Calling in a professional to fix your appliances is not only inconvenient, it can also get very expensive. The following guidelines will show you how to do some basic repairs yourself.
November 18, 2015
Calling in a professional to fix your appliances is not only inconvenient, it can also get very expensive. The following guidelines will show you how to do some basic repairs yourself.
Finicky automatic icemakers keep many an appliance repairperson in business. If your freezer's icemaker has ground to a halt, try this simple cure before you spend a bundle on a repair call:
Professionals get a good chuckle when you tell them that your dishwasher isn't cleaning as well as it used to. That's because homeowners have a good shot at fixing this problem themselves with this easy, three-minute procedure:
It's one of the most common things that go wrong with a fridge. In a typical two-door unit with the freezer at the top, there is a drain tube running from the freezer compartment to an evaporation tray underneath the fridge.
You'll find the drain hole on the floor of the freezer compartment, near the back. Its purpose is to drain the runoff that develops when your unit periodically melts its frost to keep itself, as advertised, frost-free.
The problem is that algae spores often develop in the tube, blocking it. This causes water to back up on the floor of the freezer, usually forming ice.
The solution is simple:
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