Dishwasher woes
Author
Discussion

bimsb6

Original Poster:

8,442 posts

237 months

Wednesday 1st January
quotequote all
We have a smeg dishwasher thats playing up, it powers up normally then we can’t get the timer to delay the wash or start the cycle ,before xmas i shook it around abit and result ! It worked for a week faultlessly then we are back to it not working . I’m handy with a screwdriver just don’t know which parts to butcher first ! Any ideas ?

K87

3,979 posts

115 months

Wednesday 1st January
quotequote all
Mine plays up unless I switch it off at the mains after every wash. It is something to do with a circuit board issue.

It is worth a try and cannot do any harm... Switch off and leave off for at least 24 hours.

Ace-T

8,154 posts

271 months

Wednesday 1st January
quotequote all
bimsb6 said:
We have a smeg dishwasher thats playing up, it powers up normally then we can’t get the timer to delay the wash or start the cycle ,before xmas i shook it around abit and result ! It worked for a week faultlessly then we are back to it not working . I’m handy with a screwdriver just don’t know which parts to butcher first ! Any ideas ?
We have a Smeg also. This sounds a bit like our issue. It leaks very slowly into the base. There is a detection float that stops ours if there is too much water in the base. Turn machine off. There's a clipped on plastic cover at the base at the front. Carefully prise it off then mop up any water. That should sort it, if it's the same as ours.

dunkind

435 posts

36 months

Wednesday 1st January
quotequote all
I managed without one for the last 30 odd years, bought one a few weeks ago. Throw yours away, what are they, a few hundred quid?

bimsb6

Original Poster:

8,442 posts

237 months

Wednesday 1st January
quotequote all
dunkind said:
I managed without one for the last 30 odd years, bought one a few weeks ago. Throw yours away, what are they, a few hundred quid?
Its a smeg stainless steel , about £600.

bimsb6

Original Poster:

8,442 posts

237 months

Wednesday 1st January
quotequote all
K87 said:
Mine plays up unless I switch it off at the mains after every wash. It is something to do with a circuit board issue.

It is worth a try and cannot do any harm... Switch off and leave off for at least 24 hours.
Tried that , made no difference . Bizarrely it suddenly did a wash after saying no several times .

ATG

22,259 posts

288 months

Wednesday 1st January
quotequote all
Ace-T said:
bimsb6 said:
We have a smeg dishwasher thats playing up, it powers up normally then we can’t get the timer to delay the wash or start the cycle ,before xmas i shook it around abit and result ! It worked for a week faultlessly then we are back to it not working . I’m handy with a screwdriver just don’t know which parts to butcher first ! Any ideas ?
We have a Smeg also. This sounds a bit like our issue. It leaks very slowly into the base. There is a detection float that stops ours if there is too much water in the base. Turn machine off. There's a clipped on plastic cover at the base at the front. Carefully prise it off then mop up any water. That should sort it, if it's the same as ours.
That might well explain why shaking the machine about got it working again.

bimsb6

Original Poster:

8,442 posts

237 months

Wednesday 1st January
quotequote all
ATG said:
Ace-T said:
bimsb6 said:
We have a smeg dishwasher thats playing up, it powers up normally then we can’t get the timer to delay the wash or start the cycle ,before xmas i shook it around abit and result ! It worked for a week faultlessly then we are back to it not working . I’m handy with a screwdriver just don’t know which parts to butcher first ! Any ideas ?
We have a Smeg also. This sounds a bit like our issue. It leaks very slowly into the base. There is a detection float that stops ours if there is too much water in the base. Turn machine off. There's a clipped on plastic cover at the base at the front. Carefully prise it off then mop up any water. That should sort it, if it's the same as ours.
That might well explain why shaking the machine about got it working again.
I tried that again yesterday , I’ll try again with the float switch that worked with our last one .

princeperch

8,127 posts

263 months

Wednesday 1st January
quotequote all
Is the machine level? If it's not level then it won't work properly (or at all). Speak from bitter experience.

bimsb6

Original Poster:

8,442 posts

237 months

Wednesday 1st January
quotequote all
princeperch said:
Is the machine level? If it's not level then it won't work properly (or at all). Speak from bitter experience.
Its on a tiled floor and hasn’t moved for years .

dunkind

435 posts

36 months

Thursday 2nd January
quotequote all
bimsb6 said:
dunkind said:
I managed without one for the last 30 odd years, bought one a few weeks ago. Throw yours away, what are they, a few hundred quid?
Its a smeg stainless steel , about £600.
There you go, a few hundred quid, get one bought.

wyson

3,677 posts

120 months

Thursday 2nd January
quotequote all
How old is it?

My dishwasher had a slight leak, triggering the aquastop feature. There was a pool of water in the bottom tray. You’ll have some lights alerting you to this, if this is the source of the problem.

We called someone out who diagnosed it needing a new part for about £250, fitted. Because it was more than 5 years old, we decided to get a new one. Dishwashers these days are disposable items. Something else would likely have gone in a year or two.

Even the likes of Miele largely gave up on their 10 year warranty because it was getting too expensive. They only roll it out for their premium models or as a special offer now. Most of their dishwashers come with 2 years, like everyone else.

Edited by wyson on Thursday 2nd January 00:36

bimsb6

Original Poster:

8,442 posts

237 months

Thursday 2nd January
quotequote all
wyson said:
How old is it?

My dishwasher had a slight leak, triggering the aquastop feature. There was a pool of water in the bottom tray. You’ll have some lights alerting you to this, if this is the source of the problem.

We called someone out who diagnosed it needing a new part for about £250, fitted. Because it was more than 5 years old, we decided to get a new one. Dishwashers these days are disposable items. Something else would likely have gone in a year or two.

Even the likes of Miele largely gave up on their 10 year warranty because it was getting too expensive. They only roll it out for their premium models or as a special offer now. Most of their dishwashers come with 2 years, like everyone else.

Edited by wyson on Thursday 2nd January 00:36
No lights and no lcd for error codes.

7 5 7

3,899 posts

127 months

Thursday 2nd January
quotequote all
Mine was playing up recently, error code and water leak underneath in the catch tray triggered the "auto cut off"

Had fella come out £70 call out, diagnosed as blocked jets in arm, a good cleaning, dishwasher rinser and dishwasher salt (both of which I have never used in it's 9 year life) - its working great.

Lesson learnt for me, maintain your white goods.

Mine is a IKEA one, probably an indesit rebadged, I'm damned to get a new one till this thing really does die!

Probably not relevant at all to your issue, but thought I would share smile