I have a friend who lives in a Section 8 housing apartment and the dryer vent (that normally sticks out enough to connect a dryer to) is broken off flush with the wall by previous tenants. I believe it's also glued/foam filled into place, so it can't be easily pulled further out or anything. They'd probably get in trouble if they modified anything excessively anyway. No pictures, sorry.
They have a stacked washer/dryer that works, but cannot use them due to no venting. There is no way that the landlord will fix it, as they refused to fix many bigger, more dangerous things until the state forced them to. They are just stuck with the apartment that they have. Also, they currently have a negative income, so I'd have to fix it out of my pocket. Currently they just walk to a laundry place and pay a bunch of money (that they don't have) to wash their things.
Is there some sort of trick that's still safe, like a metal insert that you can put into the vent to extend it? Some way to make it usable without modifying the building?
This is Washington State, USA, so it'd need to pretty much follow laws/code if at all possible.
Thank you.
Without pictures, a best answer is not possible.
I'm going to rely on experience and assume that there is a 90° bend elbow in the wall and the last segment has broken away.
With the original piece you can open half of the flange and slip the removed piece back in and fold the flange back over.
If you don't have the original piece then you can get a "4in flexible duct connector" and slip that in carefully.
You can also slip the end of the flexible duct into the vent, but you don't want to bunch it up in the wall, you want the flexible duct to have as smooth a wall as possible.
I don't go over there often, but I'll check next time I do. The duct connector looks like it usually goes over the duct/pipes, so maybe it would be difficult to insert into the wall duct? I could always try, though.
The flexible duct does normally slip over the vent, you can insert it with some doing.
If it is the silvery plastic with the metal wire inside, that is easiest to slip in. If it is the corrugated aluminum duct, that will require crimping with needle nose pliers to shrink the diameter.