Hey, first commenter posted that long spiel. Those facts relate to Whirlpools not GEs…..GEs are a different animal with different parts and system function. Would you pull a Mercury manual to work on a Buick? GE thermal switch resets when it cools. You failed to mention that GE dryers have a thermal switch built in the motor. A door switch has no relevance to a dryer quitting while running unless the door is bent and popping open from machine harmonics and vibrations. No one needs missinformation. It is less than useful. It leads people away from solving issues and closer to giving up and trashing a machine with a small parts issue. GE has a thermal on the heat element and one buult in the motor. You either have a bad motor or a heating element issue. Bad thermals will not switch off cool and re contact so stating you need a thermal fuse when a drier is stopping and restarting after a minute is unlearned also. In that case thermal is working perfectly. Metering amperage to systems with recorded diagnostics is how you properly diagnose an overloaded alternating current circuit. Replacing parts and having same outcome warrants dryer replacement or replacement of inexperienced technician.