw bright orange flames coming out of the heat inlet grill. I said "Get the fire extinguisher, and quick" she took off into the other room and came back with it, I quickly opened the door and sprayed inside, which quickly poofed back, giving me a bath in yellow powder. I then sprayed into a gap in the cabinet, and turned the dryer back on for a second (I didn't know where the fire was or what) to distribute the powder. A few minutes later after recovering from an anxiety attack, I opened the dryer up and found the problem... A mouse had built a decent sized nest in the burner tube and when I started the dryer I incinerated it. I ALWAYS open a dryer up and inspect it before turning it on, but for whatever reason I didn't this time. Bad idea.
No damage to the dryer since the fire was contained to the burner tube, but it stunk and was completely yellow inside (fire extinguisher) and out. And the entire large laundry room had a thick yellow haze. Spent about 4 hours cleaning powder and smoke smell out (vacuumed first, then bleach spray everywhere), and all was well, works fine and almost no smell. The laundry room is a different story, everything has a fine yellow coating. Will work on that tomorrow. It is now running smooth and quiet and seems to dry pretty well, but was a scary situation for a few minutes there.
Hoping the fire extinguisher powder doesn't cause damage down the line. I cleaned everything very well (completely dismantled the dryer), all seals, ducts, etc. and gave all the rollers and tensioner a shot of 3 in 1 oil. When I started it up the first time after cleaning it, (fire extinguisher still handy!) A huge thick yellow cloud came out the vent, completely blocking view of our neighbors house (from the vent pipe, which was cleaned last week, so not cleaning it again.. A little fire protection can't hurt lol). My car was parked at the other end of the house and it even has yellow dust on it!
My first time in 25 years ever using a fire extinguisher, and hopefully last for a very long time! I was in panic mode so forgot to pull the pin at first.... An 18 year old extinguisher, kept "just in case" by the fireplace, gone in seconds. But it did work when it was needed (maybe not needed but I wasn't taking that chance).