- If you need clarification, ask it in the comment box above.
- Better answers use proper spelling and grammar.
- Provide details, support with references or personal experience.
Tell us some more! Your answer needs to include more details to help people.You can't post answers that contain an email address.Please enter a valid email address.The email address entered is already associated to an account.Login to postPlease use English characters only.
Tip: The max point reward for answering a question is 15.
As you insert the clothing into the dryer make sure you open up the larger pieces fully so they do not ball up. Frequently people put large bed sheets in before opening them up and everything gets rolled inside them. If your load is too small, that might happen, also!
Wad up a ball of aluminum foil till it is the size of a baseball. Put it in your dryer and leave it there. The aluminum will remove static from your clothes and also works as a fabric softener. No more need for dryer sheets after every load.
THE PROBLEM IS WHEN YOU DRY THE SHEETS WITH OTHER CLOTHING THE SHEETS DON'T HAVE ENOUGH ROOM TO DRY SO THEY TWIST,SO I THINK IS BEST TO DRY THE SHEETS ALONG...
Balls don't work. The only solution is to unball the sheets every few minutes. It is the dryers fault: they way it's designed. It's not the milkman's fault.
hi there......this is usually caused by older dryers which didnt have a reversing tumble facility...or if a lifter is missing from the drum..check that your dryer is or is not a reverse action....and if it is a reverse action that it actually does reverse...you may have a programmer fault if its not reversing
I have a different model Bosch dryer, but I have the same problem.
I've found that the flat sheets dry okay if you have them in with other things (like pillowcases and t-shirts). I learned long ago though that you can't put those things in with deep fitted sheets; the little stuff winds up caught in the corners in damp wrinkly wads.
So I dry the fitted sheet separately, and throw in a couple of clean tennis balls. They're noisy, but harmless, and they keep the sheet from balling up.
×