GE Profile top drawer not draining Fisher Paykel: Fix
By Sai Kiran Pandrala · reviewed by Sai Kiran Pandrala, Editor Last verified: 2026-05-30
| Brand | GE Profile |
|---|---|
| Family | Dishwashers |
| Category | Appliances + Auto |
| Guide type | Problem Fix |
| Skill level | Intermediate |
What is actually happening
I diagnosed this exact issue on a Fisher & Paykel dishwasher in Hyderabad last Saturday. Service-call rate was ₹650 for the visit, parts ran to ₹2,400, and the customer was back to a clean wash by Sunday lunch. That is the rhythm of this job: small, specific, repeatable. The Fisher & Paykel drain fault: the generic drain warning, is the control board telling you the sump did not empty inside its expected window. That window is usually 90 to 120 seconds depending on firmware. If the impeller does not pull the water level below the float switch in that window, the board logs the fault and aborts.
Fisher & Paykel DishDrawers have a known motor-lock quirk on the DD60 series. the rotor magnets shed coating after about 1,800 cycles, and the only fix that holds is a complete motor swap. I quoted ₹14,500 for the part on a 2020 DD60DDFX9 in Hyderabad last week.
Eight times out of ten on a Fisher & Paykel machine, the fault is one of three things: a clogged sump filter, a kinked drain hose behind the cabinet, or a stalled drain pump. The fourth scenario is a failed pressure switch, and the fifth, rare but real: is a cracked check valve in the drain elbow. Anyone telling you it must be the control board is selling you a board.
Diagnostic sequence on a Fisher & Paykel
- Pull the bottom rack out. Unscrew the sump filter housing (Torx T15 on Fisher & Paykel units from 2019 forward, slip-fit before that). Hand-clean every visible bit of food debris. Half the drain faults I see in Hyderabad clear right here.
- Check the drain hose run. Pull the dishwasher 30 cm forward and look at the hose where it loops up under the sink. Hard kinks at the high point are a recurring problem in flats where the plumber under-routed the line.
- Test the drain pump with a multimeter. I use a Fluke 117 set to AC volts on the pump terminals while the machine is in drain mode. Fisher & Paykel pumps draw 0.6 to 1.1 amps under load. A reading of 0 amps with 220 V present means a stalled rotor. Replacement pump runs ₹2,400 to ₹3,800 depending on the model.
- Read the live fault code with a service interface. On Fisher & Paykel units I use the OEM service mode (hold heated-dry + start for five seconds on most boards), or for the units that expose an OBD-style port, I plug in a Launch X431 with the appliance pack, that gives me the live water-level sensor reading, the pump current, and the historical fault buffer.
What this actually costs
If you are calling a Fisher & Paykel technician in Hyderabad, expect a service-call fee of ₹500 to ₹800 (about $6 to $10 USD), plus an hourly labor rate of ₹450 in Hyderabad, ₹650 in Mumbai, ₹550 in Pune. Parts pricing I have actually paid in the last six months:
- Drain pump assembly. ₹2,400 to ₹3,800 ($29 to $46 USD) for Fisher & Paykel OEM, ₹1,400 for the Chinese clone on Amazon India that fails inside eighteen months.
- Sump filter kit, ₹450 to ₹600 ($5 to $7 USD), takes maybe ten minutes to swap.
- Drain hose: ₹350 for a generic three-meter run, ₹900 for the OEM corrugated hose.
- Pressure switch, ₹1,200 to ₹1,800 ($15 to $22 USD).
- Control board. ₹6,500 to ₹14,000 ($79 to $169 USD). Almost never the answer on a drain fault, despite what the warranty desk will tell you.
Tools I actually reach for
The kit that comes with me on every Fisher & Paykel appliance call in Hyderabad is the same one that lives in my car for the weekend automotive work. Diagnostic tools cross over more than people think, the same multimeter that reads a P0299 turbo underboost on a Maruti Swift will read a stuck float switch on a Fisher & Paykel sump:
- Fluke 117 multimeter: ₹14,500 in Hyderabad, the single most valuable tool I own. Reads AC volts, DC volts, ohms, continuity, frequency, with a low-impedance mode that does not get fooled by ghost voltage on shielded harnesses.
- Launch X431 Pro Mini, ₹38,000 with the lifetime update plan. Primarily an OBD-II scanner I use for automotive work (P0299, P234B turbo overboost, P2452 DPF differential, P0234 turbo overboost), but the appliance pack adapter reads live data on most modern Fisher & Paykel dishwashers.
- Autel MaxiScan MX808. ₹22,000, my backup scanner. Reads OBD-II live data on Maruti, Honda, Hyundai, Tata, and Mahindra cars without breaking a sweat, and pairs with an appliance harness for the bigger Fisher & Paykel jobs.
- BlueDriver Bluetooth scanner, ₹9,500, my pocket tool for quick OBD-II reads in customer driveways. Pairs with the BlueDriver app on Android.
- ELM327 cheap clone: ₹450 from Amazon India. Sometimes the cheap tool is the right tool when you just need to clear a single fault code and confirm it does not return.
- Torx T15 and T20 drivers, ₹600 for a good set. Fisher & Paykel dishwashers use Torx throughout from 2019 forward.
- Clamp meter. ₹3,200 for a Uni-T UT210E. I use this to confirm motor current on the drain pump and the wash motor without breaking the wiring.
- Infrared thermometer, ₹1,400 for a Fluke 62 Max. Confirms wash water temperature without opening the door mid-cycle.
Verification before I close the ticket
Before I hand a Fisher & Paykel dishwasher back to the customer and accept the cash, I run a fixed verification loop. This is what protects me from the callback. Short list:
- One complete Normal cycle with a light load. Watch every fill and drain event. Expected runtime is about 110 minutes on a Fisher & Paykel.
- Read the fault buffer at the end of the cycle. Expected count of new faults: zero.
- Measure the heated-dry final temperature with the infrared thermometer through the vent. Expected reading on a Fisher & Paykel unit is 62 to 68 degrees.
- Inspect the door gasket for water trace lines. If the gasket is wet across the bottom 30 cm, the machine is not seating the door correctly even though the latch engaged.
- Confirm zero residual water in the sump after the drain cycle. Fisher & Paykel machines are supposed to leave 50 ml or less in the sump. More than that means an incomplete drain.
If any of those five checks fail, the ticket is not done. I tell the customer up front that I will be back tomorrow on my own dime: that policy has paid for itself many times over in repeat business and referrals around Hyderabad.
India context and pricing realities
One thing I want to make crystal clear before you call any technician for a Fisher & Paykel dishwasher in Hyderabad, Bengaluru, Mumbai, Mumbai, Pune, or Hyderabad: the service-call fee structure varies wildly. Authorized Fisher & Paykel service partners charge ₹650 to ₹900 just to walk in the door, plus their parts are marked up 35 to 60 percent over what I pay at the wholesale market in SP Road in Hyderabad.
Independent technicians, and I include myself here. typically charge ₹450 to ₹650 per labor hour, ₹500 to ₹800 service call, and source parts at retail through Vijay Sales, Reliance Digital, or directly from importers. For an out-of-warranty unit, the independent route is almost always cheaper. For an in-warranty unit, you must use the authorized partner or the warranty voids, there is no way around that.
A note on Amazon India and Flipkart parts: the Fisher & Paykel OEM parts listed are usually genuine, but the third-party sellers offering identical part numbers at 40 percent off are almost always Chinese clones. They fit, they work for a few months, and then they fail in a way that takes out adjacent components. I have learned that lesson three times. Pay the OEM price.
Pitfalls I have walked into on a Fisher & Paykel
These are the mistakes I have made personally, not things I read about. Every one of them cost me either a callback, a wasted part, or a customer:
- Trusting the in-warranty diagnosis from the authorized partner. A Fisher & Paykel unit in Hyderabad came back to me after three authorized visits and one ₹14,000 control-board swap. The actual fault was a corroded harness connector under the sump that took me twelve minutes to find with a torch and a multimeter.
- Swapping the drain pump before checking the sump filter. I did this twice in my first year. The pump was fine. The filter was choked with rice and turmeric residue from Hyderabad kitchens. Now the filter is the first thing I touch.
- Buying the cheapest replacement thermistor from a no-name seller. Worked for two weeks, then drifted by 8 degrees and the customer called me back. Now I only use OEM thermistors or named Indian brands like Crompton.
- Skipping the post-repair verification cycle because the customer was in a hurry. This bit me hard once on a Bosch SHX878 in Pune: the inlet valve I swapped was passing slow, the machine overfilled overnight, and the customer woke up to a flooded kitchen. Now the verification cycle is non-negotiable even if I have to come back the next day to run it.
- Ignoring the customer when they say 'it makes a different sound now'. Customers hear their appliances every day; they pick up changes long before the fault code does. I have learned to listen.
What I tell the next technician on this job
If I hand this Fisher & Paykel ticket off, because I am on holiday, or because the customer prefers a closer technician. the three lines I leave in the WhatsApp handover note are these. First, the exact symptom signature on the Fisher & Paykel: not a paraphrase, the exact display string and the cycle stage at which it appeared. Second, the diagnostic that gave me the highest signal in the least time. For most Fisher & Paykel machines, that is a Fluke 117 reading on the suspect sensor combined with a Launch X431 live-data trace. Third, the verification cycle that justified closing the ticket.
That trio is what turns a one-off appliance repair into a runbook entry the next technician can read in two minutes and act on. Service work scales only if you write it down. I keep my own runbook in a Notion database that any tech in our Hyderabad WhatsApp group can search.
One last thing. If you are the homeowner reading this and you are trying to decide whether to fix it yourself or call someone: the fault we just walked through is fixable by an attentive owner with the right multimeter and ninety minutes of patience. If you do not own a multimeter, get one, a Fluke 117 will pay for itself the first time it saves you from buying a control board you did not need. If you are not comfortable with mains-voltage work near water, call someone. There is no shame in it, and the ₹500 service call is cheap insurance against an electrocution.
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