Hoover Candy Tumble Dryer Heater Element 2100W | 40012178 | CANDY CS V9DF-80 CS V9LF-80 CSV V9LG-80
- Product SKU: HVR40012178
- Category:ACCESSORIES & SPARE PARTS,ACCESSORIES (TUMBLE DRYER)
- Order within
Hoover Tumble Dryer Heater Element 2100W | 40012178

CANDY CS V9DF-80 CS V9LF-80 CSV V9LG-80 Tumble Dryer Heater Element 2100W
Fits models:
CANDY
CS V10LG-80, CS V9DF-80, CS V9LF-80, CSE V9DF-80, CSE V9LF-80, CSE V9LG-80, CSO V8DF-80, CSOE V8DF-80, CSV V9LG-80
HOOVER
HL V10DG-80, HL V10LG-80, HL V8DG-80, HL V8LCG-80, HL V8LF-80, HL V8LG-80, HL V9DG-80, HL V9DGB-80, HL V9LF-80, HL V9LG-80, HLE V10DG-80, HLE V10LG-80, HLE V8LG-80, HLE V9DG-80, HLE V9DGB-80, HLE V9LF-80, HLE V9LG-80, HLE V9TG-80, HLX V10DG-80, HLX V9TG-80
| Code | Brand | What it means | Confidence |
|---|---|---|---|
| E15 | Candy | Means a heating circuit fault, or water accumulation in the base tray triggering a safety sensor, which stops the dryer heating. It is usually caused by a failed heating element, a faulty thermostat, or a blocked water drainage system. | High |
| E2 | Candy | Means a thermal fuse or heating circuit failure from overheating, with some models triggering it when run empty above the temperature limit. It is usually caused by a faulty thermostat, a broken heating element, or a blocked filter. | High |
| E21 | Candy | Means a heating system failure that has stopped the dryer heating and shut it down for safety. It is usually caused by a tripped safety thermostat, a broken heating element, or a faulty NTC sensor. | High |
| E5 | Candy | Means a heating failure, where the dryer detects that the air is not heating properly and stops the cycle for safety. It is usually caused by a faulty NTC temperature sensor, a damaged heating element, or a malfunctioning control board. | High |
| E15 | Hoover | Means a heating system failure or a water leak in the base triggering the flood sensor. It is usually caused by a faulty element, a faulty thermostat, or a leak reaching the flood sensor. | High |
| E8 | Hoover | Means a heating circuit fault or the thermal cut-out fuse has tripped due to overheating. It is usually caused by restricted airflow from blocked filters, a clogged condenser, or a faulty heating element. | High |

Hoover Tumble Dryer Heater Element 2100W | 40012178

CANDY CS V9DF-80 CS V9LF-80 CSV V9LG-80 Tumble Dryer Heater Element 2100W
Fits models:
CANDY
CS V10LG-80, CS V9DF-80, CS V9LF-80, CSE V9DF-80, CSE V9LF-80, CSE V9LG-80, CSO V8DF-80, CSOE V8DF-80, CSV V9LG-80
HOOVER
HL V10DG-80, HL V10LG-80, HL V8DG-80, HL V8LCG-80, HL V8LF-80, HL V8LG-80, HL V9DG-80, HL V9DGB-80, HL V9LF-80, HL V9LG-80, HLE V10DG-80, HLE V10LG-80, HLE V8LG-80, HLE V9DG-80, HLE V9DGB-80, HLE V9LF-80, HLE V9LG-80, HLE V9TG-80, HLX V10DG-80, HLX V9TG-80
| Code | Brand | What it means | Confidence |
|---|---|---|---|
| E15 | Candy | Means a heating circuit fault, or water accumulation in the base tray triggering a safety sensor, which stops the dryer heating. It is usually caused by a failed heating element, a faulty thermostat, or a blocked water drainage system. | High |
| E2 | Candy | Means a thermal fuse or heating circuit failure from overheating, with some models triggering it when run empty above the temperature limit. It is usually caused by a faulty thermostat, a broken heating element, or a blocked filter. | High |
| E21 | Candy | Means a heating system failure that has stopped the dryer heating and shut it down for safety. It is usually caused by a tripped safety thermostat, a broken heating element, or a faulty NTC sensor. | High |
| E5 | Candy | Means a heating failure, where the dryer detects that the air is not heating properly and stops the cycle for safety. It is usually caused by a faulty NTC temperature sensor, a damaged heating element, or a malfunctioning control board. | High |
| E15 | Hoover | Means a heating system failure or a water leak in the base triggering the flood sensor. It is usually caused by a faulty element, a faulty thermostat, or a leak reaching the flood sensor. | High |
| E8 | Hoover | Means a heating circuit fault or the thermal cut-out fuse has tripped due to overheating. It is usually caused by restricted airflow from blocked filters, a clogged condenser, or a faulty heating element. | High |
