
Dear Ann Landers
I'm writing about your recent column regarding clothes-dryer
vents and fires. Ann, my husband and I have a company that specializes
in cleaning dryer vents, so I am more than familiar with the
dangers. Clothes dryers start more residential fires than any
other appliance. The Consumer Products Safety Commission estimates
that there are more than 24000 dryer fires each year in the
United States, causing more than 96 million in property damage.
Lack of vent maintenance is leading cause of dryer fires, and
lent which is a hidden fire hazard is the material most likely
to ignite. Even a cleaned lint screen traps only 75% of the
lint. When lint builds up in dryer vents, the dryer motor has
to labor harder and can overheat, igniting the lint. It isn't
just clothes-dryer vent hoses that need to be checked, Ann.
Clogged lint-screen compartments, disconnected or ripped dryer-vent
hoses, smashed hoses behind the clothes dryer, bird nests in
dryer vents, poor dryer-vent design, screens placed over the
exhaust point, use of white plastic vent hoses instead of aluminum
foil ones-all produce the same blockage, and all cause dryer
fires. All these fires are preventable. Please get the word
out.
S.S in Oceanside, California
Dear Oceanside: The word is out, thanks to you. Because
I don't know much about clothes dryers, I was unaware of this
hazard. I now know a lot more than I did. Read on:
From Green Bay WI:
Recently you had an article from a reader about how the lint
from clothes dryers could start a fire. When I read that I asked
my husband to check the vent hoses. He reluctantly said, "I'll
get to it tomorrow." Thank God that I was home because
the lint in the dryer caught fire before my husband ever got
to it. Waiting an extra day was almost too late for us. Please
tell your readers to get the lint out of their dryers and vent
hoses today.
From Independence MO:
My husband and I are very thankful to the reader who shared
her problem about clogged dryer vents. When my husband read
that column to me, I decided to check our dryer, I pulled out
the hose and much to my surprise, found it was ripped and brimming
with lint. We were wondering why it took three cycles before
our clothes were even partially dry.
Orlando FL:
Bless you for printing that information about dryer vents. For
months, my clothes had been taking longer and longer to dry.
After reading that column, I decided to check the vent. Not
only was it clogged with lint, but also the flap at the end
was stuck in an almost-closed position. I am grateful to that
reader not only for helping me avoid a fire but also for helping
me avoid a fire but also for a lower electric bill.