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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Leavingt the tumble dryer on ...

57 replies

redskyatnight · 21/10/2011 12:20

DH has "suggested" that I should not leave the tumble dryer on when I am out due to the risk of overheating and the house burning down. Apparently this happened to Terry Wogan.

I have never heard of tumble dryers being a particular fire risk and would rather not leave half dried clothes if I have to turn if off to go out. I am also of the opinion that the risk of fire is small and actually I would rather not be in the house if the tumble dryer is going to spontaneously combust Grin . Also, we leave on (e.g) the oven, washing machine, other electrical applicances while we are out and surely these also have risk of catching fire?

I genuinely do not know if IABU and will organise my future tumble drying habits round the responses I get.

OP posts:
Makiko · 21/10/2011 12:38

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aldiwhore · 21/10/2011 12:39

ElaineRease that's exactly what my dilemma was. Our heating is oil fuelled and V expensive, our new tumbler doesn't eat leccy as much as the old one... it works out cheaper to tumble. Plus I HATE that dankness of clothes drying in the house, have no 'unused' room let alone rooms and we'd end up with laundry everywhere, every day if I didn't tumble it.

Makiko · 21/10/2011 12:40

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ElaineReese · 21/10/2011 12:40

We always have laundry everywhere anyway - now that it;s colder, things aren't drying on the airer very quickly either.

Our electricity is with Ecotricity, so in theory it might be better for the planet to use the electric dryer than the radiators - but I'm not sure which is actually cheaper any more.

Astronaut79 · 21/10/2011 12:42

Bugger, DH was right. We have an ongoing war about leaving teh washing machine on if we go out (me) and turning it off (him). He also makes sure I've unplugged the hair dryer.

I put it down to him being fire monitor (or something) in work, but now he's right!

valiumredhead · 21/10/2011 12:43

An unused room? ha ha ha ha ha ha Grin My tumble drier costs about £2 extra a week in the winter when I use it, I am quite happy with that. I rarely have the CH heating on, so does that make it ok?

faverolles · 21/10/2011 12:44

I would love to find an unused room in my house!

colken · 21/10/2011 12:46

Ballstoit

If children are at school, and you are at work, the lounge/dining room is unused, isn't it. Those rooms are unused when you are in bed. I didn't mean rooms where no one slept because they had left home and not everyone has more than one bedroom, anyway. Even the bathroom is only used sometimes.

valiumredhead · 21/10/2011 12:46

Covering radiators with wet clothes surely makes the CH work harder doesn't it - much cheaper to use the drier Grin

GladbagsAndYourHandrags · 21/10/2011 12:47

Our tumble dryer stops itself automatically when the stuff is dry but I don't know it this makes it actually safer?

OP I do agree that if there is a chance of house on fire I'd rather be out than in though Grin

Ladybird, ladybird fly away home
Your house is on fire and your laundy is gone

ElaineReese · 21/10/2011 12:49

But Colken, that still assumes that you have enough floor space in the living room for one or more airers, and that the stuff will dry in an unheated house between say, half eight and half three - which isn't my experience!

I do use the radiators, though - seems a shame to waste all that heat - and it makes the house smell nice!

MrsBloodyTroll · 21/10/2011 12:51

Oh good, something else to feel guilty about!

ballstoit · 21/10/2011 12:53

Hmm, well I'm a SAHM with a tiny kitchen and bathroom which also contains the loo. The DCs bedroom has their 3 beds squashed in it but I guess I could use mine to dry clothes some of the time. As I try to avoid having the heating on as much as possible, the washing would probably take 3 days to dry, even inside Grin

valiumredhead · 21/10/2011 12:54

Guilt is not an emotion that I encounter when turning on the drier - blessed relief is more like it!

LydiaWickham · 21/10/2011 12:54

Colken - I put sleep suits on the airer in the kitchen last night around 9pm. They still aren't dry. Thankfully, DS is at MIL's this morning so we arent playing the 'fun' game of finding where he's stuffed them after pulling them off the airer (current favouite is the recycling bin as he's learned how to stamp on the peddle to make the lid lift).

They can't really go in the tumble dryer as it shrinks them, however 2 loads have already gone through this morning - it just wouldn't dry today outside.

Does anyone know if it ok if you set them on timers to go off through the night? I normally put the washing machine and dryer set to go off at around 5am so it's all done by the time we get up...

Makiko · 21/10/2011 12:55

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Dirtydishesmakemesad · 21/10/2011 12:55

I dont really have mine on when im out or when we go to bed (especially the bed one). I dry some things on the washign line or radiators. When we lives in the south east i did alot more line drying, here north west) it seems to rain all the sodding time so i can put washing out in bright sunshine and half an hour later be running to get it in from a sudden rainshower.

Bunbaker · 21/10/2011 12:58

"A fireman (sadly not a fit one) came to our toddler group to do a fire safety talk and advised that dishwashers, tumble dryers and washing machines are all a fire hazard and should not be left unattended in the day or switched on when everyone's in bed."

We were told that, and the fireman we had was very fit Grin.

redsky We have one of these.

aswellasyou · 21/10/2011 12:59

I've just moved into a flat at university with a tumble dryer and I love it. Grin So much so, that I'll probably buy one when I finish university next year. My flat at home is pretty small and last winter it usually took about a week to dry a load of washing. And there was a lot of washing with a new baby and my Mum staying at mine as much as she possibly could. It was a complete nightmare!

Bogeymanface · 21/10/2011 13:01

I wont leave any appliances on now when we are out because the son of my mums friend at church had his house destroyed when his dishwasher caught fire :(

Its just not worth the risk.

CogitoErgoSometimes · 21/10/2011 13:02

Tumbledryers and dishwashers and now freezers as the sad story of a family killed in Neasden shows. Basically, don't leave the house without turning off the electricity at the mains Hmm

Astronaut79 · 21/10/2011 13:06

BTw, my washing is on the line today, although it does mean I'm spending my precious toddler-free mat leave day anxiously gazing out of the window (I live in N wales; the rain is sneaky). I also know that when I bring it in, I'll have to give in and use the tumble dryer anyway, or try and bung it all in teh airing cupboard and risk Dh whining that I've made all his clothes smell of piss.

However, still not had the central heating on!

memphis83 · 21/10/2011 13:08

My friends house was totally gutted, she left her tumble drier on while she picked her kids up from school, she returned after 15 mins to find fire crew there, her whole house was ruined and all the family pets dead, it was a fairly new drier, put me off ever owning one!

susiedaisy · 21/10/2011 13:10

Mine once made a terrible noise and then a burning smell wafted through the house by time I went to see what was going on there was wisps of smoke coming from it, fortunately I was home otherwise I feel sure it would of caught fire, I now never leave my new tumbler on when I am not home.

tyler80 · 21/10/2011 13:16

Just when are you supposed to do washing without leaving your machine unattended? We have a new efficient machine but the wash cycles last for ages. I've heard of the risk for tumble driers but not washing machines.

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