You load the drum, hit start, and hear the motor run, but nothing tumbles inside. A GE dryer not spinning is the call we hear most often at dryer repair. It’s usually one part failing, not the whole machine, and once you know which part, the fix is often straightforward. Here’s what tends to cause it and what to check before you call someone out.
Broken drive belt
The belt loops around the drum and hooks onto the motor pulley. After years of heat cycles it stretches out, cracks, or just snaps. When that happens the motor keeps running, you’ll hear it hum along fine, but the drum has nothing pulling it, so it just sits there. A snapped belt causes a lot of these calls, and swapping it is a routine part of most dryer repair visits.
Worn drum rollers
The rollers hold up the back of the drum, and on some models the front too. Once they flatten out or the axle seizes, the drum starts dragging or squealing before it stops moving altogether. If you hear a grinding sound for a week or two before the dryer quits spinning, worn rollers are usually the reason.
Faulty idler pulley
This little pulley keeps the belt tight against the drum and motor. When it wears out or the bearing seizes, the belt loses grip and the drum spins slower, stutters, or stops entirely. It’s a slow failure, so the symptoms build gradually rather than showing up overnight.
Defective motor
On most GE dryer models the same motor drives the drum and the blower. Worn bearings, a burnt winding, or a tripped thermal cutoff will stop the drum cold. If the dryer won’t start at all, smells hot, or trips the breaker, the motor is a likely suspect, and that one usually needs a technician to confirm before parts get ordered.