SiteSeeing: ApplianceRepair.com offers useful how-to troubleshooting tips for home appliances
Stuck with a leaky, noisy, bouncy, smelly, or otherwise underperforming
appliance? The folks at RepairClinic.com, who have helped us with "Can
This [fill in the blank] Be Saved?" sidebars on refrigerators, ranges, dishwashers, and other household gear, has a new site that provides
even more sage appliance-repair advice for DIYers. (We haven’t tried out any of the repairs, so use your judgment to determine whether the you want to proceed with the recommended fixes.)
At the heart of ApplianceRepair.com are dozens of transcripts of the site's Sunday-morning radio show with host John Sowden (shown). Each transcript is quite effectively divided into detailed descriptions and savvy solutions to problems like:
• Musty, noisy, or dancing washing machines.
• The balky top burner on a Kenmore range.
• Refrigerator lightbulbs that won't stay lit.
• Enigmatic error codes for GE electric ranges.
• Cures for a shaky garbage disposer. See our buyer's guide to garbage disposers.
The entire archive is keyword searchable, so you might be able to find your specific model. If it's not covered, there's still plenty of good general information available; Sowden is very good at describing how each appliance works as he queries callers about particular problems.
And he often comes up with cost-effective fixes users should try before an expensive replacement. Examples include heating lemon juice in a microwave to banish the smell of popcorn and replacing a refrigerator's low-cost cooling fan rather than an expensive compressor.
If you don't find an answer there, check our stories on excessive vibration and mold in front-loading washing machines and preventing dryer fires in and installing proper venting for clothes dryers.—Gian Trotta | e-mail | Twitter | Forums | Facebook
Essential information: You might be able to avoid these repairs by picking the recommended models in our appliance ratings. Our own appliance-maintenance advice, repair-or-replace timelines (available to subscribers), and our members' applicance-buying strategies will help you get the most value for your money.

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Posted by: cecilia deWolf | Sep 22, 2009 11:49:41 PM
Hi,
My dishwasher works fine until the the end. After the cycle is over there is is still a lot of water in the bottom of the dishwasher. It seems that maybe a pump is not working properly to pump the water out of the dishwasher.
Can I fix this? Do I need to hire a dishwasher repairman? Or do I have to buy a new dishwasher?
Thanks for you help.
Cecilia