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My faith in humanity has been partially restored.

I loaded my dishwasher a few nights back and set it to do its thing. A few hours later I noticed the light was off. It is supposed to show a white light when finished to let me know the dishes are clean. It kept shutting off. I tried a few times to get it going but it was getting late so I decided to work on it in the morning.

Yesterday morning I start researching possible problems online. 55% of the time it is the thermal fuse! (Followed by door switch, latch switch and drain pump.) AHA! I call the parts place a little north of me only to find out they no longer sell parts and they are now 100% service. No thanks, I refuse to pay the price of the dishwasher to fix it!

I call another place I found online that is actually closer to me. A nice guy, Frank, answered and looked up my model number and told me the thermal fuse on my model is part of the main board and that I'd need to pay $210 for a new one. He could have it there in two days. I told him I was pretty handy and I'd try to desolder the part myself and replace just the single failure point.

I get home early, tear the thing apart and test the fuses on the main board. They are all good! Well shit! What now? I call Frank back and he tells me to remove the kickplate to find the service instructions and it will tell me how to make the dishwasher go into diagnostic mode. The instructions might as well be written in Latin. This is a high end KitchenAid with the hidden buttons when you close the door. I get it to go into diagnostic mode while he is on the phone with me. Turns out there are potentially 60+ things that could go wrong with it. I hang up with him to study a bit more.

Hey... it's flashing at me! 8 flashes a pause, then 4 more. It keeps flashing! I look to the diagram and see section 8.4... A clogged or stuck drain pump. I call Frank again. He tells me to siphon as much water out as I can, clean the filter on the inside, turn off the breaker and get underneath to remove the drain pump. Nothing! Looks clean to me. I drain every ounce of water and reassemble everything.

BAM... IT WORKS! I call Frank to tell him the good news. He said it was most likely a piece of broken glass or small shard of pottery and asks if I've had any broken glasses or plates with chips. Yup... Well, he said, there's your answer.

I plan on getting Frank a $50 gift card to a nice restaurant near me. He spent time on the phone with me, it seemed, almost as a friend instead of some guy at the parts store. He was super nice, patient and helped me without looking for money for his time and advice. I found my new go-to appliance place!

There still are nice people out there!

RiverRick 7 Oct 2
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7 comments

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0

i took a course on major appliance repair several decades ago. was able to keep old appliances going forever (to my wife's chagrin) at very little cost. much different now b/c the appliances are so computerized. and i don't doubt that they're built with planned obsolescence.

2

That's a great story 😊

2

Frank is a fine example of humanity! Be sure to get him that certificate!

I stopped by there on the way home tonight and gave him a Thank You card with a $50 Visa gift card in it. We chatted for 15 minutes or so. I thanked him again and took several business cards. I will make sure my neighbors and friends know about him!

1

I have no dishwasher. Washing dishes by hand is a relaxing chore and requires almost no energy. Electric dishwashers make a lot of noise and use a lot of energy, and you actually have to hand wash first anyway and stack the dishes. Many people leave the dishes in the dishwasher afterwards. That warm, humid environment is perfect for bacteria.

The whole concept is a marketing scheme based on lies. The manufacturers actually claim that electric dishwashers use LESS energy than hand washing, an impossibility.

Haven't had one for almost 40 years. Even a sink full, like after cooking a big meal, takes less than 5 minutes, maybe 10 if a pot needs scrubbing! Air-drying, for sure, put them away in the morning as the coffee brews.

And let's not forget the medical benefits of putting arthritic hands into hot water. I now wash my few dishes in the morning, before attempting to make coffee. I have not smashed a coffee careffe in months!

It's a state-of-the-art machine and EnergyStar rated at $32 per year. That figures you use an electric water heater and run 4 loads per week. I run 1 load per week and have an on-demand propane fired water heater. I figure I am in the $5-$6 per year category. I'm good with that.

I dry the bottoms of the coffee mugs when they are super hot. (No dishwasher dries them 100%) and then put them away when they are cool to the touch. No water spots ever as I am on well water with no minerals to speak of.

You cannot hear it running even if you are right beside it. I often wonder what the odd sound is and I forget that I started it. I use my laptop at the end of the bar literally 2 feet away. It is 99% silent.

I built this house to be energy efficient and spent a lot to make it so. No way I could build a state-of-the-art house and not have a dishwasher.

@RiverRick Sounds like they’ve improved’em since my last one from the seventies. Good to hear.

1

Encouraging!
I wash my dishes by hand.

So do I for the most part. I like to sanitize my dishes in the dishwasher and I don't like drying everything by hand.

@RiverRick you Dry dishes??! Let them air-dry, far more sanitary that using a cloth! And No dishwasher "sanitizes" anything, yes the higher heat & stronger chemicals do, but the humid air they sit in afterwards negates all that, very quickly.

0

My ex-fiance bought one of the first modern use less water washing machines with all the bells and whistles you could imagine. Worked great for about a year then stopped working. (by the way, it was very expensive). Small town and two different service guys came out, were stumped as to how to fix it. Did research on the internet. Everything pointed to sensors getting soap on them which gives false readings to the computer. I tore it apart, cleaned every sensor part, cleaned and flushed pump, all filters cleaned, lines flushed, put back together....nothing. Another service guy came.....ran diagnostic computer test.....nothing......Screw ultra fancy expensive have to have a Ph.d to work on it washing machines. I am glad your guy could help you, but machines are getting so complicated electronically and computerized, that even that guy will get left behind. I now own a 20 year old, simple washing machine that is built like a tank.

I feel your pain but I have always had great service out of KitchenAid products. This turned out to be a fairly easy fix... Plus l learned something new in the process. So I see it as a Win-Win situation.

I have never had a new washer dryer. The washer in my basement right now was used by my inlaws for 20 years, I got it after Dad moved to senior housing. It is approx 50 years old, a Maytag. The dryer came from Habitat for Humanity. I find I use One cycle on each 99% of the time, all the other "features" are not needed.

1

That's great! And very rare these days.

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