Seals coming out patchy, thin, or not forming at all? The seal bar is the heated strip that welds the bag shut, and residue, a torn cover strip, or a worn element all show up as bad seals.
Here is how the seal bar works and how to fix it.
This article will teach you:
- What the seal bar does
- Why welds go bad
- How to clean and inspect it
- When to replace parts
Why the Seal Bar Fails
- Melted plastic residue on the strip.
- A torn cover tape over the element.
- A worn heating element.
- Moisture on the bar during sealing.
What You’ll Need
- A cloth and rubbing alcohol
- Replacement seal-bar tape if needed
- Your owner’s manual
How to Fix the Seal Bar
- Unplug and cool. Let the bar cool before cleaning it.
- Clean the strip. Wipe residue off the seal bar with a little alcohol.
- Check the cover. Inspect the tape over the element and replace it if torn.
- Test a seal. Run a scrap bag to confirm a clean, even weld.
Pro Tip: Melted bag residue on the seal bar is a top cause of patchy welds. Wiping the cooled bar clean after messy jobs keeps every seal crisp and even.
When to Look a Little Deeper
Because the bar makes the seal, it helps to check related issues, and reviewing a sealer that will not seal, a sealer that melts bags, or a bag leak can reveal the cause.
When to Call a Pro
The strip and tape are DIY on many models. If the heating element itself is dead, replacing the sealer is usually the practical route.
Wrapping Up
Seal-bar trouble is usually residue or tape. Here’s the recap:
- Unplug and let it cool.
- Clean residue off the strip.
- Replace torn cover tape.
- Test on a scrap bag.
Clean the bar first, and even welds return. You’ve got this.