I removed the top. front panel and also the control panel. I then remove the screws on the small stand and bracket holding the heating coil in place and pulled it out the front and verified that both thermal fuses were still good, having continuity between the two leads, and I had already checked the coil and found that it had infinite resistance meaning that it had a break in it somewhere and so was bad. I disassembled the heating coil assembly and put one lead on one of the coil leads and ran the other lead down the length of the coil wires until I no longer had continuity and then noticed the brake in the coil wire on the bottom side. I used my shop vac and cleaned out the inch thick blanket of lent in the bottom of the dryer and cleaned the top and bottom heater coil housing and reassembled the heater coil assembly and put it back inside the dryer and screwed it back in place and reassembled the dryer and test operated it and it had plenty of heat. Note, you do not have to remove the drum and then belt as the heating coil assembly is in the lower right corner of the dryer which is accessible by just removing the top and front panels and the control panel. This saves a lot of time and is especially a plus if you don't have a lot of room. And if I wasn't so anal about my work, I could have had this done in about 30 to 45 minutes. But I cleaned it very well I blew out the vents from inside the dryer tub to make sure there was no Lent inside and just attention to detail. I only used a small impact driver and a Phillips head on it. I also put the corresponding screws back in their holes when I remove the panels and control board, so I don't miss place any and they're right there when I put everything back together. This was a simple job if you just have a will do can do attitude. I can't imagine paying somebody to do it. Plus the satisfaction of doing the job yourself and fixing the problem.