Kenmore Dryer Drive Motor Replacement — What This Part Does
The drive motor spins both the drum (through a belt and pulley system) and the blower wheel to circulate heated air through your dryer. When the control board sends power to start a cycle, the motor should begin turning immediately. Over years of use, motor bearings wear out, windings short or open, and the motor either hums without starting or fails to turn at all.
A failed motor triggers the F26 fault code on many Kenmore dryers, which means the control board commanded rotation but did not detect the motor spinning. The motor can also fail mechanically if the blower wheel is jammed, cross-threaded, or installed backward, which overloads the motor and causes early burnout. Proper blower wheel reinstallation is just as important as swapping the motor itself.
Signs It Needs Replacing
- Drum does not turn when you start a cycle The dryer powers on and you hear normal sounds, but the drum stays completely still.
- Motor hums or buzzes but does not spin You hear a low humming from inside the cabinet, meaning the motor is receiving power but cannot overcome mechanical resistance or has failed windings.
- F26 error code appears on the display The control board reports a drive motor circuit failure because it commanded the motor to turn but detected no rotation.
- Dryer will not start at all Pressing the start button does nothing, though this can also be caused by a failed door switch or start switch before you blame the motor.
- Burning smell or visible damage at the motor Overheated windings or seized bearings produce a distinct electrical or friction smell near the blower housing.
- Intermittent drum rotation or stalling mid-cycle The drum spins for a few seconds then stops, indicating the motor is on its way out or the blower wheel is dragging.
How to Replace It
- Unplug the dryer from the wall outlet or shut off power at the circuit breaker before you touch anything.
- Remove the lint screen, then unscrew the two screws hidden in the lint chute that secure the top panel.
- Lift the top panel up and prop it open, then remove the screws holding the front panel (usually along the top edge under the open top and sometimes inside the door opening).
- Pull the front panel forward to release the bottom clips, then lift it off and set it aside to expose the drum and motor assembly.
- Release tension on the drum belt by pushing the spring-loaded idler pulley toward the motor, slip the belt off the motor pulley, then lift the drum straight up and out of the cabinet.
- Locate the drive motor at the base of the cabinet (it will have the blower wheel attached to the shaft and a wiring harness plugged into the side).
- Disconnect the motor wiring harness, remove the motor retaining clips or screws that hold the motor to its bracket, and check that the blower wheel is not jammed or cross-threaded before you remove the motor.
- Install the new motor by aligning the mounting tab to the bracket slot, secure it with the retaining clips or screws, and reattach the wiring harness.
- Reinstall the drum, loop the belt around the drum and motor pulley (and around the idler/tension pulley), replace the front panel and top, and restore power to test a full cycle.
The Part You Need
| Part | Notes |
|---|---|
| Kenmore / Whirlpool electric dryer drive motor | Amazon | Part number 279827 is common for many Kenmore/Whirlpool dryers. Find your exact model and serial number on the cabinet tag (usually inside the door opening or on the back panel) and cross-reference the motor part number with your model to avoid returns. |
Related Error Codes
If this part is failing you may also see one of these codes:
- Kenmore Dryer F01 error code
- Kenmore Dryer F20 error code
- Kenmore Dryer F22 error code
- Kenmore Dryer F23 error code
- Kenmore Dryer F26 error code
- Kenmore Dryer F28 error code
- Kenmore Dryer F29 error code
- Kenmore Dryer F30 error code
- Kenmore Dryer F31 error code
- Kenmore Dryer F70 error code
When to Call a Pro
If you are not comfortable disassembling the cabinet panels, lifting the drum, or working around belt-and-pulley systems, call a tech. If the new motor still triggers F26 or the dryer will not start, the problem may be upstream in the door switch, start switch, wiring harness, or control board, and further diagnostic work is needed. Always call a pro if you see burn marks on wiring or smell gas (on gas dryers), and do not attempt any gas-side work yourself.