Sounds like I need to come down and help work in the garage.
Yep! I did this a few months back. The easiest way to tell is if your clothes are taking longer to dry than they normally do or they don't dry at all. My dryer vent run is literally straight from the back of the unit to the outside and that still managed to get clogged up somehow.PSA
If you haven’t taken the exhaust foil hose off from your clothes dryer and the wall in the past year, I recommend that you do, and use a shop vac to clean, I was amazed that a couple dryer sheets made it past the lent trap, not to mention the rat sized lent ball that I pulled out of the wall.
The build up of lent and debris can cause a fire from your dryer.
Keep experimenting with your dryer time settings. I have been trying to see how long it actually takes to dry a load completely. I found out it only takes my dryer with regular clothes 30 mins to dry. My kiddo's clothes is 20 minutes. Towels and bed sheets are still about an hour.Was yesterday national laundry safety day or something? I replaced my lint/vent line last night and shop vac'ed the heck out of my dryer. Took my dry times for a FULL load from over an hr done to 40 minutes so it was WAY past due.
Got rid of the crappy foil lined vent hose that was a fire hazard and replaced it with a maytag line kit that's not made from paper. Much better than what I had, but still not as good as a custom made rigid line. The time I saved by buying the kit was used up + some by me needing to seal it all up with duct caulk and foil tape. I also didn't trust their clamps or locks so I added my own sheet metal screws after install. Thing had leaks everywhere, but I really liked that both heads rotate/spin and the metal is metal not paper so thats a plus![]()
So if your lazy and want a cheap quick fix over the paper/foil ones - it's a great upgrade.
If safety and air efficiency are #1 priority - just make up a rigid vent by yourself.
View attachment 18536
Man you dodged a bullet with that light!!
Was yesterday national laundry safety day or something? I replaced my lint/vent line last night and shop vac'ed the heck out of my dryer. Took my dry times for a FULL load from over an hr done to 40 minutes so it was WAY past due.
Got rid of the crappy foil lined vent hose that was a fire hazard and replaced it with a maytag line kit that's not made from paper. Much better than what I had, but still not as good as a custom made rigid line. The time I saved by buying the kit was used up + some by me needing to seal it all up with duct caulk and foil tape. I also didn't trust their clamps or locks so I added my own sheet metal screws after install. Thing had leaks everywhere, but I really liked that both heads rotate/spin and the metal is metal not paper so thats a plus![]()
So if your lazy and want a cheap quick fix over the paper/foil ones - it's a great upgrade.
If safety and air efficiency are #1 priority - just make up a rigid vent by yourself.
View attachment 18536
Keep experimenting with your dryer time settings. I have been trying to see how long it actually takes to dry a load completely. I found out it only takes my dryer with regular clothes 30 mins to dry. My kiddo's clothes is 20 minutes. Towels and bed sheets are still about an hour.
DO NOT vent the dryer into your garage. You will have lint covering everything forever.no kidding, I’m no longer buying those fluorescent tubes/bulbs, slowly changing them out to LED, almost everything inside the house is now LED, the garages and shop will be next on the ongoing to do list(s).
Those are nice, but the magical room where my Laundry Fairy turns dirty clothes into nice smelling clothes is a interior room. I highly doubt they used double wall fire rated exhaust pipe through the walls and attic to the outside vent.
The magical room does share a wall with the attached garage, and I have considered adding another port/vent on that shared wall, and dump the heat into the garage during the winter months was my thoughts.
The Laundry Fairy has LG machines, you can set the time for 90mins if you wanted and the dryer has sensors that detect when the clothes are dry, for the most part it works unless it’s a load of towels or jeans.
My garage has four 2-bulb 4' halogen fixtures in the ceiling, I swapped out the bulbs for LED's several years ago and it was fine. But in the past 2 months 2 of the housings have gone out. So I decided my fall/winter project would be to install new lights. I decided to try these out. Bought one for S&G to see how it works. If I like I'll get 3 more. I can't wait to see it up there. Made in the USA!
Edit.. bought another one.
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01G7TLWDG/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o00_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1
They quoted me $119 each, plus tax, free ship, and $45 for a clear cover or $57 for the frosted cover, I’d bet if you were to pick them up directly you could knock off the shipping cost of those lights. I’m waiting to hear back price and if they have a cover for the 6 LED Bulb fixtures.
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This might be one of my options F32T8 Tube Guard with End Caps - Clear - 4T8TG | 1000Bulbs.com
By the time you add in tax you would save a few dollars, 3 maybe.. meanwhile I have them in hand. LOL Not gonna put that much effort into it as its already done.
Also, those covers may not work... I'll get a photo of the bulb but I don't think its perfectly round.. the backside is more of an oval.

Keep experimenting with your dryer time settings. I have been trying to see how long it actually takes to dry a load completely. I found out it only takes my dryer with regular clothes 30 mins to dry. My kiddo's clothes is 20 minutes. Towels and bed sheets are still about an hour.
DO NOT vent the dryer into your garage. You will have lint covering everything forever.
The rent house I live in now that I remodeled had the dryer vented into the garage for 20+ years and I still have lint falling down on my tools and stuff years later despite cleaning up a lot of it.
And I've never been satisfied by the moisture detector in my dryer so I don't use that setting.
no kidding, I’m no longer buying those fluorescent tubes/bulbs, slowly changing them out to LED, almost everything inside the house is now LED, the garages and shop will be next on the ongoing to do list(s).
Those are nice, but the magical room where my Laundry Fairy turns dirty clothes into nice smelling clothes is a interior room. I highly doubt they used double wall fire rated exhaust pipe through the walls and attic to the outside vent.
The magical room does share a wall with the attached garage, and I have considered adding another port/vent on that shared wall, and dump the heat into the garage during the winter months was my thoughts.
The Laundry Fairy has LG machines, you can set the time for 90mins if you wanted and the dryer has sensors that detect when the clothes are dry, for the most part it works unless it’s a load of towels or jeans.

Think that kit was less than $30. No double walls - just pure exhaust. Pretty basic kit thus all the leaks
All my vent penetrations are through concrete block so I have zero heat issues to worry about.
Only real concern is what can climb into it from the outside.
