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NOISY Whirlpool Dehumidifier

Hi,

I bought a Whirlpool model AD50DSS2 dehumidifier. It is a very NOISY
(vibration noise) dehumidifier!

A service man came. He thought he fixed it, but later the NOISE was
back.

The dehumidifier's cabinet "amplifies" the compressor's vibration. A
call to Whirlpool was no help at all.

I am a ham radio operator and found out from other hams that I am not the
only one that has a NOISY Whirlpool dehumidifier.

I would like to hear from others with the same problem.

Thank You in Advance, John N3AOF

PS, Remove "ine" from my email address
 
W

William Sommerwerck

What about putting something heavy on the dehumidifier to dampen the sound?

About a year ago I considered buying a dehumidifier for my garage. After
searching the Web for reviews, I discovered that all dehumidifiers, from any
manufacturer, are pretty much junk. (Ditto for toaster-ovens, but that's
another matter.)
 
G

GregS

Just assume that you're buying a device with a two year life and get
the best deal you can.

Although some of the LG models now have a 5 year warranty...

John
dehumidifier in the basement with a condensate pump to move the water
- because it runs year-round in Georgia

My LG dehumidifier goes on and off every so often to make it sickening.
There is no way to stop it doing that except pull the plug.
Thats what I did when i got air conditioning.

greg
 
C

Cydrome Leader

William Sommerwerck said:
What about putting something heavy on the dehumidifier to dampen the sound?

or jam some rolled up/folded cardboard wherever you can to make parts
vibrate less. This hack works on machinery with vibrating panels or other
parts that make noise even louder.
 
A

Adrian C

Hi,

I bought a Whirlpool model AD50DSS2 dehumidifier. It is a very NOISY
(vibration noise) dehumidifier!

A service man came. He thought he fixed it, but later the NOISE was
back.

The dehumidifier's cabinet "amplifies" the compressor's vibration. A
call to Whirlpool was no help at all.

Could it be possible to build a large baffle box about it using sheets
of MDF constructed so to avoid a direct path between the unit and
outside. Bit like constructing a large phat-box speaker cabinet with a
damping line? Obviously want to avoid the MDF getting wet.

Also, sticking sheets of bitumous deadening material on the case - sort
used stuck to automotive body panels - would probably help.

Finally, securing the compressor on anti-vibration mounts might be
possible, or improving the isolation it already has.

Also ...

I note this questions has been posted by the OP on many non-subject
related newsgroups and has had some similar answers, to which there has
been no response. I fear, but hope not, that he just wants to complain
and do nothing else.

The point is Radio Hams *don't* do nothing else. By their very nature,
they get right in there and tinker it, MODIFY it, even BEAT it - until
it works ....
 
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