If your Blomberg dryer is making noise partway through a cycle, you’re not imagining it and you’re not alone. Toronto technicians hear this complaint constantly. The sound could be a squeak, a thump, a grind, or something closer to a rattle, and what it points to inside the machine changes depending on which one it is. Here’s how to work out what’s going on before you call in professional dryer repair.
The machine has a handful of moving parts that wear down over years of use. Most noise complaints trace back to one of these:
Technicians usually ask when the noise happens, at the start of a cycle, partway through, or during spin down, because timing narrows down which part is involved before anyone opens the cabinet.
This usually comes from the drive belt or the felt seals. As felt wears thin, the drum rubs directly against the metal frame. It’s a slow problem. It gets louder over weeks or months rather than showing up overnight.
A steady thump that lines up with each drum rotation is almost always worn rollers or a bent support arm. If it’s irregular instead, more like something hitting metal at random points, check inside the drum first. There’s a decent chance it’s a coin.
This one means metal is touching metal somewhere it shouldn’t be, usually a worn bearing, roller, or pulley. It tends to worsen fast, and running the dryer while it grinds risks damaging the motor or drum shaft.
Something’s loose, whether that’s inside the drum, in the blower housing, or somewhere in the venting. Check pockets before every load, and clear out the lint trap. Buildup there can rattle loose on its own.
Some causes are easy enough to rule out without tools:
1. Stop the dryer and check the drum for anything loose, coins, keys, buttons.
2. Clean the lint trap and vent hose. Buildup causes more vibration than people expect.
3. Open the door and spin the drum by hand. You’re feeling for resistance or grinding.
4. Check that the dryer is level. An uneven appliance can rock and knock against nearby walls or cabinets.
If the noise is still there after all that, you’re probably looking at a worn part, rollers, a belt, a pulley, that needs replacing. Most Toronto homeowners call in a technician for repair at this stage rather than pulling the front panel and drum off themselves, since the wiring underneath isn’t something you want to guess at.
Blomberg dryer repair without the correct parts or diagrams tends to cause more damage, particularly around the drum bearing and motor mount. A technician working on these machines has access to Blomberg specific parts and service documentation, which matters more than it might sound. Reinstalling a roller without catching a cracked motor mount underneath just means the same noise comes back in a few months.
A proper service visit also checks the venting system. Restricted airflow puts extra load on the blower wheel and motor, and that shortens the life of the whole appliance. A technician can tell you whether the noise is one isolated part or a symptom of something bigger going on with ventilation.
Get in touch with a dryer repair service if a Blomberg dryer making noise doesn’t settle down on its own:
Putting off a Blomberg dryer making noise rarely saves money. A roller or bearing that fails completely can take the drum or motor down with it, and that’s a far bigger bill than catching the problem early.
If you’re dealing with a noisy dryer, a technician who knows this brand specifically will diagnose it faster and have the right parts on hand for your model. Dryer Repair handles Blomberg dryer repair across Toronto, ON, covering drum roller replacement, belt swaps, pulley repair, and blower wheel service.
Call Dryer Repair at 647-793-5249 or visit dryerrepair.co if your dryer’s still making noise after the basic checks. We can usually tell you what’s wrong over the phone before we even get to your door.