You will still have 240V going to the element itself it just won't be causing the element to heat up. Make sure the dryer is unplugged, take the back off the dryer and pull the element out. It's usually just a few screws. Mark and write down what wire goes where. The wires have clips that will slide right off the element, take it to your local hardware or appliance store with the dryer info and put it back on in the reverse order. Elements are usually pretty cheap.
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If the motor is 240V, then yes. It really depends on the dryer and what voltage devices are used inside it. If the dryer includes a motor to drive a fan, the motor may actually run at only 120V. Since the manufacturer has two possible voltages to work with, it can install whichever kind of motor is cheaper.
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As always, if you are in doubt about what to do, the best advice anyone should give you is to call a licensed electrician to advise what work is needed.
If you do this work yourself, always turn off the power
at the breaker box/fuse panel BEFORE you attempt to do any work AND
always use an electrician's test meter having metal-tipped probes
(not a simple proximity voltage indicator)
to insure the circuit is, in fact, de-energized.
IF YOU ARE NOT ALREADY SURE YOU CAN DO THIS
WORK SAFELY AND COMPETENTLY
REFER THIS WORK TO QUALIFIED PROFESSIONALS.
Hydrogen
potassium
Promethium is an artificial chemical element discovered in burned uranium fuels as a fission product.
a non-metal such as Nitrogen (though it is difficult to burn in oxygen) sulphur and phosphorous
Most people use natural gas to heat homes, but natural gas itself has to be burned. So technically we are using combustion to heat our homes
burned out heating element.
The heating element probably burned out causing the open circuit. The element needs to be submerged in coolant completely, all the time that it is plugged in.
a broken wire, a burned out fuse, a burned out heating element. Take it to the dealer if you want to get it fixed right.
A gas dryer that will not heat usually has one of two problems. Either the gas is turned off or the heating element is burned out.
An oxide of that element.
A spectrometer analyzes the light given off when an element is burned.
Car will make when running even if heater core is not burned out.
sulfur
By heating many salts are melted.
Wood or coal was burned to make heat
There are a number of possible problems when a dryer is not getting hot. If it's an electric dryer the heating element may have burned in two. Or the relay that switches power to the heating element could have gone bad. If it's a gas dryer the igniter that lites the burner could have failed. The control that commands the heat to come on could have failed. These are other possibilities
Coal, gas and oil