
The dishwasher is playing up ( no i havn't been putting engines in it!) seams that its not getting hot enough?
Any suggestions as i'm not familiar with the inner workings of said machines.
Or best to call out an expert?
Cheers
Ash.
Give her a slap and tell her to do them properly next time.
might need a descale.
Ps can you come round to my house to replumb mine back in after the pipe split on sunday flooding the kitchen out


[Edited on 28-9-10 by mangogrooveworkshop]
quote:
Originally posted by CRAIGR
Give her a slap and tell her to do them properly next time.![]()
You should have put more engine parts in it, doing this prevents these problems, because the oil resedue lubricates the inner workings.
At least that's what I told my wife
quote:
Originally posted by mangogrooveworkshop
might need a descale.
quote:
Ps can you come round to my house to replumb mine back in after the pipe split on sunday flooding the kitchen out:
buy this
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Dishwasher-Manual-Plumbing-Fault-finding-Maintenance/dp/1844255557/ref=sr_1_2?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1285709988&sr=1-
2
or get it from a LIBRARY
quote:
Originally posted by thunderace
buy this
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Dishwasher-Manual-Plumbing-Fault-finding-Maintenance/dp/1844255557/ref=sr_1_2?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1285709988&sr=1- 2
What kind is it?
Mine did the same thing (AEG, Electrolux thing), and it was the water heater element. The components are common to loads of brands (including
Zanussi).
If you google it you will come up with some hits. The test is to measure the resistance across the heater element terminals which should be ~10 Ohm
(whatever 2kW is at 240v), open circuit is not a good sign!
They seem to be an unreliable part, which is bad (because they break) but good because you can get OEM parts from e-bay for reasonable money (£40).
Easy to swap.
Matt
quote:
Originally posted by matt_gsxr
What kind is it?
Mine did the same thing (AEG, Electrolux thing), and it was the water heater element. The components are common to loads of brands (including Zanussi).
![]()
If you google it you will come up with some hits. The test is to measure the resistance across the heater element terminals which should be ~10 Ohm (whatever 2kW is at 240v), open circuit is not a good sign!
They seem to be an unreliable part, which is bad (because they break) but good because you can get OEM parts from e-bay for reasonable money (£40).
Easy to swap.
Matt
Thanks for the tips, its a Neff so shares its design and parts with Bosch & Siemans....
Going to try bunging in some descaler first to see if it helps if not then will prob get a techi in as i've not got the time really to faf with
it myself.
Ash.
This has happened twice to our Bosch dishwasher, first time two days out
of warranty which fortunately they honoured.
Bloke turned up with a PCB, went straight to the door, took the front cover off and
swapped said board. Sorted in 5 mins.
First thought was this happens a lot !
5 years on it did, so I went to the board and found a fried section on it, no component
damage just a track gone. Bridged with a bit of solder and wire and it's happy 6 years later.
Took me half an hour.
[Edited on 30/9/10 by NigeEss]