Sybil S Ashburnham , MA March 28, 2016 Leaking from the bottom of the door The bottom of our LG dishwasher was leaking. We attempted the cheap, easy fix of replacing the door gasket, but while we were doing that we spotted how warped the gasket at the bottom of the door was. It's crimped in, so you can attempt to find a similar gasket and recrimping it, or you can buy the entire inner door liner. We figured better safe than sorry. It's really not that difficult of a task, unless you try to cut corners. Electricity needs to be turned off, which we did. Water turned off and disconnected, which we did. You do need to remove the dishwasher completely out of the cabinet, which my husband thought he could skip. The sides of our dishwasher have a covering, you can access the hinges without fully removing the dishwasher, but expect some very sharp sheet metal to greet you. The electrical is easy to disconnect, just make a note of what goes where. Everything comes apart with a screwdriver. One of our hinge ropes broke during the ordeal, and the other was looking pretty frayed. We tied the broken one back together and need to order new ones, so our door won't fully open at the moment. However, now we're pros and will be able to replace those in no time. Four cleaning cycles later and not a single sign of leaking. LG has videos on youtube with step-by-step for how to remove the inner door liner. It may not be a cheap part, but it's a whole lot less expensive than buying a replacement dishwasher. And other than a little hydrogen peroxide and some band-aids, the repair was relatively painless. I'd recommend purchasing it from appliancepartspros as customer service and shipping details were spot on. Read More... 5 People found this story helpful Do-It-Yourself Rating: Repair Time Estimate: 1-2 hours Tools: Screwdrivers