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GE GDT695SBL3TS dishwasher

GE GDT695SBL3TS dishwasher Parts

Here are the diagrams and repair parts for GE GDT695SBL3TS dishwasher, as well as links to manuals and error code tables, if available.

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Browse Parts for GDT695SBL3TS Dishwasher

  • Installation Instructions for GE GDT695SBL3TS - Part 31-31560

    Installation Instructions

    Part #31-31560

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Scr 8-18 Ab Tsq 5/8 Ss for GE GDT695SBL3TS - Part WR01X10380

    Body parts (1) diagram

    Scr 8-18 Ab Tsq 5/8 Ss

    Part #WR01X10380

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Scr 10-16 Ab Hxw .532 for GE GDT695SBL3TS - Part WB01T10103

    Sump & motor mechanism diagram

    Scr 10-16 Ab Hxw .532

    Part #WB01T10103

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Junction Bracket for GE GDT695SBL3TS - Part WD12X10411

    Junction Bracket

    Part #WD12X10411

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Outer Door Painted Bs for GE GDT695SBL3TS - Part WD27X24076

    Outer Door Painted Bs

    Part #WD27X24076

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Scr 6-20 Gxb Ihxw 3/8 Ni for GE GDT695SBL3TS - Part WB02T10324

    Escutcheon & door assembly diagram

    Scr 6-20 Gxb Ihxw 3/8 Ni

    Part #WB02T10324

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Dishwasher Flood Switch Housing for GE GDT695SBL3TS - Part WD01X23496

    Dishwasher Flood Switch Housing

    Part #WD01X23496

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Flood Lever Switch for GE GDT695SBL3TS - Part WD16X23497

    Flood Lever Switch

    Part #WD16X23497

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

GE Dishwasher GDT695SBL3TS FAQs

Yes. On the GE GDT695SBL3TS dishwasher, an FTD (fail to drain) error commonly happens when water cannot leave the tub because the drain path is restricted, such as a clogged air gap, blocked disposer connection, or a kinked drain hose. See the GDT695SBL3TS owner’s manual for drain checks.

What to check first (fast, common fixes)

  • Cancel the cycle so the dishwasher starts draining; then confirm the tub actually empties.
  • Check the sink and disposer: if the sink drains slowly, the dishwasher may not drain well either.
  • If the dishwasher drains into a disposer, make sure the disposer inlet plug was removed.
  • Inspect the drain hose routing for kinks or pinches behind or under the dishwasher.
  • If you have an air gap, clean it (a clogged air gap can leave water standing in the tub).

Drain restriction checklist (where clogs usually hide)

Area to check What you’re looking for Typical symptom
Air gap (if installed) Debris under the cap Water standing in tub, slow drain
Disposer connection Plug not removed or blockage No drain or weak drain
Drain hose Kink, pinch, or internal clog Intermittent FTD, slow drain
Filter area Food soil buildup Poor cleaning plus drain issues

Parts that can be involved if clearing the drain path doesn’t help

If the drain path is clear but the dishwasher still won’t pump out, a failed drain pump or a restricted hose can be the next place we look.

Why it matters

FTD is the dishwasher telling you it cannot remove water as expected. Clearing the drain path (air gap, disposer connection, hose routing) restores normal draining and helps prevent standing water, odors, and incomplete cycles.

Last updated: January 2026

A GE dishwasher typically lasts 10 to 12 years with normal household use and basic care. For your GE GDT695SBL3TS, following the cleaning and maintenance steps in the GDT695SBL3TS owner's manual helps you get the most life out of the wash system, heater, and controls.

Typical lifespan range (what to expect)

Most modern built-in dishwashers fall into a fairly consistent lifespan window.

  • Average: 10 to 12 years
  • Common real-world range: 8 to 15 years
  • Shorter lifespan drivers: heavy daily loads, hard water scale, chronic clogs, frequent overheating
  • Longer lifespan drivers: regular cleaning, correct detergent use, good water temperature, prompt leak/drain fixes
Usage pattern Typical lifespan What usually wears first
Light (few loads/week) 12 to 15 years Racks, door seals, dispenser parts
Average (most homes) 10 to 12 years Pump, heater, spray arms
Heavy (daily, large family) 8 to 10 years Circulation pump, controls, door latch

Maintenance that extends life

These steps reduce strain on the circulation pump, spray arms, and heating system.

  • Clean the filter area and remove debris that can restrict water flow
  • Check spray arm holes for buildup; clear blocked jets
  • Run a dishwasher cleaner periodically to reduce hard-water scale
  • Use the right detergent amount (too much can cause residue; too little can reduce cleaning)
  • Fix draining issues quickly so the pump is not fighting standing water

Parts that commonly affect performance as the unit ages

If cleaning and loading changes do not restore performance, these are common wear items on many GE dishwashers.

Why it matters

Knowing the expected lifespan helps you decide whether to maintain, repair, or replace. A well-maintained dishwasher often avoids repeat issues like poor cleaning, poor drying, and drain problems that shorten service life.

Last updated: January 2026

The most common issues we see on the GE GDT695SBL3TS dishwasher are “won’t run” and “won’t drain” symptoms caused by power/Start-sequence problems, a door that is not fully latched, or drainage restrictions from food debris. Use the GDT695SBL3TS owner's manual troubleshooting steps first to narrow it down.

Most common symptoms and what usually causes them

  • Dishwasher won’t run: tripped breaker, wall switch off, control panel locked, door not firmly closed
  • Dishwasher won’t drain: clogged filter area, blocked drain path, drain hose restriction
  • Poor cleaning: spray arm jets blocked, items blocking detergent cup, wrong detergent type
  • Suds in the tub: using non-dishwasher detergent or rinse aid spill
  • Hard water film/odor: mineral buildup, needs cleaning cycle with citric acid or dishwasher cleaner

Quick checks we recommend (in order)

  1. Confirm the door closes firmly and latches; a loose latch can stop the cycle. If the latch feels weak or inconsistent, inspect the GE dishwasher door latch lock WD21X10490.
  2. Check the home breaker and any nearby wall switch that supplies power to the dishwasher.
  3. Make sure the control panel is not locked (lockout can look like a “dead” dishwasher).
  4. If it fills but does not wash well, check for blocked spray jets or a damaged lower arm; inspect the dishwasher spray arm, lower WD22X33499.
  5. If drying is poor, confirm heated dry options are selected and look for heating-related symptoms; the dishwasher heating element WD05X30818 is a common suspect when water does not heat.

Symptom-to-part guide (common matches)

Symptom Most likely area Example part for this model
Won’t start or stops early Door latch, controls WD21X10490, WD21X24901C
Not cleaning Spray system, circulation WD22X33499, WD26X23258
Not drying Heating circuit WD05X30818
Not draining Drain path, pump, hose WD19X25187, WD24X10062

Why it matters

Catching the “simple” causes first (door not latched, wrong detergent, blocked spray jets) prevents repeat cycles, sudsing, and poor wash results. It also helps you avoid replacing parts like the electronic control board when the real issue is a latch, clog, or loading problem.

For code-based troubleshooting, use GE electronic dishwasher error codes.

Last updated: January 2026

Yes, repairing a GE dishwasher like model GDT695SBL3TS is usually worth it when the problem is isolated (drain, heat, latch, spray) and the total repair cost stays well below the price of a comparable new dishwasher. It becomes less worthwhile when multiple major components fail close together.

Our repair-or-replace checklist

  • Age: Dishwashers typically last 10 years.
  • Repair cost rule: If the repair is under 50% of replacement cost, repair usually makes sense.
  • Failure type: One failed part (latch, heater, pump) is a good repair candidate; repeated failures point toward replacement.
  • Parts availability: If key parts are in stock, downtime is shorter.
  • Installation condition: A dishwasher should be installed so it can be removed later for service (important for long-term repairability). See the installation guide.

Common repairs that are often worth it on GDT695SBL3TS

These are typical “single-failure” repairs that can restore normal operation:

Quick decision table

Situation Usually the best choice Why
One clear symptom, one failed part Repair Lowest cost, fastest return to service
Multiple major symptoms (won’t run + won’t drain + leaks) Replace Stacked repairs add up quickly
Unit is near 10 years old and needs a control or pump Replace (often) Higher parts cost, more labor, more risk
Unit is under 10 years old and otherwise reliable Repair Better value from remaining service life

Why it matters

A dishwasher repair is most cost-effective when it restores reliability with one targeted part. Once you start replacing multiple high-cost items (control, circulation, user interface), the total cost can approach replacement while still leaving other wear items untouched.

For model-specific operating and care guidance that can prevent repeat problems (filters, cleaning, control lock), use the GDT695SBL3TS owners manual.

Last updated: January 2026

Most common symptoms to help you fix your dishwashers

Choose a symptom to see related dishwasher repairs.

Main causes: light switch beside the sink turned off, lack of power, bad dishwasher door switch, control system failure,…

Main causes: damaged or stuck spray arm, leaking door seal, damaged door hinge, leaky heating element water seal, cracke…

Main causes: improper loading, low water temperature, improper detergent dosage, detergent dispenser failure, spray arm …

Main causes: glass or popcorn kernel stuck in the chopper blade, drain line vibrating against the cabinet, debris in was…

Main causes: broken door latch, tripped circuit breaker, broken heating element, faulty vent fan, sensor failure, contro…

Main causes: not using rinse aid, rinse aid dispenser failure, broken heating element, malfunctioning vent, drying fan f…

Main cause: damaged rack height adjuster…

Main causes: clogged kitchen sink drain, clogged drain hose, drain check valve damaged, drain pump failure, control syst…

Main causes: water supply problem, stuck overfill float, clogged water inlet valve screen, water inlet valve failure…

Most common repair guides to help fix your dishwashers

These step-by-step repair guides will help you safely fix what’s broken on your dishwasher.

How to replace a dishwasher door latch assembly

How to replace a dishwasher door latch assembly

If the dishwasher door doesn't click shut, a broken door latch is a likely cause. Follow these instructions to replace i…

Repair time and Difficulty

 30 minutes or less
How to replace a dishwasher thermal fuse

How to replace a dishwasher thermal fuse

A completely dead control panel often indicates that the thermal fuse on the electronic control board is blown; follow t…

Repair time and Difficulty

 15 minutes or less
How to replace a dishwasher control panel

How to replace a dishwasher control panel

Learn how to replace a dishwasher control panel. Learn which tools and parts you need and get step-by-step instructions.…

Repair time and Difficulty

 15 minutes or less

Effective articles & videos to help repair your dishwashers

Use the advice and tips in these articles and videos to get the most out of your dishwasher.

What's a turbidity sensor, and how does it affect wash quality?

What's a turbidity sensor, and how does it affect wash quality?

Your dishwasher’s secret weapon? A turbidity sensor. Find out what it does, how it boosts wash quality, and what to do i…

Dishwasher not drying dishes video

Dishwasher not drying dishes video

Find out why your dishes are still wet even after the dishwasher cycle has finished.…

Replacing dishrack rollers on Kenmore 587-series and Frigidaire dishwashers video

Replacing dishrack rollers on Kenmore 587-series and Frigidaire dishwashers video

It only takes a few minutes to get your dishrack sliding easily again.…

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