Low Temp will deactivate one half of the heating element. Low Temp (2x) will reduce the temp another 10°C by cycling the smaller heater, I think. The dryer will automatically go into a lower temp once it reaches iron dry. Less ironing will cause the drum to stop and restart more frequently. This is how the settings worked on mine (an identical model). I upgraded the filter to the one with two layers and added some weatherstripping - after that, I only had to rinse the condenser about twice a year. I also had the drain hose installed, thus I removed the water tank during drying, which increased the cooling air flow. This led to faster and less hot drying. A resistor on the control board blew after about 7 years. The replacement was 10€ + 5€ for the soldering job. Eventually, a small leak developed where two plastic parts meet in front of the condenser. I was able to fix it with packaging tape 😅 but decided to sell the dryer. My heat pump Bosch uses a lot less electricity - but I feel the Siemens condenser was superior in every other way.
@@whichwasher2007 I have some service documentation for these dryers, but it doesn't mention any temperature targets. I suppose Low Temp is still ~60°C.
I have the 2005 model of this dryer and its not that bad. It has the small display, a glass door, its 7kg and a difftent filter than this one. The only thing that bugs is that it doesn't reverse and fluff builds up inside the body
the advantage of washer dryers is that they can wash and dry the laundry in a single cycle without having to put the laundry in a dryer but the big downside is that you have to put the price
@@DeepRinseEnthusiast2002 And YOU are a "bit rude!" ... You need to learn some manners! And the two who liked the rude comment, shouldn't encourage rudeness!