Home appliance reference

Fix the small faults before you call a technician.

Vervomel collects plain-language diagnostic notes for the appliances Canadian households use every day. Each guide walks through what to check first, which parts are safe to inspect yourself, and when a fault belongs to a licensed technician.

A washing machine opened up for inspection during a repair
Inspecting a front-load washer. Image: Wikimedia Commons (CC).

How to use these notes

Read before you reach for a screwdriver.

Every guide follows the same order: safety first, then the cheapest and most common cause, then the checks that need a tool. Stop at the point where a repair calls for refrigerant handling, sealed-system work or mains wiring — those are regulated trades in most Canadian provinces.

  • Unplug the appliance or switch off its breaker before opening any panel.
  • Keep the model and serial plate handy — it lists voltage and part numbers.
  • Photograph connectors before disconnecting them so reassembly is simple.
A set of screwdriver bits and a ratchet screwdriver
A basic bit set covers most appliance fasteners. Image: Wikimedia Commons (CC).

Contact

Send a question about a fault

If a guide left something unclear, describe the appliance and the symptom. Notes are reviewed and used to improve future guides. This form runs entirely in your browser and does not transmit data to a server.

Email
contact@vervomel.org
Reference hours
Monday to Friday, 9:00–17:00 (Eastern Time)
Location
Ontario, Canada
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