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It shouldn't hum... all it is, is a resistor and capacitor. if you need it to be variable,, use a transistor in place of the resistor.. there are no power connections to it, to cause a hum.. there must have been a wire you moved or not installed correctly..
Sounds like your capacitor has stopped functioning. Most dryers have capacitors ranging from 8 to 10 ohms which store energy and give the drum the initial energy boost to start it turning. Unplug the machine and take off the side that contains the motor. in there you will find a small cylindrical object with two connections, thats your capacitor, replace it
a hum with a burning smell means the motor winding has failed.
you can try this: open the door and hold in the door switch, have another person hold the start button. You manually roate the drum by grabbing a fin and moveit while the unit is humming.IF the dryer starts, you need a motor.
Good Luck!
I switched out of the audio-out cables from the cable box to the audio in at the Denon receiver and went with a coaxial cable connection. That switch got rid of the hum. I don't understand why the initial connection produced the hum, but the unit is working fine now.
i have Samsung HLP5085WX 50" Projection TV that occasionally turns its self off and then back on again does anyone have any idea what could be causing this
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